Hi guys. I work for an architectural hardware company and when one of the owners heard that I had been playing around with a structured light scanner he asked me to look into using it to scan and build parametric models of some of the antique hardware in his collection (potentially hundreds of pieces). If not fully parametric then at least clean meshes of the organic surfaces that aren't too big. Our company machines a lot of molds for castings so this would fit in nicely with our manufacturing capability. I just downloaded the demo for Design X and hoping there was some reference materials or tutorials that are more geared more to what I'm trying to do than whats on Gomagic's web site. I've got meshes of a few items we had scanned already. They are each from 100mb to over 600mb (in .obj format) for the biggest ones. I assume the first thing I need to do after orienting them is reduce their size (is that re-topology?) then clean the holes and errors. Design X from the promo videos looks like a good choice for this but I'd like to learn a bit of how to do it and see if this the direction we want to go. Does anyone here work with scans like these (mostly non prismatic)? Can you point me to anything to help me figure out the work flow and how to get started?
Thanks
Pete~
Design X, Getting Started with Organic Surfaces?
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Re: Design X, Getting Started with Organic Surfaces?
Hi Pete,
DesignX is very powerful and has many possibilities for the workflow!
If I remember right, there are some tutorials on the support pages and on YouTube. You can use the older Rapidform videos too, because there is little change in the workflow.
I prefer to use Geomagic Studio for wrapping and finalizing the model, to get a closed STL. Extracting a nurbs model is done in DesignX. My colleges learned it by using the videos - there are some videos for remeshing and some other for extracting the model. Most of the data can be downloaded from the support pages...
Good luck
Stefan
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DesignX is very powerful and has many possibilities for the workflow!
If I remember right, there are some tutorials on the support pages and on YouTube. You can use the older Rapidform videos too, because there is little change in the workflow.
I prefer to use Geomagic Studio for wrapping and finalizing the model, to get a closed STL. Extracting a nurbs model is done in DesignX. My colleges learned it by using the videos - there are some videos for remeshing and some other for extracting the model. Most of the data can be downloaded from the support pages...
Good luck
Stefan
Gesendet von meinem iPhone mit Tapatalk
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- I have made <0 posts
- Posts: 5
- Joined: Mon Jan 18, 2010 11:14 pm
- 14
- Full Name: Peter H
- Company Details: Arcolite Precision
- Company Position Title: Manufacturing Engineer
- Country: USA
Re: Design X, Getting Started with Organic Surfaces?
Thanks Stefan.
Is Geomagic studio still a product? I thought that it became X. there seem to be so many products offered by Geomagic for working with scan data I don't know which one is which.
Is Geomagic studio still a product? I thought that it became X. there seem to be so many products offered by Geomagic for working with scan data I don't know which one is which.