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If you fabricate metal in New Zealand and are ready to move from manual to automated cutting, two machines sit at the top of the workshop-level shortlist: the Strata Workshop Series WS66 and the WS1212. Both are proper CNC plasma-cutting tables, both are stocked here in New Zealand, and both are supported locally by Proline Industrial. The WS66 is the compact 600 × 600 mm option, built for tight spaces, small-batch runs, and repair work. The WS1212 is the large-format 1200 × 1200 mm table built for structural parts, larger panels, and steadier production volume.

Rather than list features and leave you to guess, this guide gives a straight recommendation. You will see what to evaluate before you buy, an honest read on where each table performs and where it stops, and a direct comparison so you can self-select with confidence. We also cover the plasma cutter you need to complete the setup and the real fabrication jobs these tables handle around the country, from signage and brackets through to structural steel and farm equipment parts.

What Makes a CNC Plasma Cutting Table with Torch Height Control Top Rated?

Plenty of tables look similar in a photo. What separates a genuinely capable machine from a frustrating one comes down to a short list of signals to check before you spend a cent, including the total cost, not just the purchase price.

Cutting accuracy and repeatability. A CNC cutter earns its place by producing the same part, to the same tolerance, hundreds of times over. Quality workshop tables driven by rack-and-pinion motion typically maintain positional accuracy to within a fraction of a millimetre, though your finished edge always depends on travel speed, consumable condition, and how well the plasma is dialled in.

Bed size and usable cutting area. The number on the box is the frame size. What matters is the usable cutting area inside it, because that is the largest part you can nest and cut in a single pass.

Build quality and frame rigidity. Plasma cutting is fast, and the gantry moves quickly. A rigid, well-braced frame keeps the torch steady, which is what keeps your lines crisp and your holes round.

Controller ease of use. A standalone controller that reads standard cut files without a tangle of extra computers shortens the gap between drawing a part and cutting it.

Plasma cutter compatibility. The table is the motion system. It still needs a CNC-ready plasma source matched to the thickness you cut.

Availability and local support. A table stuck on a container overseas cuts nothing. Local stock, local parts, and local support protect uptime, help a machine last for 20 years, and reduce ownership costs.

CNC plasma cutting is generally more cost-effective than laser and waterjet systems for fabrication work, especially once support and consumables are factored in.

Those criteria map directly onto the questions fabricators ask us most often. Here is the short version before we profile each table. Prices vary significantly depending on the machine type and the support it offers. Regular maintenance is still required to keep any CNC plasma table performing accurately over time.

Strata Workshop Series WS66: 600 × 600 mm Cutting Table

The WS66 is the compact member of the range. With a 600 × 600 mm working area, it is designed for workshops and fabrication bays that need accurate, repeatable CNC cutting without sacrificing a large floor footprint. It pairs automatic torch height control with a standalone CNC controller, so the torch keeps a consistent standoff across the plate, and you can run cut files without building a separate computer station.

What it cuts well: smaller components where precision and repeatability matter more than sheer size. Think signage and lettering, mounting brackets, gussets, flanges, gasket blanks, decorative panels and one-off repair parts.

Who it suits: smaller workshops, sign makers, maintenance teams and fabricators taking their first considered step into CNC cutting. If your typical part fits comfortably inside a 600 mm square, the WS66 removes the manual marking out and freehand cutting that eats time and introduces error.

Where it stops: it is honestly a compact table. If you routinely process full sheet or long structural sections, you will spend time repositioning material, and that repositioning is where a larger bed earns its keep. Bought for the right work, though, the WS66 is an efficient, tidy and genuinely productive machine.

Strata Workshop Series WS1212: 1200 × 1200 mm Cutting Table

The WS1212 steps up to a 1200 × 1200 mm working area, and the extra capacity changes what the table is for. It is a large-format plasma-cutting solution built for workshops that need to cut larger sheets accurately and maintain a steadier flow of work. A bigger table also improves throughput by letting you nest more parts from one sheet with minimal material waste, and it gives you more flexibility when working with full sheets. Alongside integrated torch height control, it adds a waterbed system, which helps contain dross and fume and supports cleaner, more consistent results across a production shift.

CNC plasma cutting can also run at speeds up to 300 inches per minute, which matters when the table is used for regular production.

What it cuts well: structural brackets and base plates, larger panels, machine guards, trailer and truck components, and multiple smaller parts nested onto a single sheet for efficient batch cutting, across material thicknesses ranging from thin sheets to thick plates.

Who it suits: established fabrication businesses and busier workshops running regular production cutting rather than occasional jobs. If cutting is a core part of how you make money each week, the larger bed and the waterbed system pay back through increased throughput and a cleaner working environment.

Compared with the WS66, the WS1212 is less about tight spaces and more about capacity and volume. It requires more floor space and a higher initial outlay, and in return, it handles work that the smaller table simply cannot handle. For a shop that has outgrown manual cutting, it is the more future-ready choice.

WS66 vs WS1212: Which Is Right for Your Workshop?

