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Using SMR Nests to Simplify Object Measurements

Contributing Editor: Ray Ryan, Vice President of Sales, East Coast Metrology

East Coast Metrology (ECM) has a client who requires a special rectangular X-Ray fixture to be placed at the center of their imaging room to calibrate the position of the X-Rays relative to the treatment beam. Originally, each time the client wanted the X-Ray system checked for alignment, the fixture would need to be measured and moved accordingly until it was centered accurately. This required the measurement of 3 planes, construction of intersecting geometry, building a reference frame from the geometry and finally computing the corrections.  The process was iterative and very time consuming since the positioning tolerance was very tight (+/- 0.1 mm).

brunson_ecm_smr_xray

ECM and Brunson worked together to develop a targeting scheme using ½ inch, threaded SMR nests that could be placed on the X-Ray fixture to allow direct measurement and the use of a software watch window that allowed a laser tracker technician to measure at least 3 points to set the fixture within tolerance relative to a nominal value. Using this approach greatly simplified the process and reduced the time to position the fixture by 80%. Additionally, the fixture geometric features were not made to exacting standards, so the legacy process wasn’t completely repeatable. Using the SMR nests proved to be highly repeatable and thus improved X-Ray alignment results.


Ray Ryan
By Ray Ryan on May 7, 2014 10:03:00 AM

Topics: East Coast Metrology, Metrology, Contributing Editors

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The Brunson blog is designed to be a platform for collaborative exploration in the field of metrology. You can expect to explore new Brunson products, hear from industry professionals invited to be contributing editors, and gain insight from customers who use Brunson products. So if you are one of the chosen few people who understand that Metrology is not a study of the weather, please join us here.