Manufacturing
Faster inspection, less scrap, better parts — from prototype through full production.
Manufacturing quality starts with measurement. But traditional measurement tools — calipers, CMMs, go/no-go gauges — are slow, measure only discrete points, and can’t keep pace with the demands of modern production. 3D scanning captures the complete geometry of every part in a single session, compares it automatically against the nominal CAD model, and generates a full inspection report without manual data entry — delivering better quality data faster and at every stage of the manufacturing process, from first article through production inspection, reverse engineering, and automation.
Persase in action — 3D scanning for manufacturing inspection, quality control, and production automation
How Persase Serves Manufacturing
| Service | How manufacturing uses it |
|---|---|
| Precision Component Scanning | Complete surface capture of machined parts, castings, and formed components — full geometry compared against CAD with deviation maps and GD&T results, delivering far more information than point measurements alone |
| Automated Inspection Programming | Custom inspection routines that collect scan data, compare against nominal CAD, evaluate all GD&T tolerances, and generate a complete inspection report automatically — the same program run consistently for every part, every shift, without operator variability |
| Prototype & First Article Inspection | Complete as-built verification of new parts before committing to a full production run — full surface comparison, GD&T evaluation, and a submission-ready inspection report that confirms design intent was achieved |
| Reverse Engineering | Old tooling, molds, jigs, and fixtures with no surviving drawings scanned and rebuilt as accurate CAD models — ready for reproduction, modification, or replacement without starting the design from scratch |
| Large-Scale 3D Scanning | Production equipment, large tooling, and fixtures captured in their operational environment for digital twin creation, reverse engineering, or as-built documentation of manufacturing assets |
| Automated Scanning & Inspection | Portable automated inspection cells — scanner on a robot arm with motorized rotary stage — deployed to the production floor for hands-free, operator-free inspection of components at production speed |
| Robotics Integration | Standard Bots collaborative robots integrated for pick and place, sanding, surface finishing, and automated inspection — removing repetitive manual tasks from the production floor without expensive infrastructure changes |
| Vision Systems | Inline camera-based inspection systems for surface defect detection, part identification, and sorting at production speed — catching defects automatically without slowing the line |
the value
Why 3D Scanning for Manufacturing
Manufacturing quality problems are expensive — and they get more expensive the later they’re discovered. A defect caught at the machine costs minutes to fix. The same defect discovered at final inspection costs hours. The same defect found by a customer costs days, plus the relationship. 3D scanning moves quality measurement earlier, makes it faster, and makes it more complete — catching deviations from nominal at every stage of production before they become escapes. Full surface comparison against CAD means nothing is missed because the inspector didn’t measure the right point. Automated report generation means no transcription errors and no time spent manually compiling data. And the same inspection program run consistently across every part means results that can be trended, analyzed, and used to drive process improvement over time.
For new product introduction, first article inspection confirms that the manufacturing process achieved design intent before committing to tooling investment and full production runs. For production quality, automated inspection programs deliver consistent, traceable results for every part — with GD&T evaluation, datum-based alignment, and automatic report generation removing operator variability from the measurement process entirely. For tooling and fixtures, reverse engineering captures the true geometry of undocumented tooling so it can be reproduced or modified without the cost and delay of starting from scratch. For automation, collaborative robots and vision systems remove repetitive manual tasks from the production floor — pick and place, sanding, inline inspection — freeing operators for higher-value work and delivering more consistent results across every shift.
