touch probe
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Author(s):  
S.E. Sadaoui ◽  
N.D.M. Phan

Coordinate measuring machines (CMMs) are the standard displacement systems used for measurements in dimensional metrology. Since measurement with a touch probe mounted on a CMM provides high accuracy, repeatability, and reliability, it has been widely used for mechanical part inspection in manufacturing. The inspection process requires the use of several sensor orientations and optimal positioning of the part in order to measure all features. Recently, the field of probing path planning has become a huge and active research field. In this paper, various techniques aimed at generating the probe paths for part inspection are reviewed. Multiple issues related to the positioning of the part to maximise accessibility, analysis of probe accessibility to measure all inspection features, optimisation of the measurement sequence, distribution of measurement points, and collision avoidance are mentioned. The common research approaches and potential algorithms in this field are also discussed in this paper.


2020 ◽  
Vol 287 (1940) ◽  
pp. 20202322
Author(s):  
C. J. du Toit ◽  
A. Chinsamy ◽  
S. J. Cunningham

Some probe-foraging birds locate their buried prey by detecting mechanical vibrations in the substrate using a specialized tactile bill-tip organ comprising mechanoreceptors embedded in densely clustered pits in the bone at the tip of their beak. This remarkable sensory modality is known as ‘remote touch’, and the associated bill-tip organ is found in probe-foraging taxa belonging to both the palaeognathous (in kiwi) and neognathous (in ibises and shorebirds) clades of modern birds. Intriguingly, a structurally similar bill-tip organ is also present in the beaks of extant, non-probing palaeognathous birds (e.g. emu and ostriches) that do not use remote touch. By comparison with our comprehensive sample representing all orders of extant modern birds (Neornithes), we provide evidence that the lithornithids (the most basal known palaeognathous birds which evolved in the Cretaceous period) had the ability to use remote touch. This finding suggests that the occurrence of the vestigial bony bill-tip organ in all modern non-probing palaeognathous birds represents a plesiomorphic condition. Furthermore, our results show that remote-touch probe foraging evolved very early among the Neornithes and it may even have predated the palaeognathous–neognathous divergence. We postulate that the tactile bony bill-tip organ in Neornithes may have originated from other snout tactile specializations of their non-avian theropod ancestors.


Author(s):  
S. Robson ◽  
L. MacDonald ◽  
B. Sargeant

Abstract. Understanding the performance of large high performance manufactured structures can require highly accurate dimensional measurement across large volumes with the often conflicting capability to record critical parts of the structure in fine detail. Examples include turbine blades, aircraft wings and off-site manufactured modular structures assembled on-site for city, energy and transport infrastructure. Established large-volume industrial metrology systems such as laser trackers and photogrammetry partially meet the need through the measurement of targets and reflectors, but are limited in capability to record high density local detail needed to capture the finest manufactured features. Whilst large-volume surface sensing is possible with laser radar, photogrammetric pattern projection and contact probing for example, the detail required at a local level typically demands local sensing which generally takes the form of a tracked sensor such as a triangulation laser scanner or hand held touch probe. Local sensing systems face challenges where surfaces have fine detail of similar magnitude to the local sensing system sampling capability and particularly for optical sensors where the light reflected back to the sensor by the surface includes specular reflections compounded by local geometry. This paper investigates how Reflection Transformation Imaging (RTI) with a dome camera and lighting system might be calibrated, characterised and tracked as an alternative technology that is more robust to material surface properties and capable of very fine surface detail capture. Laboratory results demonstrate the capability to characterise and locate the dome to sub-millimetric accuracy within a large-volume tracked space to achieve local surface sampling at the 30 μm × 30 μm level. A method utilising sparse touch probe points to seed conversion of low and high frequency normal maps into a common 3D surface is explored with local agreement with laser tracker surface probe check points to the order of 30 μm.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Syed Hammad Mian ◽  
Usama Umer ◽  
Hisham Alkhalefah

The phenomenon of coordinate measuring machines has led to a significant improvement in accuracy, adaptability, and reliability for measurement jobs. The coordinate measuring machines with scanning capabilities provide the alternative to output precise acquisition at a faster rate. However, they are less accurate as compared to discrete probing systems and slower than the noncontact techniques. Therefore, the data acquisition using a scanning touch probe needs improvement, so that it can provide commendable performance both in terms of accuracy and scanning time. The determination of appropriate scanning parameters is crucial to minimize the inaccuracy and time associated with the scanning process. However, it can be demanding as well as unreliable owing to the presence of uncertainty from a multitude of factors that may influence the measurement process. The optimization of data acquisition using a scanning touch probe is a multiresponse process which involves definite uncertainties from various sources. Therefore, multioptimization tools based on grey relational analysis coupled with principal component analysis and fuzzy logic were employed to enhance the utilization of the scanning touch probe. The work described here has the objective to identify the appropriate combination of scanning factors which can simultaneously boost the accuracy and lessen the scanning time. This study demonstrates the capability and effectiveness of the uncertainty theory based optimization methods in coordinate metrology. It also suggests that the uncertainty associated with the parameter optimization can be significantly reduced using these techniques. It has also been noticed that the results from the two techniques are in accord, which corroborates their application in coordinate metrology. The result from this study can be applied to other probing systems and can be broadened to include more experiments and parameters in various scenarios as needed by the specific application.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 4-10
Author(s):  
Joby V John ◽  
Manikandan

Orthopedic implants are a type of joint implant such as knee and hip implant to replace the severely injured or diseased joints for people who suffer from joint problems and bring those people back to a normal life. The total number of knee and hip replacement surgeries per year in US keeps increasing in the recent years and will hit 3.48 million in 20 years. However, once the implant replacement surgery is finished, doctors and surgeons have difficulty to observe and obtain the detailed information of the implant. Existing methods for implant identification suffer from several drawbacks. First, the information is not stored on the implant but somewhere else, which can raise the risk of data loss or counterfeiting. Second, most hospitals use paper based archives to keep the patient history whose management is a huge cost. Third, it takes much time to search for the implant and patient information, which does not only increase the risk of mistakes but also increases the cost. Aiming at providing an efficient and accurate way for orthopedic implant identification to reduce time and cost, a method of using radio-frequency identification (RFID) technology, a wire- less radio frequency communication technology, for orthopedic implant identification has been proposed.


Author(s):  
Tsvetan Kaldashev

The present paper proposes a method for measuring and compensating for error establishment. The measurement is done with a touch probe and the measuring program is a macro program. A mathematical model was developed to experimentally determine the error of non-alignment of the axis of rotation of the workpiece with the physical axis of rotation of mass C. A virtual approach to compensate for the error of establishment by using a postprocessor for the particular machine was also proposed.


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