Cutting 16 ga cold roll

Cut quality issues can be discussed here, most common issues have been discussed here and should help you.
Post Reply
kfuller
1/2 Star Member
1/2 Star Member
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri Dec 29, 2017 7:46 am

Cutting 16 ga cold roll

Post by kfuller »

Need help cutting 16 ga cold roll steel Please. Using Hypertherm 30 XP. Help with voltage needed cutting speed and air pressure. Using fine cut parts.

Air is dry but having to do lot of clean up on back side. Need any advice ! Thanks
User avatar
tnbndr
4.5 Star Elite Contributing Member
4.5 Star Elite Contributing Member
Posts: 1670
Joined: Mon Jan 09, 2012 4:30 pm
Location: New Berlin, WI
Contact:

Re: Cutting 16 ga cold roll

Post by tnbndr »

I would start here, find your machine manual and it should have good starting parameters for cutting.

https://www.hypertherm.com/en-US/custom ... egion=NART
Dennis
LDR 4x8, Scribe, DTHCIV
Hypertherm PM45, Macair Dryer
DeVilbiss Air America 6.5HP, 80Gal., 175psi, Two Stage
16.9scfm@100psi, 16.0scfm@175psi
Miller 215 MultiMatic
RW 390E Slip Roll (Powered)
AutoCAD, SheetCAM, Mach 3
http://ikescreations.com
jimcolt
5 Star Elite Contributing Member
5 Star Elite Contributing Member
Posts: 3087
Joined: Mon Jul 20, 2009 11:18 pm
Location: North Carolina

Re: Cutting 16 ga cold roll

Post by jimcolt »

Since the 30XP is sold as a system designed for hand cutting.....Hypertherm does not provide machine cutting specs as they do with the 45 amp and larger systems. I recommend piercing at about a .15" standoff, then cutting with about a .06" standoff. do a test cut with the torch set at .06"....increase cut speed on subsequent tests until the dross is minimal (heavy dross means you are cutting too slow). When you find the speed that minimizes dross....read the arc voltage while cutting at that speed with the torch at .06" off the material.....that is the correct cut voltage. Keep a chart with cut speed, cut height and arc voltage as you cut different materials and thicknesses...that way you will have developed your own cut charts and will save time and aggravation. Jim Colt
Post Reply

Return to “Plasma Cut Quality Forum”