The choice between an oxy-acetylene cutting machine and a plasma cutter depends on various factors, including the type of work, the materials, and your specific requirements.
Oxyacetylene and gas profile cutting are best for thicker mild and low carbon steels, also, no electricity is needed, so it's ideal for applications where portability is an important factor like fieldwork. The outlay and operational costs are also fairly cheap compared to other methods. However it is a slow process, and doesn't work well when cutting stainless steel, aluminium, or non-ferrous metals.
On the other hand, plasma cutting cuts through all conductive metals (steel, stainless steel, aluminium, copper etc.), and offers faster, cleaner cuts with minimal heat distortion. It works best for cutting thin-medium material thicknesses (1mm-50mm), depending on the machine's power output. The initial equipment cost is higher than flame cutting, and it also requires an electrical supply as well as compressed air. Plasma cutting isn't a suitable process for thick metals, but if you need speed, precision and versatility on thinner sheet metal, a plasma cutter is the way to go.
Many metal fabricators use a combination of both methods based on the application, as found on a CNC plasma gas profile cutter. Check out our guide to help you choose between flame cutting or plasma cutting here.