3D laser scanning is a very accurate, fast and safe contact-free method used for survey of real state of complicated technological complexes, such as industrial halls, assembly lines and equipment, complicated pipelines and other complex units. The target is to create virtual model of a real object with minimal loss of information about its dimensions and shape.
Laser scanning and consequent processing of measured data requires costly hardware and software equipment that ensures very quick, accurate and low-price data gathering and processing of large data volume.
3D scanner uses a phase-shift or a pulse laser technology for length measurement and a space polar method in order to determinate coordinates directly in a 3D area. The density of points that describe surface of scanned objects is determined by the resolution in vertical and horizontal direction (usually 5 × 5 mm). So-called point cloud, a large set of points (up to hundreds of millions) defined by three-dimensional coordinates, is a primal output of laser scanning. The point cloud carries very accurate information about the shape and dimensions of measured objects.
It is useful to transform the point cloud to CAD model for further data processing. Translation to CAD format is performed in specialized applications where scanned points are one-by-one substituted by standardized objects (pipe, H-beam, flange…) or by simple objects (block, lever, sphere…) that accurately describe more complicated objects. Formats that are regularly used in CAD applications such as STEP, WRL, 3Ds and others figure as output.