Hi all,
I will try not to bore you all but am new to the world of 3D scanning.
I own a small motorcycle accessory business and have developed a few of our own products and looking to expand the range and to use a 3d scanner to scan parts of the bike.
The bit I am unsure of and looking for guidance on is using the scan models within CAD to design parts that will fit to or around the original part. So picking up mounting points and component edges to create a new part in CAD.
If any one can advise what would be a useable solution that would be a great start.
Many thanks
Phil
Newbie signing in
Re: Newbie signing in
Hi Phil.Moto-Mate wrote: ↑28 Feb 2023, 16:15 Hi all,
I will try not to bore you all but am new to the world of 3D scanning.
I own a small motorcycle accessory business and have developed a few of our own products and looking to expand the range and to use a 3d scanner to scan parts of the bike.
The bit I am unsure of and looking for guidance on is using the scan models within CAD to design parts that will fit to or around the original part. So picking up mounting points and component edges to create a new part in CAD.
If any one can advise what would be a useable solution that would be a great start.
Many thanks
Phil
What you want to do is definitely very doable, It kind of depends on how much time and money you willing to invest.
What cad package are you using currently?
µ
Re: Newbie signing in
Hi there,
Time is less of an issue than money
So far I have been using Free CAD which has done everything I need but if I need to upgrade then that is not an issue.
It's more about understanding how I can create a separate 3D drawing / model from a scanned file.
Time is less of an issue than money

So far I have been using Free CAD which has done everything I need but if I need to upgrade then that is not an issue.
It's more about understanding how I can create a separate 3D drawing / model from a scanned file.
- greenskynet
- Posts: 127
- Joined: 12 Nov 2021, 19:02
Re: Newbie signing in
it depends on your object and mesh file. for industrial parts, you need to import the scan data to a CAD software like CATIA, Geomagic, NX and ... . then you can redesign/reverse your part on the CAD software.
these softwares also have automatic surfacing factions, but the final result of automatic functions is not perfect.
Re: Newbie signing in
Yes. but I got the impression that he wanted to stay legitimate, and didn't want to spend a lot of money. I doubt he's going to spend $20K for a seat of just one application. Remember, he still has to buy the scanning hardware. Buying something like a scan lizard or a, or revo pop might work for him, and then Mesh mixer, and fusion 360 are the most affordable CAD/processing packages that can reasonably do reverse engineering from mesh data. At least, That's my opinion.greenskynet wrote: ↑01 Mar 2023, 08:39it depends on your object and mesh file. for industrial parts, you need to import the scan data to a CAD software like CATIA, Geomagic, NX and ... . then you can redesign/reverse your part on the CAD software.
these softwares also have automatic surfacing factions, but the final result of automatic functions is not perfect.
S11.jpg
µ
- OBNRacerMan
- Posts: 369
- Joined: 12 Aug 2019, 09:46
- Location: Obninsk, Russia
Re: Newbie signing in
As an owner, among other scanning systems, I can also say that Lizard, despite its very low cost, the lack of software support for working with markers does not allow you to comfortably use this model to scan something large (even with marker simulation enabled due to the built-in into it a monochrome texture camera)
Soft: RangeVision DIY, Calibration panel/Rotary tables - RangeVision, Prj: LG PF1500G, Cam: Daheng Mercury MER2-630-60U3M-L (USB3.0, monochrome) x2, Obj: ZLKC FM12036MP5 (F2.8/5Mp/12-36mm) x2. And a handheld scanner Creality Ferret
- greenskynet
- Posts: 127
- Joined: 12 Nov 2021, 19:02
Re: Newbie signing in
how are you Micr0Micr0 wrote: ↑01 Mar 2023, 14:35 Yes. but I got the impression that he wanted to stay legitimate, and didn't want to spend a lot of money. I doubt he's going to spend $20K for a seat of just one application. Remember, he still has to buy the scanning hardware. Buying something like a scan lizard or a, or revo pop might work for him, and then Mesh mixer, and fusion 360 are the most affordable CAD/processing packages that can reasonably do reverse engineering from mesh data. At least, That's my opinion.
for CAD software, there are many cheaper solutions. but personally I can't imagine my world without CATIA
for scanner, I don't know lizard at all, but about revo pop, some of my group members have it, the results are not as accurate as enough for scanning industrial parts. but it can be a point to start.
and based on my experiences, it is better to buy something good for once and use it for ever, instead of wasting time on bad and low quality hardware and tool. it is my personal idea. but there are many other parameters that can affect this method, so it is not absolute