Serving New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut

Foam Waterjet Cutting Long Island

Perfect Fit Parts, Zero Heat Damage

Our precision foam waterjet cutting in Long Island, NY creates custom inserts, gaskets, and complex shapes with clean edges—no melting, no fumes, ready to install.

Built for Precision Manufacturing

01

CNC Waterjet Technology

Our computer-controlled precision delivers repeatable accuracy with tolerances as tight as ±0.005 inches on every cut.

02

No Heat Damage Ever

Our cold water cutting eliminates melting, warping, burn marks, and toxic fumes that plague laser and hot wire methods.

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Any Foam Type

We cut polyurethane, polyethylene, polystyrene, EVA, and specialty foams without changing tools or adjusting equipment.

40+

Years Of Experience

Precision Foam Cutting Long Island

The Smarter Way to Cut Foam

Waterjet foam cutting uses high-pressure water to slice through foam materials with surgical precision. No blades, no heat, no compromises. The process is controlled by CNC programming, which means your design gets cut exactly as specified—whether it’s a simple rectangle or an intricate pattern with tight inside corners. This matters because foam is temperamental. Hit it with heat and it melts. Press it with a blade and it compresses. But a focused stream of water? It cuts clean, preserves the cell structure, and leaves edges you can use immediately without sanding or finishing. You get parts that fit right the first time, with no secondary work and no material waste from trial-and-error adjustments. For manufacturers looking for foam cutting near you that actually delivers precision, waterjet cutting solves the problems traditional methods create.

Built for Precision Manufacturing

01

You’ll stop dealing with melted edges, burn marks, and toxic fumes that come with laser or hot wire cutting.

02

Parts come off the cutter ready to install—no sanding, trimming, or hand-finishing required to clean up rough edges.

03

Complex shapes with sharp corners and intricate cutouts become possible, opening up design options you couldn’t achieve before.

04

Prototypes cost the same per piece as production runs since there’s no expensive tooling to amortize over volume.

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Material waste drops when precision nesting software arranges parts efficiently and the narrow kerf barely removes material.

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Turnaround times shrink when you eliminate secondary finishing and can stack multiple sheets for simultaneous cutting.

Waterjet Cut Foam Inserts Long Island

Built for Real-World Applications

Our foam waterjet cutting serves industries where precision matters and failure isn’t an option. Long Island’s aerospace manufacturers use it for composite layup tooling and protective packaging for sensitive avionics. Medical device companies rely on it for custom case inserts that cradle instruments during sterilization and transport. Automotive shops need it for sound dampening panels and interior cushioning that must fit exact contours. The packaging industry depends on our waterjet-cut foam inserts in Long Island to protect high-value electronics, tools, and equipment during shipping. These aren’t generic foam blocks—they’re precision-engineered cradles with cutouts that match your product’s exact dimensions, preventing movement and absorbing impact. You also get the ability to work with any foam density or type without reconfiguring equipment. Soft open-cell polyurethane for cushioning, rigid closed-cell polyethylene for structural support, ESD-safe foam for electronics, medical-grade materials for healthcare applications—our waterjet handles them all with the same precision and clean results.

Industrial Foam Cutting Long Island

Why Waterjet Beats Traditional Methods

Most foam cutting methods force you into compromises. Hot wire and laser cutters work fast but generate heat that melts foam, creates fumes, and leaves you with distorted edges. Die cutting gives you speed on high volumes but requires expensive steel rule dies that take weeks to produce and lock you into one design. Blade cutting compresses the foam, creates dust, and produces inconsistent results that need extensive hand work. Waterjet cutting sidesteps all of it. Our cold cutting process uses pure water at high pressure—no abrasives needed for foam—so there’s zero heat generation and zero material distortion. The CNC control means you get the same precise cut on piece one and piece one thousand. We can pierce straight through the material to create interior cutouts, something blade methods can’t do without cutting in from an edge. And because there’s no tooling to build, we can cut a single prototype in the morning and adjust the design that afternoon based on test results. That kind of flexibility is impossible with traditional methods that require days or weeks of tool production before you see your first part. Our custom foam cutting service in Long Island, NY gives you the agility to respond to design changes without production delays.

Custom Foam Cutting Service Long Island

What You Actually Get

Our precision foam waterjet cutting in Long Island, NY delivers results that other methods simply can’t match, especially when dimensional accuracy and material integrity matter.

01

Design and Programming

You provide drawings or CAD files. We program the design into our CNC system with nesting software to maximize material use and minimize waste.

03

Quality Check and Delivery

We inspect finished parts for dimensional accuracy. Clean edges require no secondary finishing, so parts ship ready for immediate use in your application.

02

Precision Water Cutting

High-pressure water cuts through foam following the programmed path. We can stack multiple sheets to produce several identical parts in one pass.

