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| To adjust the location and angle of the camera, loosen the thumbscrew on the bottom of the camera to slide it. In general, the angle of the camera should be set to 22 degrees. Position the camera so that the projected pattern on the object surface (nearly) fills the camera view. If the camera view shows much more than the scanned surface, you should reduce the distance between camera and object.
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| Dial “focal ring” located on top of the projector to focus the projected striped image on the scan object.
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- Adjust camera focus to get a sharp image.
- Adjust the aperture of the camera. To find the proper brightness, view the interface in DavidScanner and look at the red sinusoidal curves within the blue line regions. The red wave pattern should be as close to the blue lines as possible without being cut-off
- Once you are satisfied with the focus and exposure, then tighten the fixing screws.
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| - Once you have determined that your projector focus, the camera position and focus, and the aperture (red sine waves are close but not clipped by blue lines), all look good, then fasten everything down.
- Lock down the camera and project’s position by fastening all screws including projector, camera and camera slide. The camera lens dials can be fixed with their locking screws.focus. Use hand-force and do not over-tighten hardware.
- The next step will be calibration so everything mentioned above needs to stay in position for the remainder of the scanning process. However, the position of the tripod, it's height and angle may be changed after the calibration has occurred.
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Calibrate ScannerTo Calibrate the Scanner: - Set up the calibration corner
Carefully secure the glass calibration panels in a 90 degree angle with two fixing brackets. Handle with care. Image Added
- Choose a Calibration Pattern Size
Choose a pattern size that best fits the object/region to be scanned; should be slightly larger than the object/region. For object sizes greater than 200mm across any one dimension, use the large 240 mm pattern on the back. Note: For beginners, the pattern should be folded inwards; advanced users can avoid undesired reflections with an outwardly-folded pattern, if necessary.
- Remove the object from the scanning area. Set up the glass calibration panels in front of the projector at the same location where the object was previously placed so that the projection and camera image on your monitor are sharp. The camera image should show the projected pattern as large as possible. The 6-rings and at least 15 points of the calibration pattern must be visible. The entire camera image should be filled with about 24 to 70 markers
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4. Depending on the size of the projection, enter the correct scale length in the “scale[mm]”. This scale is written next to the dot pattern on the calibration panel. Image Added
5. Check the camera image The camera should not be able to see past the calibration panels. In the areas where the waves are visible, the red intensity curves must not reach the blue lines. If the object to be scanned is considerably darker than the white glass calibration panels, the sine waves will now be overdriven. Work with the “Projector Brightness” slider in the software to temporarily adjust the red waves for the calibration step. Image Added
6. Click “Calibrate” to calibrate the scanner. In this step the software will first measure the position, orientation, focal length and distortion coefficients of the camera. Then it will project a pattern sequence in order to determine the same optical properties of the projector. If Texturing is enabled, it will also perform a white balance measurement. After a successful calibration, DAVID will project a checkerboard pattern, whose corner points should fall exactly onto the calibration markers.
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