Industrial CNC Machine Directory

Machine Comparison

Mitsubishi MV2400R vs Mitsubishi MV2400S

Mitsubishi Electric vs Mitsubishi Electric · Wire EDM

01

Summary

The Mitsubishi MV2400R and Mitsubishi MV2400S are both from Mitsubishi Electric's wire edm lineup, making this a common upgrade or lineup decision for shops already invested in the Mitsubishi Electric ecosystem. These machines are closely matched across most specifications, making the decision more about specific feature priorities, dealer support, and your existing shop ecosystem than raw spec advantages. Both machines are proven performers in production environments and represent solid investments for shops in the market for a wire edm.

02

Specifications Comparison

Specification Mitsubishi MV2400R Mitsubishi MV2400S
Control M80B touchscreen CNC M800 series (19-inch touchscreen)
Max Workpiece Weight 1,500 kg (3,307 lb) 1,500 kg (3,307 lb)
Drive System Ball screws with optical linear scales Optical Drive System (ODS)
Price Range $175,000 - $275,000 (new) $160,000 - $230,000
03

Advantages

Mitsubishi MV2400R

  • Backed by Mitsubishi Electric's dealer and service network for parts and support
  • Large mold shops cutting oversized mold plates, cavity blocks, and die sets

Mitsubishi MV2400S

  • More competitive pricing at $160,000 - $230,000 compared to $175,000 - $275,000 (new)
  • Backed by Mitsubishi Electric's dealer and service network for parts and support
  • Progressive die shops cutting large die plates where the 1,500 kg capacity and 600 mm X-travel cover typical plate sizes without workpiece repositioning
04

Verdict

This is a close matchup. The Mitsubishi MV2400R and Mitsubishi MV2400S trade advantages across different specifications, making neither a clear winner on paper alone. Your decision should come down to practical factors: which dealer is closer, which control system your operators already know, what tooling ecosystem you're invested in, and which machine's specific strengths match your highest-volume work. Get quotes on both, run test cuts with your actual parts if possible, and factor in long-term service and support costs.