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of foam can be cut with waterjet in Long Island?
Our waterjet cutting handles virtually every foam type without limitation. Polyurethane foam (both open-cell and closed-cell), polyethylene, polystyrene (EPS and XPS), EVA, EPE, neoprene, and specialty foams all cut cleanly with the same equipment. The process works across the full density range, from soft cushioning foams to rigid structural materials. You don’t need different cutting methods or tools when switching between foam types—our waterjet adjusts through software settings for pressure and speed. This versatility matters when you’re working on projects that require multiple foam grades or when you need to test different materials before committing to production. ESD-safe foams for electronics, medical-grade materials, and even foam-rubber composites all process the same way with consistent, repeatable results.
The fundamental difference comes down to heat and tooling. Laser cutting generates intense heat that melts foam edges, creates fumes, and can distort material—especially problematic with temperature-sensitive foams like polystyrene. Our waterjet is a cold process that eliminates these issues entirely. Die cutting requires expensive steel rule dies that take weeks to fabricate and lock you into one design, making it cost-prohibitive for prototypes or low-volume runs. We use CNC programming instead of physical tooling, so design changes happen in minutes, not weeks, and there’s no tooling cost to amortize. Our waterjet also delivers capabilities that other methods can’t match—like piercing through material to create interior cutouts, cutting intricate patterns with tight inside corners, and stacking multiple sheets for simultaneous cutting. You get cleaner edges, better dimensional accuracy, and more design flexibility without the limitations of heat damage or expensive tooling.
Turnaround depends on project complexity and volume, but our waterjet cutting is inherently faster than methods requiring tooling. We can often cut simple parts the same day or next day since there’s no die to build. The CNC programming takes minutes for straightforward designs, and the actual cutting happens quickly—especially when we stack multiple foam sheets to produce several parts simultaneously. Complex projects with intricate patterns or high piece counts might take a few days, but you’re still looking at significantly shorter lead times compared to die cutting, which requires weeks just to produce the tooling before any parts get made. The other time advantage comes from eliminating secondary operations. Parts come off our waterjet with clean, finished edges that don’t need sanding, trimming, or deburring. That means your parts are ready to use immediately rather than waiting for additional finishing work. For prototyping, this speed matters—you can test a design, make revisions, and we can have new samples cut within days rather than restarting a weeks-long tooling process.
Custom foam inserts are one of the primary applications for our waterjet cutting, and the precision makes a real difference in how well your products are protected. Our CNC control allows us to create exact cutouts that match your product’s dimensions—not approximate shapes that leave gaps or create pressure points. This matters for high-value items like electronics, medical instruments, optical equipment, or precision tools that need secure positioning during transport. Our waterjet can pierce through the foam to create interior pockets and cavities, which is essential for multi-layer insert designs where products nest into specific compartments. We can incorporate features like finger pulls for easy product removal, drainage channels, or ventilation slots—details that would be difficult or impossible with manual cutting methods. The process also handles varying foam thicknesses in the same project, so we can build up layers of different densities for optimal cushioning. Whether you need inserts for Pelican cases, custom shipping containers, presentation boxes, or industrial packaging, our waterjet foam shape cutting in Long Island delivers the precision fit and professional appearance that reflects the quality of your product.
Our waterjet cutting handles a wide range of foam thicknesses, typically from thin sheets under a quarter-inch up to 8 inches or more in a single pass. The exact capacity depends on foam density and type—softer, less dense foams can be cut thicker than rigid, high-density materials. For most packaging and industrial applications, you’re working well within the comfortable cutting range. One significant advantage is our ability to stack thinner foam sheets and cut them simultaneously, which dramatically increases production efficiency. We might stack four or five sheets of 2-inch foam and cut them all in one pass, producing multiple identical parts in the time it would take to cut one. This stacking capability also helps when you need consistent parts across a production run—since they’re all cut together, there’s zero variation between pieces. Our waterjet maintains precision even on thicker materials because the focused water stream doesn’t deflect or wander like mechanical cutting tools can. You get square, clean edges through the full thickness rather than tapered or angled cuts that require correction.
Our waterjet cutting is particularly cost-effective for prototypes and low-to-medium volume production because there’s no tooling investment to recover. With die cutting, you might spend thousands of dollars on a steel rule die before producing a single part, which makes economic sense only when you’re spreading that cost across thousands of pieces. We use CNC programming instead, so your only costs are programming time (minimal for most projects) and the actual cutting. This means a one-piece prototype costs roughly the same per piece as a hundred-piece run. You’re not penalized for small quantities. The other cost advantage comes from material efficiency. Our advanced nesting software arranges parts on the foam sheet to minimize waste, and the narrow kerf (cut width) of the water stream removes very little material. You get more parts per sheet compared to methods with wider cutting paths or less efficient layouts. Factor in the elimination of secondary finishing operations—no labor hours spent sanding edges or cleaning up rough cuts—and the total cost per part often beats traditional methods even before considering the speed and flexibility advantages.