Engineering

Persase 3D scanning for engineering — capturing physical geometry for analysis, reverse engineering, and design verification

How Persase Serves Engineering

ServiceHow engineering uses it
Reverse EngineeringLegacy components, physical prototypes, and undocumented hardware scanned and rebuilt as accurate CAD models — enabling modification, analysis, reproduction, and integration into modern design workflows without starting from scratch
Prototype & First Article InspectionComplete as-built verification of prototypes against design intent — full surface comparison, GD&T evaluation, and deviation analysis that gives engineering teams the clear, actionable data they need to refine designs and release for production
Building & Site Laser ScanningAccurate point cloud capture of existing infrastructure, facilities, and sites for structural assessment, retrofit design, and as-built documentation — providing the reliable base data that engineering analysis and design decisions depend on
As-Built BIM ModelsScan data converted into fully structured BIM models of existing buildings and infrastructure — ready to feed directly into structural analysis, MEP coordination, and retrofit design workflows
Custom Scan SystemsPurpose-built scanning and measurement systems for R&D, test, and validation programs — combining the right sensors, motion systems, and software for measurement requirements that standard instruments cannot address
Vision SystemsCustom camera-based inspection and dynamic tracking systems for engineering test programs — capturing data from moving parts, thermal processes, and real-time phenomena that require more than point-in-time measurement

the value

Why 3D Scanning for Engineering

Engineering problems rarely fit neatly into standard measurement categories. A component exists only as a physical part with no CAD file. A prototype comes back from fabrication and needs to be compared against design intent across every surface. An existing structure needs to be accurately documented before a retrofit can be designed. A test program requires a measurement system that doesn’t exist off the shelf. In each of these situations, traditional measurement tools — calipers, tape measures, contact probes — provide partial answers at best. 3D scanning provides complete answers — capturing full surface geometry, spatial relationships, and dimensional data across the entire object or environment in a single session.

For design and development, scan data closes the loop between physical reality and the digital model — whether that’s reverse engineering a legacy part into a CAD file, comparing a prototype against its nominal geometry, or capturing a physical test article for FEA mesh generation. For infrastructure and retrofit, accurate point clouds and as-built BIM models of existing structures give engineering teams the reliable base data they need to design around what actually exists — eliminating the field verification trips and dimensional surprises that slow retrofit projects down. For test and measurement, custom scanning and vision systems extend what’s measurable beyond what standard instruments can reach — capturing data from surfaces, processes, and phenomena that no off-the-shelf tool was designed to handle.