Industries that requires the fabrication of machine pieces or the cutting and shaping of a material, such as aerospace and mining, use water jet cutting.
There are a few sites I would recommend. waterjets.org is a great resource for waterjet cutting. wjta.org is also good. wardjet.com has tons of information and videos about the waterjet cutting machines that they manufacture. Tryhttp://www.wardjet.com/waterjet-university.html
send me an e-mail to symvoulosllc[at]gmail.com and i will send you my entire PDF library. about waterjet cutting best RG
Industries that use resin transfer molding, include the automotive and and aerospace industries.
architects
Iron and steel, cement, aluminum, machine tools, petrochemicals producing industries are called mineral based industries.Mineral based industries are primary industries that use mineral ores as their raw materials. The products of these industries feed other industries. Iron made from iron ore is the product of mineral based industry. This is used as raw material for the manufacture of a number of other products, such as heavy machinery, building materials and railway coaches.
There are a few sites I would recommend. waterjets.org is a great resource for waterjet cutting. wjta.org is also good. wardjet.com has tons of information and videos about the waterjet cutting machines that they manufacture. Tryhttp://www.wardjet.com/waterjet-university.html
send me an e-mail to symvoulosllc[at]gmail.com and i will send you my entire PDF library. about waterjet cutting best RG
Waterjet uses up to 60,000 psi pressure to project water streams through the cutting head. With the high pressure of the water, and abrasive particles (garnet) mixed in with the cutting stream, the waterjet is able to cut up to 12" thick materials.
If you need to find info about waterjet why dont you check hydrocut.blogspot[dot]com they have some intresting articles about waterjet
You may be able to rent one. You could also buy one. Check out www.iwmwaterjet.com
waterjet cutting (for up to 12" thick)... or machining.
Clean lines and an able cut through a lot of harder surfaces. Plus it can be cheaper depending on time and what your cutting.
Yes. If you go to http://www.omax.com (the website of the company that manufactures these machines) and click on "materials cut" under "applications," you can see some wood items they cut in-house on a waterjet cutter.
Ridgid makes one that isn't to bad. Most of them are very expensive.
It depends on how thick of steel you're aiming to cut. But most job shops process steel with either laser cutting (for thin steel) or waterjet cutting (for up to 12" thick)... or machining.
It is great for cutting titanium. If you do cut it, it will create dust particles in the air and you have to be careful breathing them in. It is great for metal that is all ready deformed.
Abrasive water-jet cutting, is when one uses water jets for cutting and removing materials. The water jets may contain abrasive powder, and can be used to cut titanium, marble, and glass.