The cost of the plasma consumables can be high, although I don't know the actual comparison to flame-type cutting (Oxyacetylene, etc.)
I picked up on a link that I believe that one of the heavy burning guys on here posted--how to make your own plasma cutter. In that link, the author briefly mentioned to choose a torch head that had "reasonable" consumables costs, and he had chosen Panasonic. I didn't even know Panasonic built anything heavier than a hard drive arm so I looked it up on
eBay...Yes, they make a plasma torch head and the consumables are inexpensive. They look like steel rather than copper so they may be doing something different than the North American plasma guys.
I have dealt with plasma at a shop where they did lots of cutting with...less than skilled guys. Found out why management at the place just hated plasma, even though the shop boss loved it--and proved it by pouring out the work. But, when I was there, a guy dropped a chunk of metal on a plasma hose. That hose has several wires in it plus the heavy wire was integrated with the air hose. Severed them all. The shop boss did a temporary fix but a replacement hose was quite a bit--nearly $1000. Not as easy to fix as a cutting torch hose.
As with everything else, it is training...a monkey on a torch can ruin it in no time...same with a plasma cutter.
There's also a thread here where BigBurchino had a race with a torch guy in cutting cars in half in a yard. The yard had never even heard of plasma cutters. He beat the torch by miles.
Maybe rent a big plasma cutter and see how the guys like it.
Jon.
PS- plasma will cut just about anything. Stainless, etc. An oxyacetylene torch won't, since it relies on the fact that steel reacts with oxygen when it is hot enough, and will burn on its own--try shutting off the acetylene when you get into a cut and you'll see for yourself.
Bookmarks