Choosing the wrong nozzle diameter is one of the most common—and most costly—mistakes in fiber laser cutting. An undersized nozzle starves the cut of assist gas, causing dross and rough edges. An oversized nozzle wastes gas and reduces cutting pressure, leading to incomplete cuts and poor quality. This comprehensive fiber laser nozzle size chart eliminates the guesswork, giving you the exact specifications for every material and thickness combination.
Whether you operate a 1kW entry-level machine or a 30kW heavy-duty system, this guide covers single layer vs double layer nozzle selection, gas pressure settings, and the specific nozzle configurations used by Precitec, Raytools, WSX, Trumpf, and Bystronic cutting heads.
Understanding Nozzle Types: Single Layer vs Double Layer
Before diving into the size chart, it is essential to understand the two fundamental nozzle designs and when to use each.
Single Layer Nozzles (Conical Nozzles)
Single layer nozzles have a simple conical design with a single gas exit orifice. The assist gas flows directly through the nozzle tip in a concentrated stream.
Best for:
- Oxygen cutting of carbon steel (mild steel)
- Applications where the oxidation reaction is desired to assist the cutting process
- High-speed thin sheet cutting where a focused gas stream is needed
How they work: With oxygen as the assist gas, the concentrated gas stream initiates and sustains an exothermic oxidation reaction at the cut front. This reaction generates additional heat that contributes to the cutting process, enabling faster speeds and cleaner cuts on carbon steel.
Double Layer Nozzles (Coaxial Nozzles)
Double layer nozzles feature an inner orifice for the laser beam and an outer annular ring that provides a secondary gas flow. This outer gas shield surrounds the cut zone.
Best for:
- Nitrogen cutting of stainless steel (produces bright, oxide-free edges)
- Nitrogen or air cutting of aluminum
- Any application requiring clean, oxidation-free cut edges
- High-power cutting (6kW+) where additional gas coverage is needed
How they work: The outer gas layer creates a protective shield around the laser beam and cut zone, preventing atmospheric oxygen from reaching the molten metal. This is essential for stainless steel and aluminum, where oxidation would discolor the edges and require additional post-processing.
Fiber Laser Nozzle Size Chart by Material and Thickness
The following chart provides recommended nozzle diameters for the most common cutting applications. These are starting-point recommendations; fine-tuning based on your specific machine, laser source, and cutting head may be required.
Carbon Steel (Mild Steel) — Oxygen Cutting
| Material Thickness | Nozzle Type | Nozzle Diameter | O₂ Pressure | Cutting Speed (3kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 – 1 mm | Single Layer | 1.0 mm | 0.6 – 0.8 bar | 10 – 20 m/min |
| 1 – 2 mm | Single Layer | 1.0 – 1.5 mm | 0.5 – 0.8 bar | 6 – 12 m/min |
| 2 – 4 mm | Single Layer | 1.5 mm | 0.5 – 0.7 bar | 3 – 6 m/min |
| 4 – 6 mm | Single Layer | 1.5 – 2.0 mm | 0.4 – 0.6 bar | 1.5 – 3 m/min |
| 6 – 10 mm | Single Layer | 2.0 mm | 0.3 – 0.5 bar | 0.8 – 1.5 m/min |
| 10 – 16 mm | Single Layer | 2.0 – 2.5 mm | 0.3 – 0.5 bar | 0.4 – 0.8 m/min |
| 16 – 25 mm | Single Layer | 2.5 – 3.0 mm | 0.3 – 0.5 bar | 0.2 – 0.4 m/min |
Note: Carbon steel cutting with oxygen uses relatively low gas pressure (0.3–0.8 bar) because the oxidation reaction provides additional cutting energy. Higher pressure can actually blow out the reaction and worsen cut quality.
