Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
730098 Measurement 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A laser rotary-scanning measurement system was developed for the reverse engineering of 360° objects. The system is constructed by an optical head and a rotary indexing. The optical head is composed of a laser diode strip-light projector and dual CCD cameras. Based on the principle of structured-light triangulation, a laser line is projected onto the object upon which the distorted line is captured by dual CCD cameras from left and right simultaneously. By processing a series of line fittings from the discrete angular positions of an object, the entire 3D profile can be reconstructed. Since the actual space coordinates of the object are computed according to the geometric relationship between the coordinate of optical head system and the coordinate of the rotary indexing systems, if these two coordinate systems are not in good alignment, errors in the computed coordinates will be introduced.This paper describes the influences of the alignment and eccentricity errors of the laser rotary-scanning measurement system on the computed geometrical profile. Calibration procedures are then proposed to adjust the alignment to avoid image distortions and thus enhance the system accuracy. Experimental results show that this easy-to-use calibration procedure can significantly improve the accuracy of the system.

► Describes the influences of axis inclination and eccentricity errors of rotary system. ► A simple calibration procedure for rotary non-contact measurement system was proposed. ► Experimental results show that the calibration procedure can be easily executed. ► The accuracy of the calibrated system can be improved.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Control and Systems Engineering
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