Flat glass cut planning

Build a cut plan from your own flat glass job.

Use the demo to enter pane sizes, compare standard roll widths, review linear feet and waste, and open the cut diagram for the selected plan.

Precision Film Systems demo graphic showing pane entry, roll-width comparison, cut diagram output, and film on hand planning for a flat glass job
Build a cut plan from your own flat glass job, then compare roll widths, linear feet, waste, and the cut diagram.
Quick answer

A measurement list becomes a cut plan only after it meets the roll.

A job sheet can hold every pane size and still leave the material layout unresolved. The cut plan shows whether the panes fit the selected width, how many linear feet the layout uses, where cut-layout waste appears, and how the pieces connect back to the window list.

Square footage tells you the glass area. It does not tell you the best roll-width path or the handoff your crew will actually follow.

Demo challenge

Do not take the page's word for it.

A polished sample job can make any planning tool look tidy. A completed job gives you a better read because you already know the measurements, the film ordered or pulled, the roll width used, and how the job was cut.

01

Use real measurements

Enter the pane sizes, quantities, groups, and any unusual windows from a residential, commercial, or storefront job your shop already handled.

03

Open the cut diagram

Check how repeated panes, wider pieces, doors, sidelights, and odd sizes land on the selected roll width.

Demo workflow

Three useful checks inside one demo job.

The demo is strongest when it is treated like a comparison tool, not a brochure. Start with the pane list, then let the same measurements move through roll-width comparison and into the cut diagram.

  1. 1

    Enter pane sizes

    Add width, height, quantity, and groups so the job stays organized by room, elevation, phase, or storefront section.

  2. 2

    Compare roll widths

    Run the same job against selected standard widths and see which options fit the full pane list.

  3. 3

    Review the numbers

    Check measured area, linear feet, efficiency, cut-layout waste, and warnings before trusting a material path.

  4. 4

    Use the diagram

    Open the selected layout and compare window placement against your actual cut notes or crew handoff.

Example comparison

A smaller footage number is not useful if the job does not fit.

In this demo-style comparison, a 48 inch roll appears to use fewer linear feet, but several panes do not fit that width. The warning is the point: a partial plan should not be treated like a better full-job answer.

The 60 and 72 inch rolls both fit the job, but they create different length and waste results. The shop still decides which path fits the material, ordering, handling, and remainder situation.

Roll option Fit result Linear feet Cut-layout waste Planning note
48 inch roll Partial job 65.0 ft 32.1% Warning result: four panes do not fit this roll width.
60 inch roll Full job 106.5 ft 12.8% All panes fit with the strongest efficiency in this example.
72 inch roll Full job 90.4 ft 14.4% Valid result with lower length than the 60 inch option, but slightly more waste.
Precision Film Systems demo graphic showing three steps: use a completed job, enter the original measurements, and compare the results to what the shop used
Use a job your shop already knows so the demo can be compared against real material records.
Where Precision Film Systems fits

A clearer planning layer between measurements and material use.

Precision Film Systems is built for the part of the flat glass job where pane sizes, quantities, film choice, roll width, linear feet, cut-layout waste, and cut diagrams need to line up.

It does not replace measuring, installer judgment, manufacturer guidance, or the systems your shop already uses for scheduling, invoicing, or accounting. It gives the material decision a more visible place to live.

  • Compare 36, 48, 60, and 72 inch roll-width paths from the same pane list.
  • Review measured area, linear feet, efficiency, and cut-layout waste together.
  • Keep cut diagrams connected to the entered measurements and window list.
  • Separate cut-layout waste from remainder and usable inventory when reviewing the plan.
FAQ

Questions shops ask before trying the demo.

Short answers for installers and shops deciding whether to test the cut planner with real job records.

What is a window film cut planner?

A window film cut planner uses entered pane sizes and quantities to show how the pieces can fit on selected roll widths. A useful result should include fit, linear feet, waste visibility, and a cut diagram.

Should I test the demo with a sample job or a completed job?

A completed job is the stronger test because you can compare the demo's roll width, linear feet, waste, and cut diagram against material records from work your shop already understands.

Does the demo automatically cut the film?

No. The demo shows the material plan, roll-width comparison, and cut diagram. It is not an automotive plotter controller or a replacement for the shop's cutting process.

Does Precision Film Systems choose the final roll width?

No. Precision Film Systems makes the roll-width comparison clearer, but the shop still decides which roll width, order length, cut layout, and handling path make sense for the job.

Next step

Try the demo with a job you already know.

Enter a completed flat glass job and compare Precision Film Systems against the roll width, footage, cut layout, and remainder your shop actually saw.