Stainless Steel — Nitrogen Cutting
| Material Thickness | Nozzle Type | Nozzle Diameter | N₂ Pressure | Cutting Speed (3kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 – 1 mm | Double Layer | 1.0 – 1.5 mm | 12 – 20 bar | 8 – 15 m/min |
| 1 – 2 mm | Double Layer | 1.5 mm | 12 – 18 bar | 4 – 8 m/min |
| 2 – 4 mm | Double Layer | 2.0 mm | 12 – 16 bar | 2 – 4 m/min |
| 4 – 6 mm | Double Layer | 2.0 – 2.5 mm | 10 – 15 bar | 1 – 2 m/min |
| 6 – 10 mm | Double Layer | 2.5 mm | 10 – 14 bar | 0.5 – 1 m/min |
| 10 – 16 mm | Double Layer | 3.0 mm | 8 – 12 bar | 0.3 – 0.5 m/min |
| 16 – 25 mm | Double Layer | 3.0 – 4.0 mm | 6 – 10 bar | 0.15 – 0.3 m/min |
Note: Stainless steel nitrogen cutting requires significantly higher gas pressure than carbon steel oxygen cutting. The high-pressure nitrogen stream physically ejects the molten metal from the kerf and prevents oxidation. Insufficient pressure is the most common cause of dross on stainless steel cuts.
Aluminum — Nitrogen or Air Cutting
| Material Thickness | Nozzle Type | Nozzle Diameter | Gas Pressure | Cutting Speed (3kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 – 1 mm | Double Layer | 1.0 – 1.5 mm | 10 – 16 bar N₂ | 10 – 20 m/min |
| 1 – 3 mm | Double Layer | 1.5 – 2.0 mm | 10 – 15 bar N₂ | 5 – 10 m/min |
| 3 – 6 mm | Double Layer | 2.0 – 2.5 mm | 8 – 14 bar N₂ | 2 – 4 m/min |
| 6 – 10 mm | Double Layer | 2.5 – 3.0 mm | 8 – 12 bar N₂ | 1 – 2 m/min |
| 10 – 16 mm | Double Layer | 3.0 mm | 6 – 10 bar N₂ | 0.4 – 0.8 m/min |
Note: Aluminum has high reflectivity and thermal conductivity. Use a fiber laser with a wavelength of 1064nm (not CO2). Aluminum cutting generates significant spatter; inspect and clean nozzles more frequently.
Copper and Brass — Nitrogen Cutting
| Material Thickness | Nozzle Type | Nozzle Diameter | N₂ Pressure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5 – 2 mm | Double Layer | 1.5 – 2.0 mm | 14 – 20 bar | High reflectivity; use high-power laser |
| 2 – 4 mm | Double Layer | 2.0 – 2.5 mm | 12 – 18 bar | Requires 3kW+ for clean cuts |
| 4 – 6 mm | Double Layer | 2.5 – 3.0 mm | 10 – 16 bar | Requires 6kW+ for acceptable quality |
Warning: Copper and brass are highly reflective at 1064nm. Always use a laser source with back-reflection protection. Start with lower power and increase gradually. These materials require higher laser power than their thickness would suggest.
Nozzle Thread Specifications by Cutting Head Brand
Different cutting head manufacturers use different nozzle thread specifications. Using the wrong thread will damage the cutting head and void your warranty. The following table covers the most common cutting heads:
| Cutting Head Brand | Model Series | Thread Specification | Nozzle Diameter Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Precitec | ProCutter, PRC, Lightcutter | M11 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 5.0 mm |
| Raytools | BT210, BT240, BT300 | M16 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 5.0 mm |
| WSX | NC12, NC30, NC50 | M11 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 4.0 mm |
| Trumpf | TruDisk, BrightLine | Proprietary | 0.8 – 4.0 mm |
| Bystronic | ByStar, ByCut | M11 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 4.0 mm |
| Han's Laser | Marvel, Falcon | M11 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 4.0 mm |
| IPG | YLS series | M11 × 1.0 | 0.8 – 4.0 mm |
Important: Always verify the thread specification with your cutting head manual before ordering nozzles. Raysers supplies nozzles for all the above brands in both M11 and M16 thread specifications.
How Nozzle Diameter Affects Cut Quality
Understanding the relationship between nozzle diameter and cut quality helps you make better decisions when troubleshooting cutting problems.
