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Elasto Proxy's Sealing Solutions Blog is the place for conversation and discussion about the design and manufacturing of rubber and plastic parts and products. In addition to regular content from Elasto Proxy, you'll hear from companies across the rubber and plastics industry.

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Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

Posted March 26, 2018 3:59 PM by Doug Sharpe

What’s the best way to cut industrial rubber products like seals, gaskets, and insulation? Manual cutting, die cutting, water jet cutting, and abrasive water jet cutting each offer advantages. They also meet different business and technical requirements. As this article from Elasto Proxy explains, choosing the right cutting method for your application requires a complete and careful analysis.

Manual Cutting

Manual cutting is the simplest way to cut industrial rubber products. Often, a box cutter or bladed knife is used. An employee removes material from inventory, positions the sheet or profile on a work surface such as table, and then creates a stencil or template for use during cutting. With edge trim that contains metal wire, guillotine cutting is used instead.

Manual cutting might seem cost-effective, but manufacturers often underestimate the true cost of rework and material waste – topics we’ll examine in a future article. Manual cutting also increases the risk of employee injury. Plus, low-quality cuts can cause potential buyers to question the quality of a larger product design. There are alternatives to manual cutting, but how do these methods compare?

Die Cutting

Die cutting uses metal tools called dies with either flatbed or rotary equipment. Dies vary in terms of cost and precision. Flatbed die cutting machines are slower than rotary die cutters but can process thicker materials. Rotary die cutting is faster and more accurate, but rotary dies are more expensive. With die cutting, engineers must always balance tooling against other project requirements.

No matter which type of die is used, die cutting (like guillotine cutting) puts pressure on the profile and can cause beveling and edge distortions – especially with softer elastomers. If a metal die yields unsatisfactory results, the tool must be scrapped and revised. This adds costs and extends project timelines, especially with complex dies that take longer to machine.

Yet die cutting isn’t always cost-prohibitive. As the cost of a die is spread across more parts, the die’s per-unit cost falls. That’s why the automotive industry uses die cutting to produce hundreds of thousands of simple parts with the same shape. For prototyping and low-to-medium volume production, especially when tighter tolerances are required, water jet cutting offers an attractive alternative.

Water Jet Cutting

Unlike die cutting, water jet cutting doesn’t require tooling. This eliminates costs, supports revisions, speeds prototyping, and reduces lead times on production quantities. Because water jet cutting doesn’t deform rubber materials, cut edges aren’t rough or beveled. Smoother joints look better and are easier-to-bond. Water jet cutting can also create notches, angles, holes, dovetail cuts, and other part features.

Water jet cutting is performed with either a specialized table or an industrial robot. At Elasto Proxy, a water jet table with a 5’ x 10’ cutting surface is used to create parts with 90-degree angles and tight tolerances. High-pressure heads move along an X-Y axis and stream 50,000-psi. The water provides the cutting action and the heads move back-and-forth (X-axis) and left-and-right (Y-axis) in a linear motion.

Elasto Proxy also uses a six-axis robot for water jet cutting. Six-axis operations support the creation of 45-degree angles and other complex shapes. Like Elasto Proxy’s water jet cutting table, the six-axis robot uses computer-aided manufacturing (CAM). The engineer’s computer-aided design file (CAD) supports the creation of a cutting path that’s fine, fast, and highly-accurate.

Abrasive Water Jet Cutting

Elasto Proxy’s industrial robot can also perform abrasive water jet cutting for harder, thicker materials such as ceramic, glass, ballistic fiberglass, steel plates, and rubber-coated metal. By adding abrasive sand to a highly-pressurized stream of water, abrasive water jet cutting combines the benefits of traditional water jet cutting with incredible new features.

When you see our new video, the sights and sounds will amaze you. To learn more, contact us now.

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Power-User

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#1

Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/27/2018 3:04 PM

Laser is the best way to cut. it is basically an x-y plotter but with a laser. add your 2-D cad drawing and it will cut what you desire.

we have these machines and they work great for many polymer material from acrylic sheet to fiber mats.

universal laser systems.

https://www.ulsinc.com/

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#2
In reply to #1

Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/27/2018 4:46 PM

I saw laser missing from this, but how thick a foam can be cut clean with laser? The focus area is narrow, but length of narrow focus is kinda short in my experience.

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#3
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Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/28/2018 5:12 PM

I'd have to question the use of lasers for cutting rubber and polymers for two reasons. The fumes can be toxic and that charred edge looks awful.

How do you overcome these problems?

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#5
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Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/29/2018 10:16 AM

i have seen 2" cut easily, I have cut 1" acrylic with two or three passes. The only issue would be that the curf gets a bit wider outside the focal point. so if you focus at 1" depth on 2" thickness then your curf may be 30 thousands at top and bottom (guesstamitt)where the center may be 10 thousands thick. Overall certainly an order of magnitude less than water jet.

no char everything gets vaporized, the air blows any inorganic material away. I use this process to cut channels in ceramic green tapes and the air at 30 psi is enough to blow the ceramic powder out of the way. if you would happen to see melting, one would increase the speed, or lower the power level and increase iterations. but for foam there usually isn't much mass there so a single pass is sufficient.

toxic fumes.. the unit that i have is enclosed and connected to an exhaust system so just like your furnace at home, nasty gases are vented outside. if above a certain threshold, some sort of scrubber system is employed.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jCq4mHYSyBg

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27fuZC_XT8A

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#6
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Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/29/2018 10:32 AM

Thanks!

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#4

Re: Four Ways to Cut Rubber Products

03/29/2018 7:27 AM

Acrylics have a clean polished edge when cut by laser.

Fumes are extracted through large charcoal canister filters.

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