Concrete Waterjet Cutting Guide:What Actually Works for 2500 / 4000 / 5000 psi Concrete

China has a very large amount of infrastructure, with concrete structures everywhere — buildings, bridges, tunnels, and roads. After years in service, a lot of these structures are not in great condition anymore and need repair, strengthening, or modification.

On site, this usually comes down to cutting or removing part of the concrete, opening slots, or doing some local work so the structure can be fixed or adapted to new use.

 In real projects, it is very common to remove part of the concrete, open slots, or do local cutting to restore performance or adapt to new design requirements.

Traditionally, contractors rely on tools like hydraulic breakers or milling machines. These methods work, but they also bring obvious problems — strong vibration, high noise, and in many cases, unwanted damage to the remaining structure. For more precise work, especially in renovation or reinforcement projects, this becomes a real limitation.

Abrasive waterjet cutting is being used more often in these situations. Instead of hitting or breaking the structure, it removes material with high-pressure water and abrasive, so the process is easier to control. On site, the difference is quite obvious — almost no vibration, much less dust, and much lower risk of damaging the surrounding concrete.

In practice, this means you can cut closer to existing structure, keep edges cleaner, and avoid secondary damage that usually needs extra repair work. That’s why in bridge repair, tunnel jobs, and building renovation, more crews are turning to waterjet when the job requires control instead of brute force.

The following cutting parameters are based on the study:

Optimization of Process Parameters for Abrasive Water Jet Cutting Concrete Based on Response Surface Methodology,(Structural Concrete,March 2026, Songqiang Xiao et al.)

1. The 3 Parameters That Actually Matter

If you remember only one section, remember this.

① Pressure

Higher pressure = deeper cut. But returns diminish on stronger concrete.

② Traverse Speed

Faster speed = exponentially less depth. This is where most crews lose efficiency.

③ Number of Passes

1 → 3 passes is not linear. It’s damage accumulation. Each pass makes the next one easier

④ Concrete Strength (US & China Standard)

Strength LevelTypical Use
2500 psi (C20)Light structural / slabs
4000 psi (C30)Standard structural concrete
5000 psi (C40)High-strength / bridge / heavy load

 Higher strength = harder to cut under same parameters

2. How to Achieve the Same Depth Across Different Concrete Strengths

Below are field-ready parameter tables.

Target Depth: 40 mm (Surface Grooving / Light Work)

ConcretePressureSpeedPassesStrategy
2500 psi150 MPa200–220 mm/min1One-pass, efficient
4000 psi150–160 MPa180–200 mm/min1–2Slightly slower
5000 psi160–170 MPa160–180 mm/min2Add pass instead of pressure

 Rule: Don’t overpressure—just add one more pass for high strength.

Target Depth: 50 mm (Wall Grooving / Slab Opening)

ConcretePressureSpeedPasses
2500 psi150 MPa150–1601–2
4000 psi150 MPa140–1502
5000 psi150 MPa120–1402

 Best combo:150 MPa + medium-low speed + 2 passes

Target Depth: 60 mm (Beams / Columns)

ConcretePressureSpeedPasses
2500 psi150 MPa140–1602–3
4000 psi150 MPa130–1503
5000 psi150 MPa120–1303

 Over 60 mm, multi-pass is mandatory. Pressure alone won’t get you there efficiently.

Target Depth: 70–90 mm (Deep Cutting)

DepthUniversal Strategy
70 mm150 MPa / 100–125 mm/min / 3 passes
80 mm150–160 MPa / 100 mm/min / 3 passes
90 mm190–200 MPa / 100 mm/min / 3 passes

 Formula for deep cutting: Medium pressure + lowest speed + 3 passes

3. 3 Proven Cutting Strategies (Just Use These)

StrategyTarget DepthPressureSpeedPassesBest For
Energy-Efficient40–50 mm~150 MPa150–200 mm/min2Surface removal, grooving, repair prep
Balanced50–60 mm150 MPa120–160 mm/min2–3Beams / columns, structural modification
Maximum Penetration70–90 mm150–200 MPa~100 mm/min3Thick slabs, bridge demolition, high-strength concrete

4. Common Mistakes (90% of Crews Make These)

Don’t :  Only increasing pressure.You waste energy, gain little depth.

