Buyer Education, 03 of 06

How CNC Plasma Cutting Works

CNC plasma cutting is one of the most versatile tools in a metal fabrication shop, and one of the most misunderstood. Understanding what it does well (and what it does not) helps you scope CNC requests correctly and get better results.

What the Machine Does

A CNC (Computer Numerical Control) plasma cutter uses a high-velocity jet of ionized gas to cut through electrically conductive metal. The torch is guided by computer-programmed toolpaths generated directly from your design file, no manual tracing, no template.

The result: clean, repeatable cuts on flat plate, sheet, or tube stock at high speed. It works on carbon steel, stainless steel, and aluminum. A good plasma setup can hold tight tolerances and cut intricate shapes that would take hours by hand.

What it does best: Flat plate parts, decorative panels, brackets, gussets, logo cut-outs, custom silhouettes, perforated patterns, structural blanks, and any shape that can be drawn in 2D and cut from flat stock.

Thickness, Tolerance, and Kerf

What Affects Cut Quality

What to Send

File format is the most common friction point in CNC requests. Send the right file type and your quote process will be faster and more accurate.

Common file mistakes: Sending a DXF where text was not converted to curves (text disappears at the cutting table), dimensions that are not 1:1 scale (requires manual rescaling), and shapes with open paths that look closed on screen but have tiny gaps. Use your CAD program's “verify” or “audit” tool before sending.

When to Use CNC Plasma vs. Other Methods

Ready to Submit a CNC Request?

The CNC File Requirements guide walks through our exact submission checklist and form. Or go directly to the service page to learn more about our plasma cutting capabilities and equipment.

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