3D
Measurement Specialists

Offices Worldwide - 25 Years Experience

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

Expert Laser Scanning Saves Time by Creating Ready-to-use Data in One Iteration

The Company

The company produces rugged cases for electronics products such as cell phones, PDAs, iPods®, and other portable devices made by the leading manufacturers for the active customer and harsh work environments.  The hard-shell cases provide shock mitigation, water resistance, and dust and dirt protection, while allowing access to all buttons, dials, ports, and other device features.  Customers include military personnel, construction workers, police and firefighters, EMT/healthcare workers, and others whose professions require extra protection in extreme and hazardous conditions.  Business professionals, technology enthusiasts, frequent travelers, and outdoor adventurers also appreciate the strong cases that protect their valuable electronics in every environment.

The Challenge

In developing protective cases for large OEM companies’ products, the company creates an attractive value-added accessory for the end customer using off-the-shelf technology.  Their current project involved designing a case for a Blackberry® cell phone. However, in order to design the case, designers needed an accurate CAD model of the device.  The design mechanical engineer heading up the project explains, “Basically, we needed a 3D model to help create our case for a new Blackberry® smartphone called the Pearl.”

The challenge in designing OEM cases is a variation on a theme: making an extremely accurate case quickly without having finalized CAD data.  When the company’s engineers begin to design a case, the base model may exist only in CAD and is not yet a physical part.  Sometimes the item may be in the prototype or first-run stage, so the dimensions are not yet hard and fast.  Other times the OEMs are protecting proprietary data and release only the skin CAD to the designers.  All of these situations make it difficult to create a fully functional case for the product. According to the project design engineer, “When this type of data has been used to develop the case model, it takes up to one week of an engineer’s time to create a usable file with smooth, edited data because our company is not set up to do this type of work.” 

At first, the company tried another solution to generate a CAD model.  They used a desktop scanner to make a 3D model, but quickly found that the scan was of inferior quality.  The machine had no built-in logic and no processing capability, so every wrinkle and bump in the data was manifest in the physical 3D model.  The resulting data file took too much time to edit and clean up to obtain the quality necessary for case production.  

The preferred method for initiating the case design process is using a real part (rather than a CAD file from the OEM) which insures that the scan is representative of the actual physical device as it is manufactured.  However, if the engineers must wait for a production part, they must be extremely quick in their response time.  Their custom-fitted case must be released as close to the device product launch as possible. Quick turnaround is imperative and phenomenal accuracy is essential.  Most of the device’s exteriors are injection molded, but also include assemblies such as connectors, sheet metal, cast parts, stamped, metal, or machined parts, that add complications to a scanning setup.  For example, spring-loaded buttons cannot be measured with touch probes because they depress the buttons, thereby destroying the real profile shape. 

The project design engineer discovered that “it is more cost effective and much faster to have an actual production part scanned by an expert shop that can provide us with ready-to-use clean files.”  The design team found GKS Inspection Services, a division of Laser Design, Inc., through a web search and made first contact with Service Bureau Manager Larry Carlberg when he realized that the 3D desktop scanner’s results were unusable.

The Solution

The discussion about scan requirements with Carlberg was short.  The project design engineer emailed photos of the case to GKS with the critical areas marked.  He recalled, “Larry knew just what to do.” 

With over 25 years in the business, GKS metrologists have experience with all kinds of projects involving small electronic devices. “Over the years we have developed an awareness of what needs to be captured for this type of scan,” Carlberg explained. “This company needed a detailed, extremely accurate rendering of the device’s exterior skin so they could design a shell that conformed to the shape with a designated clearance.  Their shell must preserve full functionality of the device, which means that all the openings for spring-loaded buttons, ports, connectors, the battery case, and possibly a camera lens and microphone must be in exactly the right place. They design around the keypad, speaker, and microphone openings, so having a precise 3D model is essential. Non-contact laser scanning is perfect for this application because it does not distort the shape of the spring-loaded buttons and other delicate features.” 

Laser scanning systems project a line of laser light onto surfaces while cameras continuously triangulate the changing distance and profile of the laser line as it sweeps along, eliminating the problem of missing data on an irregularly shaped surface with holes such as the smartphone. The system measures fine details and captures complex freeform geometry so that the object can be exactly replicated. Laser scanners quickly measure articles, picking up tens of thousands of coordinates per second, and generating huge numbers of data points without the need for templates or fixtures.

To scan the Pearl device, Carlberg used Laser Design’s Surveyor DS-2020 system with the high accuracy RPS-120 laser probe to insure high density coordinates.  The setup also included an Aerotech rotary stage so that multiple orientations of Pearl device could be captured quickly and accurately and merged into a single “point cloud” of data using the Surveyor Scan Control (SSC) software. The SSC software finds redundant data points and matches their positions to create a whole 3D model automatically. GKS’s modeler then created a parasolid 3D model. The advantage of parasolids is that they are continuous surfaces and have no untrimmed edges, which prevent software from working with a model. Carlberg explained, “The resulting files that we sent to the case-making company were not only extremely accurate, but usable without further processing, thus saving them precious time to market.  They were thrilled with the results.”

The Results

“The data from GKS was very high quality, very usable CAD,” the project design engineer affirmed. “Having GKS perform this laser scan decreased our lead time by about a week. To create this type of data any other way is labor intensive if you do not have access to the final line CAD files from the OEMs. GKS’s files needed no further processing so we were able to start creating exterior surfaces from them immediately.”  Turnaround time was a mere 3-4 days which included obtaining the purchase order and shipping the part to GKS.

By relying on the excellent results from GKS, the design engineers were assured of accurate boundary layers and strategic locations of buttons, ports, and LEDs, and the geometric size and shape.  GKS 3D models are accurate to within a few thousands of an inch, saving the designers time by not having to redo projects due to errors in the prototype phase or to do multiple design iterations. The project engineer commented, “GKS’ scanning service allows us to finish projects more efficiently.

Since this scan job was a first step in the development of a totally new product, the process is still in progress.  However, based on his initial examination of the scan data, the design engineer concludes, “GKS gave us turnkey results. Larry nailed it on the first scan; he understood what we were after right away.   We have everything we need in hand with the resulting files. They were beautiful.”

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, contact GKS Inspection Services at 952-252-3433 or by email at: measure@gks.com

 

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