Tuesday, November 25, 2008
Friday, November 21, 2008
Reverse Engineering
2008 Reverse Engineering Roundup
Reverse Engineering is the process of taking an object or system and finding the technical components like Mechanical CAD data in order to learn how the object or system is made, with the end goal of enhancing or reproducing a physical copy.
First the object must be scanned with a digitizer, and then the large amount of data derived from the scan, must then be manipulated to meet the specifications of the new design. There are three types of scanning processes to choose from: feature-based scanning, usually done with a touch probe, laser scanning with a point-cloud and a mix of the two—hybrid scanning. When looking for a digitizer to scan objects, speed, accuracy and the volume are three major points to consider.
At one point reverse engineering was considered a non-reputable form of design. As with most trends in the CAD world, the hardware and software of reverse engineering are becoming easier to work with, quicker to use and less expensive. It’s an exciting time for reverse engineering with new products and quicker scanning processes being continually developed.
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Thursday, November 6, 2008
STL Samples
Circle Puzzle (2007)
- Drawn by Trevor Olsen in Autodesk Inventor as a student at West Islip High School (Graduated 6/07)
- Circle Puzzle STL files (~340KB)
- Circle Puzzle Assembly Animation (~20MB download)
Large Nut and Bolt (2008)
- Drawn by John Senft in Autodesk Inventor
(West Islip HS - Class of 2002)
- Nut and Bolt STL Files (~1.2MB)
- This part was drawn to examine how to create true threads (as opposed to illustrated threads) on a 3D Part, and was then used to examine tolerances and fit for FDM (fused deposition modelling) from the Dimension BST 1200 3D Printer. (Click image to enlarge)
- Drawn by Trevor Olsen in Autodesk Inventor as a student at West Islip High School (Graduated 6/07)
- Circle Puzzle STL files (~340KB)
- Circle Puzzle Assembly Animation (~20MB download)
Large Nut and Bolt (2008)
- Drawn by John Senft in Autodesk Inventor
(West Islip HS - Class of 2002)
- Nut and Bolt STL Files (~1.2MB)
- This part was drawn to examine how to create true threads (as opposed to illustrated threads) on a 3D Part, and was then used to examine tolerances and fit for FDM (fused deposition modelling) from the Dimension BST 1200 3D Printer. (Click image to enlarge)
Monday, September 22, 2008
instructables: 3-D Laser Scanner
Create your own super hi-tech 3-D laser scanner. Using just a laser pointer,
wine glass, rotating platform, and a digital video camera, you can make
accurate 3-D models of an object or person.
wine glass, rotating platform, and a digital video camera, you can make
accurate 3-D models of an object or person.
3D Laser Scanners
DAVID-Laserscanner 2.0 (free)
Incredibly Low-Cost 3D Scanner for Everyone...
http://www.david-laserscanner.com/
Incredibly Low-Cost 3D Scanner for Everyone...
http://www.david-laserscanner.com/
TriAngles 3D Scanner ($300)
http://www.intricad.com/
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