Product part made of plastic. Scanning time was around 5 minutes, and post-processing took about 20 minutes. This is a good example of fast reverse engineering.
A true-to-form 3D model of an American quarter dollar, capturing the rim and both sides of the coin with its varied inscriptions, images, and digits. Scanned in 3 minutes in Artec Spider II to reveal every tiny aspect in high resolution.
The cap was made of semi-transparent plastic and required a bit of dusting with an airbrush. Then it was mounted on the scanner’s rotating platform with a clamp. A couple of mouse clicks — and scanning commenced.
The complete model of this Smart car was created from approximately 10-13 scans taken from various positions around all sides of the vehicle. We also took two scans from below, with the car raised on a car lifter.
Artec Leo made light work of this suspension bracket. It was captured in 5 minutes, and processed in Artec Studio in 7. In a total of just 12 minutes, a high-res 3D model was ready for quality inspection, reverse engineering, or however you may need to use it.
A 3D model of a manual transmission, scanned with Artec Point in 25 minutes: from capturing the outer housing that encloses all the internal components to showing off all the interlocking gears, a shifter lever, linkages, and synchronizers.
This small turbine was scanned in three passes using a rotating table — this enabled the operator to easily capture all the curves from different angles with less hand motion.