Company:
a privately held corporation that makes
patented wire-free charging systems for consumer electronic products.
The company has been winning accolades from the electronics industry and
beyond for its innovative wireless charging systems.
Its products simplify
charging multiple electronic devices by adapting cell phones, music and
video players, and smartphones to charge without wires on a single pad. Each chargeable device is enabled with proprietary
technology either by attaching an adapter to the back cover or replacing
the back cover with embedded charging technology. The enabled devices
are placed on the pad and charge the same as if they were plugged in to
a wall charger.
Challenge:
The
company was quickly expanding its product line and needed CAD data from
which to create adaptive battery-door covers and, new to the market,
thermoplastic elastomer gel covers that
wrap around the entire device.
While
some extremely regularly shaped electronic devices are easy to measure
and create models in CAD, others have irregularly shaped and curved
surfaces which take a very long time and are difficult to measure
accurately. The company’s chief
technology officer and co-founder had
used GKS Inspection’s scanning services in the past so he recommended
GKS, a division of Laser Design, Inc., to his team as a means to quickly
obtain accurate CAD data of the complex geometry of the electronic
products.
The vice president of
design and manufacturing engineer, was in charge of the project. “We
needed an exact replica of the electronic devices in CAD format so we
could develop our own CAD files for making the molds or tools for our
adapters,” said the VP. “The items were difficult to measure due to
their irregular shapes and the placement of the viewing windows and
ports. Measuring these types of complex profiles manually is extremely
time consuming and difficult at best.”
The devices that the
company was developing wire-free charging systems for at the time were
the popular I-Pod, I-Phone, and several Blackberries. Their complex
geometry required a non-contact, yet accurate measurement method, so
they sent the devices to GKS for 3D laser scanning. The VP commented,
“The I-Phone has a series of complex curves around the outer perimeter.
We can’t measure that manually. In this case laser scanning is a good
fit for the application.”


Solution:
After initial contact was made with Larry Carlberg,
GKS Service Bureau Manager, the project commenced. The company required
different types of scans for the 5 different devices they sent to GKS
for scanning: the complete outside of two
devices, the outside and inside of the battery cover for one device and
one battery cover only. Carlberg noted, “We have done many
phones and small electronic devices over the years, so our metrologists
know how to approach them to obtain optimal scan data.”
Scanning free-form shapes and irregular surfaces is
a prime application for non-contact laser scanning. Because the laser
scanning system projects a line of laser light onto surfaces while
cameras continuously triangulate the changing distance and profile of
the laser line as it sweeps along, the problems of missing data on an
irregularly shaped surface are eliminated. The laser line moves back
and forth over the area until the complete surface is captured. The
system measures details and complex free-form geometry so that the
object can be exactly replicated digitally. Laser scanners measure
articles quickly, picking up to 75,000 coordinate points per second, and
generate huge numbers of data points without the need for templates or
fixtures.

GKS
metrologists used Laser Design’s Surveyor WS-2030, their most automated
and accurate system for the scans. It was equipped with the
high-accuracy SLP-250 laser probe to provide the required tolerance of ±
.1 mm. Since the adapters that the company was creating from the scan
data were located on the backs of the devices, the location of keypads
and viewing screens were not as critical as the profile of the cases.
Laser scanning took less than one hour for each
device. Creating the CAD models had a day or two turnaround time. The
company received the 3D parasolid models of all five devices within a
week. “Interrogation of the data provides answers for making the model,”
explained Carlberg. “Laser scanning on the Laser Design WS system gives
us a virtual caliper for measuring irregular and complex shapes. It
characterizes the section curves easily to import the data into a very
accurate CAD model of the object scanned. Laser scanning is a very
effective means to measure existing products digitally and put them into
CAD files.”
Laser
scanning captures the real geometry and uses software to compare it to
the CAD ideal, mapping the deviations. “Depending on what the customer
wants, our modelers can average the deviation between the two sides and
create symmetry in the part,” continued Carlberg. “We can adjust the
model any way that is necessary to implement the best solution for the
customer’s needs.”
The
VP noted that many of the devices they work with are not perfectly
shaped to spec. “For instance, in some cases, a surface that is flat in
the CAD world is not flat in the real, physical world. We used the
parasolid CAD files created with 3D laser scanning at GKS as a reference
from which to create our own CAD files for the wire-free adaptors. When
a device is hard to measure manually, we get what is needed from 3D
laser scanning very quickly.”
Results:
“We find that laser scanning at GKS is good for
dealing with complex shapes,” said the company’s VP. “It saves time in
not having to manually measure and model irregular devices. Since the
digitized models can be colored realistically to look exactly like the
real thing, we can also use the files for ‘show-and-tell’ pieces before
actual production, in investor and sales presentations.”
The company will dramatically increase the number
of wire-free adaptors it carries in the next few months. The VP
elaborated, “Very soon we will have more than 9 products for sale, and
thereafter we will have wire-free products for charging pretty much any
device available. In the future, we expect our technology to be
integrated inside cell phones and other devices at the time of
manufacture. When that happens users will not have to make any
adaptations to their electronic devices to benefit from the
technology.” The speed and accuracy of GKS Inspection’s 3D laser
scanning services will help accelerate the widespread dissemination of
this company’s innovative technology.
About GKS
GKS Inspection Services has been a leading provider
of dimensional inspection, 3D laser scanning and terrestrial scanning
services for over 25 years. The
company’s Plymouth, MI lab (Detroit metro area) is accredited by the
A2LA for Mechanical Testing and Calibration and
features numerous CMMs, vision systems, 3D laser scanners,
surface analyzers and other inspection equipment. GKS also has U.S.
offices in Minneapolis and Seattle and international locations in India,
Korea, China, Taiwan and the
Netherlands. The company’s metrologists and engineers are experienced
in the automotive, defense, electronics and many other manufacturing
industries.
More Information
For additional
information about how GKS Inspection Services can improve your
manufactured product, save you money and decrease your development time,
call Larry Carlberg at 952-252-3432 or send email to
measure@gks.com