Wazer brings water jet cutting from heavy industry to mass market

On the TechCrunch Disrupt Battlefield stage today, Wazer showed off its $6,000 desktop water cutter for the first time. Entering a market where it competes against huge industrial units costing upwards of $100,000, the company is launching a Kickstarter campaign to make water jet cutters accessible to creative souls, hackers and engineers everywhere. A great idea for people who have requirements where lasers just don’t make the cut.

Making water jets affordable

In forcing the price tag down into the reach of advanced hobbyists, maker spaces and small prototyping labs, the company is following in illustrious footsteps. Wazer is gearing up to do what Glowforge did for laser cutters and what Formlabs did for SLA 3D printing: making available to everyone high-end fabrication tech that has hitherto been reserved for heavy industrial users with deep pockets.

“Laser cutters are fun,” says Nisan Lerea, CEO and co-founder of Wazer, “but only if you want to cut paper, wood, or certain types of plastic. If you want to do real manufacturing, you need to look elsewhere. Water jet cutters are the only way to cut metal, glass and stone.”

The water cutter works by using a tightly focused jet of water and abrasive particles (fancy sand, basically, known as garnet).

The water is pressurized by a pump and garnet is added into a chamber right before the water is ejected out of the nozzle. The company is reluctant to confirm what pressure the machine is operating at “until our patents are granted”, but confirmed that it’s lower than the industrial machines the company competes against.

Because the pump is the noisiest part of the machine, Wazer cleverly designed the machine so it can be placed in another room.

“Wazer began as a senior design project at Penn Engineering,” says the company’s co-founder Matthew Nowicki. At the university, the founders were part of a team building race cars for fun and profit. Let’s be honest: mostly for fun. The team built the first small-scale water jet prototype and then wondered whether perhaps the project had legs beyond an academic experiment.

The company was embraced by the Hax accelerator, who gave them a chunk of cash and a ton of manufacturing know-how in the process. The team spent much of the past year in Shenzhen to build prototypes and get the product ready for its Kickstarter launch.

“For the Kickstarter campaign, we expect to sell in the hundreds of units,” Lerea says, revealing that he doesn’t believe that water cutters will be as wide-spread as other fabrication techniques. While the team are the first to admit that water jet cutting technology is a niche product, they do have a clear picture of who might adopt the technology. “We hope that making the technology more readily available will help educate people who aren’t necessarily that familiar with water jet cutting, too.”

Tons of different materials

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