Nozzle Diameter Too Small
When the nozzle diameter is smaller than recommended for the material and thickness:
- Insufficient gas flow causes incomplete ejection of molten metal
- Dross accumulates on the bottom of the cut
- Cut edges become rough and irregular
- Nozzle tip overheats and wears faster due to spatter buildup
Nozzle Diameter Too Large
When the nozzle diameter is larger than recommended:
- Gas pressure at the cut zone is reduced (same flow rate, larger area = lower pressure)
- Molten metal is not effectively ejected from the kerf
- Cutting speed must be reduced to compensate
- Gas consumption increases without quality improvement
The Goldilocks Zone
The correct nozzle diameter provides:
- Sufficient gas pressure to eject molten metal cleanly
- Adequate gas coverage to prevent oxidation (for nitrogen cutting)
- Minimal gas consumption for cost efficiency
- Optimal nozzle lifespan
Nozzle Condition and Replacement Frequency
Even the best nozzle size selection is undermined by a worn or damaged nozzle. Inspect your nozzles regularly using the following criteria:
Replace immediately if you observe:
- Deformed or irregular orifice shape (visible under 10× magnification)
- Spatter buildup inside the orifice that cannot be removed by cleaning
- Cracks or chips in the nozzle body
- Thread damage that affects seating
- Significant reduction in cut quality despite correct parameters
Typical replacement intervals by application:
- High-volume carbon steel cutting (2 shifts/day): Every 1–3 weeks
- Stainless steel cutting with nitrogen: Every 2–4 weeks
- Aluminum cutting: Every 1–2 weeks (higher spatter)
- Low-volume or precision cutting: Inspect monthly, replace as needed
Troubleshooting Common Nozzle-Related Cutting Problems
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Dross on bottom of cut | Gas pressure too low or nozzle too small | Increase gas pressure; try larger nozzle diameter |
| Rough top edge | Nozzle deformed or misaligned | Replace nozzle; perform nozzle centering calibration |
| Incomplete cuts | Nozzle too small; insufficient power | Increase nozzle diameter; verify laser power output |
| Oxidized edges (stainless) | Nitrogen pressure too low | Increase N₂ pressure; check for gas leaks |
| Nozzle burning/melting | Nozzle misaligned; beam not centered | Perform nozzle centering; check focus position |
| Inconsistent cut quality | Nozzle worn or damaged | Replace nozzle; inspect ceramic ring |
Choosing Quality Nozzles: OEM vs Aftermarket
OEM nozzles from Precitec, Raytools, and WSX are precision-made but expensive—often 3–5× the cost of quality aftermarket alternatives. The key to successful aftermarket nozzle use is selecting a supplier that maintains the same dimensional tolerances.
Critical specifications to verify with any nozzle supplier:
- Orifice diameter tolerance: ±0.01 mm or better
- Thread pitch and diameter: Must match cutting head specification exactly
- Nozzle body material: Copper or copper alloy (not brass for high-power applications)
- Surface finish: Smooth, polished interior for optimal gas flow
- ISO certification: Confirms consistent manufacturing quality
Raysers nozzles are manufactured to the same dimensional tolerances as OEM parts, with ISO 9001 certification and full compatibility with all major cutting head brands. Our customers typically save 40–60% on nozzle costs without any reduction in cutting performance.
Summary: Quick Reference Nozzle Selection Guide
| Application | Nozzle Type | Diameter Range | Gas | Pressure Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carbon steel (O₂) | Single Layer | 1.0 – 3.0 mm | Oxygen | 0.3 – 0.8 bar |
| Stainless steel (N₂) | Double Layer | 1.0 – 4.0 mm | Nitrogen | 6 – 20 bar |
| Aluminum (N₂) | Double Layer | 1.0 – 3.0 mm | Nitrogen | 6 – 16 bar |
| Copper/Brass (N₂) | Double Layer | 1.5 – 3.0 mm | Nitrogen | 10 – 20 bar |
| Thin sheet (<1mm) | Single or Double | 0.8 – 1.5 mm | O₂ or N₂ | Application-dependent |
| Thick plate (>16mm) | Single Layer | 2.5 – 4.0 mm | Oxygen | 0.3 – 0.5 bar |
For personalized nozzle selection assistance or to request samples for your specific cutting application, contact the Raysers technical team at [email protected].


