Advanced Computing in the Age of AI | Wednesday, May 15, 2024

Racing Aficionados Sharpen Skills and Improve Performance with Advanced Simulator Brought to Life with 3D 

<img style="float: left;" src="http://media2.hpcwire.com/dmr/Racing-Seat-Color-Error-Map_2.jpg" alt="" width="72" height="95" />CXC Simulations, maker of specialized racing simulation equipment, had a manufacturing problem that required a unique solution – designing a mounting system for a specific racing seat in a new product line. 3D scanning proved to be the answer.

CXC Simulations, maker of specialized racing simulation equipment, had a manufacturing problem that required a unique solution. The company was founded in early 2007 in Marina Del Rey, CA. This high-tech engineering firm has revolutionized the design and manufacture of advanced full-motion personal racing simulation equipment. Its highly specialized products are used not only in professional racing team training and testing environments, but also in private homes, motoring clubs, racing schools, and specialized retail settings. Each simulator is individually assembled, tested, installed, and fully supported.

CXC was designing a mounting system for a specific racing seat in a new product line. To soundly and safely attach the seat to the high force electromechanical rod-style actuators, high-accuracy locations for the mounting holes were needed, along with basic contours on the back of the seat.  Normal racing seats attach only to seat rails in a row pattern on the bottom; in the simulator, many more attachments from the upper sides and back of the seat to the actuators are needed to make the movements realistic and convincing.  The company must drill these specialized mounting holes through the solid surface of the seat and they must be pinpoint precise. To meet these accuracy requirements they turned to 3D scanning.

A secondary reason CXC decided to 3D scan the seat was to create a CAD model of the entire simulator assembly which they did not have up until this time. Although the company purchases 80% of their simulator components from industrial suppliers that provide 3D models, the free-form seat model could not be easily obtained from other sources. An added bonus of having a detailed 3D CAD model from 3D scanning is that it can be rendered and used in sales presentations and marketing materials.

Moving from Piecemeal Measurements to 3D Digital Models

CXC Simulations found GKS Services Corp. a 3D measurement company who specializes in reverse engineering and inspection. Being a relatively young company and unfamiliar with the 3D scanning world, the owner of the company began a year-long dialog with GKS Services which culminated in a well conceived and carried out 3D scanning project. “Our Account Manager walked us through the whole process,” the owner commented. “He made it easy to understand the steps involved and eventual outcomes, explaining the time and dollar savings that would accrue.”

GKS engineers laser scanned the entire seat, including both the hard shell and the soft seat padding, using the Laser Design FA system with the 10’ Platinum FaroArm® and the SLP-2000 line laser probe along with the 1/8” carbide touch probe for specific landmark features such as the mounting holes. The SLP-2000 offers a super-long 240mm (9.8”) laser line for faster scanning with better coverage than most portable scanning systems on the market today.

The non-contact laser scanning system projects a line of laser light onto all of the part’s surfaces while cameras continuously triangulate the changing distance and profile of the laser line as it sweeps along. Laser scanners measure articles quickly, picking up to 75,000 coordinate points per second, and generate huge numbers of data points without the need for special templates or fixtures. Non-contact scanning means that the problem of missing data on a complex free-form surface is greatly reduced.  The system measures fine details so that the object can be exactly replicated digitally.

The same 3D scanning setup was used to touch-probe the mounting hole locations on the seat. Rather than having to measure piecemeal by hand, CXC’s design team would be able to use the digital model to precisely position mounting components and other features to correctly fit them into the final assembly. GKS engineers merged the precise touch-probed data with the free-form laser scan data of the rest of the seat for a highly accurate composite model. The accuracy of the laser scanning was ±.005”; the touch probe accuracy was ±.002”.

The scan reproduced the part profile completely and precisely in the coordinate point cloud. The native software (Surveyor Scan Control) automatically connected the data from multiple views into a common coordinate system in a single 3D scan file. After the scanning was complete, the raw data was processed and refined in Geomagic Studio. The processed data was then modeled into a symmetrical single entity CAD model incorporating design intent.

Using touch measurement technologies alone to capture the seat’s curved irregular shapes would have taken much longer and produced a much less complete data set. Measurements taken by hand would have been sparser, never really capturing the totality of the shape. Without non-contact laser scanning, this type of exact true-to-life shape replication would be virtually impossible.

Saving Money & Gaining National Exposure

GKS delivered the highly detailed, accurate CAD model in less than a week’s time.  “After the long process of education and deciding to move forward with the scanning project, the results were fantastic,” commented Chris Considine, CXC’s owner. A “dumb” solid model with all surfaces and features gave the company a model with spot-on mounting hole locations, and also a complete model of the seat’s complex free-form organic shape that can be used to do motion studies in 3D and for rendering the object to use in product demonstrations as well.

GKS’s scanning, modeling and delivery process maintained the highest accuracy on the back curvature and mounting locations, and the resulting CAD data was verified and exported to the ideal format the company needed for their assemblies. Considine continued, “At the onset of our talks with GKS, the cost of the project seemed expensive because we didn’t understand all the applications of the 3D data. GKS was very helpful in explaining the process and the uses for the data. Once we had the model, we realized we were able to save huge money because its uses went well beyond our original purpose of creating a CAD model.” In fact, just weeks after receiving the model, the company was contacted by the Discovery Channel to do a segment on their advanced racing simulators for the show “Tech Toys 360.” Since the 3D model was already created, they were able to easily submit a complete and accurately rendered demonstration of the simulator to the producers. 

“We were very happy with the work GKS did for us. They made the process easy, and they did it right the first time. In the end, we got an extremely versatile deliverable that has saved us a lot of time and money,” Considine concluded.

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Case study courtesy GKS. 

About GKS Services / Laser Design Inc.
GKS Services and Laser Design, Inc. have been leading suppliers of ultra-precise 3D laser scanning services and systems for over 30 years, helping customers successfully complete their most complex inspection, analysis, and reverse engineering projects quickly, giving them a competitive advantage. For further information, contact GKS at 952-884-9648 or visit www.laserdesign.com.

 

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