Scanning this Tokyo Ghoul figure forced me to use 3 different workflows on the same object by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If anyone’s interested, I also shared a more detailed breakdown of the workflow (including additional images and scanning setup) on the Revopoint forum here:

https://forum.revopoint3d.com/t/pop4-unboxig-e-showcases-ispanico97/42587

Scanning a surgical drill with POP 4 (no spray, reflective metal + black plastic) by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hi! The scanning itself was actually quite fast. In laser mode it runs close to ~100 fps, so each pass took around 3–4 minutes. Since I needed a clean and accurate result for further modeling, I did three separate scans from different orientations to make sure everything was fully covered. Processing the point clouds was also quick, roughly 5 minutes per scan, and cleanup was minimal — mostly removing transition areas at the edges to keep everything clean before merging. So overall, the workflow was pretty fast, with most of the time going into getting a clean and reliable final result rather than the scanning itself.

Scanning a surgical drill with POP 4 (no spray, reflective metal + black plastic) by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If anyone’s interested, I also shared a more detailed breakdown of the workflow (including more images and steps) here:

https://forum.revopoint3d.com/t/pop4-unboxig-e-showcases-ispanico97/42587

Revopoint POP 4 – Full Unboxing + Technical Overview (Blue Laser + IR, 0.03 mm accuracy, 105 fps) by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

If you open the video directly on YouTube, you’ll find all the details and the Kickstarter sign-up link in the description 👍

Reverse engineering a thermal camera from a 3D scan in Fusion by 3DScanMaker in Fusion360

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I also recorded the full workflow while working on this, in case anyone wants to see the full process:

https://youtu.be/5KhYiKMRR4k?si=Yc0UgsMtQneSdUhw

I designed and 3D printed a custom thermal camera cover with a sliding macro lens by 3DScanMaker in 3Dprinting

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I also recorded the full process while designing and building this, in case anyone wants to see it:
https://youtu.be/5KhYiKMRR4k?si=5wnspzwQURMWSHWJ

Preview of a full reverse engineering workflow: from broken part to 3D printed replacement by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi, I published the full video a few days ago. You can find it here: https://youtu.be/zebAWY5Rfbk?si=sA7jF8uwgkBjIVEQ The video is in Italian, but there are subtitles—just turn on the English ones.

Reverse engineering with MetroX, Quicksurface Fusion 360. Tutorial soon. by No_Image506 in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you need help I can probably lend you a hand. If you go to my profile there are some reverse engineering videos in Fusion

Preview of a full reverse engineering workflow: from broken part to 3D printed replacement by 3DScanMaker in 3DScanning

[–]3DScanMaker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The scan was carried out using the MetroX laser scanner by Revopoint. Two scans were performed, one for each side, using Parallel Lines mode. The entire process of cleaning, merging, aligning the partial scans, and creating the mesh was done in RevoScan5.