Here is the direct comparison. The right table is the one that matches the parts you actually cut, not the one with the largest number.

FeatureStrata WS66Strata WS1212
FormatCompact, space-savingLarge format
Torch height controlAutomaticIntegrated
Cutting bedStand-alone controller setupWaterbed system for cleaner cutting
Best suited toSignage, brackets, smaller parts, repairsStructural parts, larger panels, batch nesting
Typical userSmall workshops, occasional and small batchEstablished fabricators, regular production
FootprintCompact, suits tight baysLarger, needs dedicated floor space
Working area600 × 600 mm1200 × 1200 mm

 

Choosing between them is genuinely straightforward. If most of your work is signage, lettering, brackets and smaller components, and floor space is tight, the WS66 is the right buy. You get accurate, repeatable CNC cutting without paying for capacity you will not use. If you are a structural steel shop or any fabricator cutting larger sheets and running regular production, the WS1212 is the one. The larger bed and waterbed system are not luxuries at that volume; they are what keep the work flowing and the finish clean. When in doubt, remember that a larger table also comes at a higher price, so size up only if your parts or volume genuinely justify the extra capacity.

Compatible Plasma Cutters for the WS Series

A CNC plasma cutting table is the motion system. It still needs a plasma cutter as the actual cutting source, and the two have to be matched. Look for a CNC-ready plasma unit that offers a machine torch and a CNC interface so the CNC control software can communicate cleanly with the table hardware, torch height control, and plasma source for reliable operation. As part of the setup, you may also need power and air provision for the plasma cutter and an air compressor.

The thickness you cut sets the amperage you need. Outlet requirements vary by machine, with some CNC plasma systems using a 120V/20 amp outlet, while a well-specified single-phase option, such as the Strata AdvanceCut60, is a sensible reference point: it is a 60 amp inverter unit that runs on standard 230 volt single phase power, produces a clean production cut in carbon steel up to around 20 mm, and is built CNC-ready. Machines such as the Hypertherm Powermax65 cut up to 20 mm in mild steel, which is the kind of capacity buyers should compare. For heavier or higher-volume work, larger three-phase machines further increase capacity.

If you already own a plasma cutter, it may pair with the table, provided it is CNC compatible with the right torch and interface. If it is a purely handheld unit without that capability, budget for a matched machine so the setup performs as intended. You can compare current CNC-ready options on the Proline plasma cutters category page, and the team can advise on the right pairing for your material and volume. Lower consumable costs than laser systems are one reason CNC plasma remains attractive for thicker plate work.

CNC Plasma Cutting Applications in NZ Sheet Metal Fabrication

These tables are not abstract. Around New Zealand, they earn their keep on everyday fabrication work. The process uses a high-temperature plasma arc to melt steel and expel molten material, which is why it cuts conductive material quickly.

Signage and lettering: sign makers cut crisp letters, logos and decorative panels from sheet metal with repeatable edges that need little finishing, including intricate profiles with curves and holes.

Structural steel components: fabricators produce base plates, cleats, gussets, and brackets to consistent tolerances, which speeds up downstream welding and assembly.

Agricultural equipment parts: rural workshops cut and replace implement components, guards, mounting plates and repair parts, often faster than sourcing them in.

Automotive panel work: panel and restoration shops use this tool to fabricate automotive parts, cutting brackets, mounts, and custom panels for repairs, modifications, and one-off builds.

Architectural metalwork: balustrades, screens, planters and feature panels come off the table as clean, repeatable parts ready for finishing.

Plasma cutting is generally faster than routing and oxyfuel for many fabrication jobs. The common thread is repeatability. Once a part is drawn and nested, a CNC plasma cutter reproduces it exactly, again and again, without the manual marking out and freehand error that slows a workshop down, provided the workpiece is electrically conductive. For a fabricator cutting the same parts week after week, that consistency is where the machine pays for itself.

Why Buy from Proline?

Both tables are stocked in New Zealand, so there is no import wait and no need to ship a large machine across the world before you can cut. That alone is a real advantage when a job is booked, and the material is already on the floor.

Beyond stock, Proline Industrial is the local supplier, which means faster delivery, New Zealand-based support and ready access to compatible plasma cutters, consumables and accessories through one channel. As a distributor for established plasma brands, including Strata, the team can help you match the table to the right cutting source for your material and volume, advise on optional add-ons and accessories when a workshop is moving from light work into more production-focused CNC plasma cutting, and keep you supplied with the parts that keep it running. It is also worth comparing Proline with other suppliers on support depth, parts availability and system matching, not just the upfront price. For a workshop investing in its first CNC plasma cutting table, buying local is simply the lower-risk path.

Knowledge Hub

FAQ's

What is the best CNC plasma cutting table for a small workshop in NZ?

What plasma cutter do I need for a CNC table?

How accurate is a CNC plasma cutting table?

What is the difference between the WS66 and WS1212 CNC cutting tables?

Can a CNC plasma table cut stainless steel and aluminium?

Are CNC cutting tables available in NZ with local support?

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