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This profile was automatically generated using 15 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 15 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 15 references Web References
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1. MCADCafe : Vision Printer Friendly Vresion
www.mcadvision.com/printer_fri - [Cached]Published on: 7/12/2006 Last Visited: 7/12/2006
by Jim Clark
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In this article, Jim Clark, Business Development Manager at 3D Scanners Ltd, a UK-based provider of non-contact optical measurement systems to CAD departments, traces the progression of reverse engineering and surfacing software, from basic modules within CAD packages through the development of classical surfacing tools, to the present where the growth of rapid surfacing packages is creating wider opportunities for the use of surfacing techniques in a range of industry sectors.
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Jim Clark is Business Development Manager at 3D Scanners Ltd, based in Coventry, England. -
2. MCADVision
www.mcadvision.com/vision.php? - [Cached]Last Visited: 2/5/2004
by Jim Clark
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In this article, Jim Clark, Business Development Manager at 3D Scanners Ltd, a UK-based provider of non-contact optical measurement systems to CAD departments, traces the progression of reverse engineering and surfacing software, from basic modules within CAD packages through the development of classical surfacing tools, to the present where the growth of rapid surfacing packages is creating wider opportunities for the use of surfacing techniques in a range of industry sectors.
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Jim Clark is Business Development Manager at 3D Scanners Ltd, based in Coventry, England. -
3. Travel Egypt - Monthly Newsletter Aug 2002
www.travelegypt.net/newsletter - [Cached]Published on: 8/1/2002 Last Visited: 5/14/2006
"It involves the same conservationists and techniques as those used in Altamira Cave in Spain, but the facsimile for the Egyptian project is 2,500 times higher resolution than Altamira and accuracy is down to a fraction of a millimeter," Jim Clark, the business development manager of 3D Scanners UK, told Al-Ahram Weekly. "The laser scanning techniques are used to capture the exact 3D form of an artwork without touching the original. A strip of light is projected onto the surface of the relief enabling an off-axis camera to capture the profile of its surface. Sophisticated computer software converts the captured information into digital form to allow a precise representation of the original surface to be viewed and manipulated on a display screen."
Clark said this technique was portable and completely harmless to the original. "The type of laser used in non-contact three-dimensional scanning applications emits a low-power (typically less then 1mw) visible continuous beam of light much the same as a laser pointer," he said.

