By Application

Cutting

Cutting is where most parts begin, and the process you pick decides your speed, your edge quality, and your cost per part. From fiber laser precision on thin-to-medium sheet to plasma on heavy plate, this is the equipment that turns raw material into parts ready for the next operation.

Buyer Guidance

How to Choose

Start with your material mix and the edge you need. Durma's HD-F Series fiber lasers hit 0.05mm accuracy at cutting speeds up to 100m/min, which makes laser the right call for precision work and for the thin-to-medium range where part quality and throughput both matter. If most of your work is sheet and you want a clean edge straight off the machine, laser earns its place on the floor.

When the material gets thick, the math changes. Durma builds its PL-C plasma around Hypertherm cutting heads and positions it as reliable for higher levels of material thickness, where running a laser would cost more than the job needs. Plasma cuts heavy plate fast and economically, so it is the workhorse for structural and heavy-gauge work.

For straight-line blanking of sheet and plate, or cutting solid bar and structural stock to length, look to CNC Cutting and Sawing. Match the process to the part and you stop overpaying to cut metal.

The Lineup

Cutting Machines

CFSImage coming soon
Durma IW Iron Worker

Durma

Durma IW Iron Worker

One machine to punch, shear, and notch your structural steel

Punching Capacity
Ø27 x 13 mm to Ø40 x 30 mm (diameter x thickness)
Shearing Capacity
Flat bar 200 x 13 mm to 400 x 30 mm; angle 60 x 60 x 8 mm to 120 x 120 x 12 mm

Not Sure Which Machine Is Right for Your Shop?

Carlson's team has placed equipment in New England fabrication shops for over 65 years. We know which machine fits your material, your volume, and your floor plan. Call us or send a note and we will get back to you the same day.