Plasma Cutter Electrode & Tip Guide: Selection by Amperage
Plasma cutting electrode (hafnium insert) and nozzle/tip guide: how they wear, tip orifice size by amperage, Hypertherm vs aftermarket quality differences.
Plasma cutter consumables guide: cutting tips, electrodes, shield cups, swirl rings, and retaining caps. Selection by brand, amperage, and cut quality optimization.
Plasma cutting consumables wear with every arc start and every inch of cut. The electrode, tip (nozzle), shield cup, swirl ring, and retaining cap work as a system. When one component degrades, cut quality drops and the other parts wear faster.
The electrode contains a hafnium or zirconium insert that erodes each time the arc transfers. A fresh electrode has a flat, shiny insert. Replace it when the pit depth reaches about 1/16 inch or the insert shows asymmetric wear. Running a pitted electrode damages the tip and produces a wandering, inconsistent arc.
The cutting tip (nozzle) shapes the plasma arc through a precision orifice. Tip size is matched to amperage: a 40-amp tip on an 80-amp machine will blow out instantly, and an 80-amp tip at 40 amps won’t constrict the arc properly. Keep 2-3 sets of tips on hand for your most-used amperage setting. Replace when the orifice becomes oval or the cut develops excessive dross.
Shield cups protect the tip from molten spatter during piercing. Swirl rings create the vortex that stabilizes the plasma arc. Both last longer than tips and electrodes but still need periodic replacement.
The guides below cover consumable selection by machine brand, amperage matching, and techniques to maximize consumable life.
Plasma cutting electrode (hafnium insert) and nozzle/tip guide: how they wear, tip orifice size by amperage, Hypertherm vs aftermarket quality differences.
When to replace plasma consumables: cut quality indicators, arc voltage changes, pit depth measurement, cost-per-cut analysis, and techniques to extend consumable life.