We are looking to scan yachts and powerboats and any device we have trialled has failed to deal with the reflective nature of the gelcoat.
We can not dust down a yacht with non reflective powder.
I'd welcome any input from anyone who has had success sacnning such objects.
Scan large format outdoor shiny reflective surfaces
Re: Scan large format outdoor shiny reflective surfaces
Put it in a CT-scan!
Well, that seems crazy, but the future is going in that direction.
At least they do it with cars, Caterpillats and containers: https://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/en/magazi ... entge.html
Most impressiv things of these toys: you calculate inside and outside surfaces without alignement issues.
BTW quite expensive stuff (around 1 million for a 40 cm radiusx150 height working field at 110 microns)
Well, that seems crazy, but the future is going in that direction.
At least they do it with cars, Caterpillats and containers: https://www.iis.fraunhofer.de/en/magazi ... entge.html
Most impressiv things of these toys: you calculate inside and outside surfaces without alignement issues.
BTW quite expensive stuff (around 1 million for a 40 cm radiusx150 height working field at 110 microns)
LG PF50, LG PF1500, RangeVision DIY: 2x DahengMer630, 2X12 and 2X16 mm 5Mp ZK lenses, RV turntable
Re: Scan large format outdoor shiny reflective surfaces
A little more information please:jaybee63 wrote: ↑25 Jan 2018, 08:19 We are looking to scan yachts and powerboats and any device we have trialled has failed to deal with the reflective nature of the gelcoat.
We can not dust down a yacht with non reflective powder.
I'd welcome any input from anyone who has had success sacnning such objects.
Do you need to scan the whole boat or just parts/sections?
What are you scanning it for (reverse engineering, designing accessories, video game asset)?
What level of detail and accuracy do you need in the scanns?
What's your budget?
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