3D Measurement Specialists

Offices Worldwide - 25 Years Experience

Sign-up for a complimentary 3D Scanning industry magazine

     Home     |     Services     |     Products     |    News & Case Studies    |  Contact Us   |   Industry Info   |   Join Newsletter


Laser Scanning Helps Fit Internal Components in Small Digital Projector

Laser scanning played a key role in engineering internal components to fit within a 2.05 inch by 3.69 inch by 9.75 inch portable digital projector. The problem with verifying the fit of components produced by rapid prototyping is that their tolerances are typically much looser than the finished parts. So they provide only a rough idea of how the assembly fits together, which wasn’t enough for a groundbreaking design like the under 2 pound projector. If inaccuracies in the rapid prototype parts had caused engineers to make bad decisions, they could have been forced to make additional $50,000 die casting molds and, worse yet, delayed the product introduction by 4 to 6 weeks which would have cost millions in revenues. The engineers overcame this problem by using GKS Inspection Services’ service bureau to reverse engineer the rapid prototype parts to an accuracy of 0.001 inch, making it easy to distinguish between problems caused by prototype inaccuracies and problems with the design. Based on the prototype measurements, engineers made several changes to the design and also adjusted tolerances in several areas. “Laser scanning made it possible to validate our rapid prototype parts to the master solid model and use them to accurately evaluate our design intent,” said the manufacturer’s Product Manager. “Once we identified a critical area, the laser scanning service bureau zoomed in for an extremely close look that helped us get our product to market weeks faster with a perfect fit.”

The projector’s compact size created numerous mechanical engineering challenges. The greatest challenge was fitting all of the components within the die-cast magnesium alloy case. The complexity of the task was increased by the fact that the geometry of the case is so complex, with numerous contoured 3D surfaces, so it’s very difficult to measure. Furthermore, there are numerous features on the case that need to mate up with internal components. “We built up an assembly model of the entire projector during the design process and everything seemed to fit together just fine,” the Product Manager said. But there was no way that we would consider investing in die casting tooling without having actual parts that we could put together and make sure they worked right. The problem that we ran into, and have faced many times in the past, is that the tolerances involved in the stereolithography process are rather large, typically about 20 thousandths of an inch. The production process has much tighter tolerances, around 5 thousandths. So when we made the prototypes and put them together we had no way of knowing if the interferences we were seeing were due to the prototypes being out of the production tolerances or problems with our design. We also wondered if other areas that fit together fine were actually fitting only because the prototypes were out of tolerance and would no longer fit once we went into production.”

“We took some measurements on a coordinate measuring machine but this was not very helpful because there are no flat surfaces on the part so there really aren’t any reference points to measure against,” the Product Manager continued. “Fortunately, we had faced this same problem on previous, if not quite as congested designs, and developed a very viable solution. Laser scanning can replicate the complete geometry of a complex part in the form of a surface model to a high level of accuracy, typically about 1 thousandth. Then the model can be superimposed upon the original design geometry to determine exactly where they differ.”

The pre-production prototypes of the critical components were shipped to GKS Inspection Services and within a couple of days the projector manufacturer received computer aided design files that defined their complete geometry. Each individual point was accurate to within 8 microns and surfaces generated from the point cloud were accurate to at least 0.001 inch. The projector manufacturer identified several problem areas and asked GKS Inspection Services to zoom in and rescan them at a higher level of accuracy. “The as-built geometry provided by GKS Inspection Services made it possible to compare the geometry of the prototypes to the design intent and determine exactly where they differed. That made it possible to determine which fit problems we saw were caused by the prototypes being out of tolerance and which were actually problems with the design. We also checked the prototypes for areas where being out of tolerance made the prototypes fit together better than we could have achieved with the actual production parts. Based on the results, we made several design changes that addressed interference issues that, if they hadn’t been fixed, could have caused delays and additional tooling costs. In the end, we saved a considerable amount of time because we were able to zero in on the real problems and not waste any effort on the issues that were caused by prototype inaccuracies. The first production parts produced with the original tooling fit together perfectly, making it possible to beat competitors to market with a product that is substantial smaller and lighter than existing products.

 

More GKS News and Stories
(Metrology and Laser Scanning Services)

View Laser Design News and Stories
(Laser Scanning Systems)

     Privacy     |     Legal     |     About GKS     |                                                                                                   © 2008 GKS Inspection Services