Choosing the Right Service: Coordinate Measuring Machine (CMM) Inspection or Laser Scanning

May 3, 2020 | 2 min read

What’s the Difference?

A CMM Inspection defines part features through direct contact with the part using industry standard methodology to define features of the part. It’s a highly accurate system but can be more costly to use for a large quantity of parts.

A Laser Scan can also be an inspection tool, but uses a light instead of physical contact to define features. It is a line of sight system that captures thousands of points on a part to generate a point cloud that can be related back to an actual CAD model. It is a perfect tool for collecting a lot of data in a very short amount of time. Commonly used when the need arises to reverse engineer a part, but has multiple applications.

CMM Dimensional Inspection3D Laser Scan
Best for comparing a part back to blueprintsXX
Best for larger or uniquely shaped partsXX
Best for reverse-engineering/ geometry recreationX
Best when blueprints or CAD models need to be created.X
Produces hard, accurate data on small partsX
Best for comparing against CAD modelsX
More cost-effective for dimensions under 30 featuresX

Defining Your Scan Service:

Do you need to know if a part you are producing meets the blueprint?

A CMM inspection can link parts back to blueprints and we can provide a first article inspection report (FAI/FAIR).

Need us to program a CMM for you?

We can transfer our program to your platform, whether that’s Calypso or PC-DMIS.

Is the part you need to be scanned small or large?

Depending on your part’s size and shape, we have the capability to scan parts requiring as little as sub-micron accuracy.

Do you need to reverse-engineer a part?

A laser scan is going to be more efficient.

Are you designing a part and need quick feedback on where your design stands?

A laser scan is going to be more efficient.

Do you need more data points or more accuracy in your data points?

A dimensional CMM inspection will be precisely accurate in data, which helps with first article inspections. But a part’s shape and size can limit the ability to inspect with a CMM. Laser scanning is beneficial when there are no blueprints and you need to create CAD models or blueprints from an existing part.