Don’t :  Cutting too fast. Depth drops sharply—especially on 5000 psi concrete.

Don’t :  Using same parameters for all strengths. 5000 psi ≠ 2500 psi,Expect 30%+ depth loss.

Don’t :  Trying to finish in one pass. Deep cuts always require multiple passes.

5. One Simple Rule to Remember

If you want:

  • Same depth → higher strength = slower speed + more passes
  • Higher efficiency → prioritize passes, then reduce speed
  • Lower cost → stay around 150 MPa
  • Maximum depth → 100 mm/min + 3 passes

Abrasive waterjet cutting is not about pushing pressure to the limit. It’s about balancing pressure, speed, and passes.The crews that understand this:

  • Cut faster
  • Use less abrasive
  • Save energy
  • Get cleaner results

FAQ: Waterjet Cutting Concrete

Does a waterjet actually “cut” concrete or just wash it away?

Not really “wash away.”

What actually happens is:

  • The jet hits the surface and creates stress
  • Small cracks start forming inside
  • Those cracks grow with each pass
  • Abrasive removes the loosened material

So it’s more like:

break it first, then remove it

Why does the second or third pass cut faster than the first?

Because the structure is already damaged.

First pass:

  • You’re basically opening up the material

Second pass:

  • Cracks already exist, so they extend faster

Third pass:

  • Material is loose, removal becomes much easier

That’s why trying to do it in one pass usually doesn’t work well and just takes longer.

Why is 5000 psi concrete harder to cut than 2500 psi?

It’s not only about being stronger — the structure inside is tighter, so cracks don’t open easily.

  • Fewer internal voids
  • Stronger bonding
  • Cracks don’t spread easily

So instead of forcing it with higher pressure, the smarter move is:

 slow down and add passes

 Why doesn’t increasing pressure always improve cutting depth?

Because pressure alone doesn’t control everything.

If your speed is too fast:

  • The jet doesn’t stay long enough in one spot
  • Cracks don’t fully develop

Result:

higher pressure, but not much deeper cut

In many cases, reducing speed gives better results than increasing pressure.

What’s really happening inside the concrete when the jet hits?

You don’t see it, but inside:

  • Stress waves travel through the material
  • Some areas are compressed
  • Others are pulled apart

Concrete is weak in tension, so it tends to fail when it’s being pulled, not pushed.

That’s where the cracks start.

Why is abrasive waterjet much more effective than pure water?

Pure water:

  • Mostly impact

Abrasive waterjet:

  • Impact + cutting + grinding

A simple way to think about it:

 pure water hits
 abrasive waterjet cuts

Why does the cut surface look rough or grainy?

Because concrete isn’t uniform.

It’s made of:

  • Cement paste
  • Aggregates (stone)
  • Voids

The jet usually:

  • breaks the cement first
  • then works around the aggregates
  • finally dislodges them

That’s why the surface doesn’t look perfectly smooth.

Why do we sometimes use more abrasive but get worse results?

Usually a setup problem.

Common causes:

  • Speed too high
  • Stand-off distance not right
  • Jet not focused

In those cases:

 abrasive doesn’t “bite” into the material
 it just gets wasted

Is there a way to predict cutting depth before starting?

Yes, and it’s getting better.

Recent studies use:

  • test data
  • regression models
  • even machine learning

So with the right inputs (pressure, speed, abrasive),
you can estimate cutting depth fairly accurately.

What’s the simplest way to improve efficiency on site?

If you only remember one thing:

 don’t try to force it in one pass

Better approach:

  • use multiple passes
  • keep speed under control
  • maintain stable pressure

That alone solves most cutting problems.

If there is not enough information you want, please contact our waterjet sales to know more.

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Liu Haiyang

water jet operator, 9 years work in APW, provides water jet cutting training services for glass processing industry

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