Difference between revisions of "Compare UniScan to MultiScan Measurements"
From ATTWiki
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− | UniScan measurements take one group of evenly spaced points over the entire straight. The method use to measure with UniScan is like spray painting.<br><br> | + | UniScan measurements take one group of evenly spaced points in stripe groups over the entire straight. The method use to measure with UniScan is like spray painting.<br><br> |
UniScan is the best way to get to a true centerline average - especially for deformed diameters in straights. The reason is because UniScan averages out the entire surface of the straight measured.<br><br> | UniScan is the best way to get to a true centerline average - especially for deformed diameters in straights. The reason is because UniScan averages out the entire surface of the straight measured.<br><br> | ||
[[image:uniscan_stripes.png|300px]]<br><br> | [[image:uniscan_stripes.png|300px]]<br><br> |
Revision as of 00:30, 15 February 2019
Compare UniScan and MultiScan Measurements |
Can UniScan and MultiScan Result In Different Numbers?
Yes – they can give different numbers for tube measurements. This is because UniScan and MultiScan cover different parts of the surface on the same straight. See the different sections below to understand why.
UniScan Measurements
MultiScan Measurements
MultiScan only measures near the tangents of a straight. (The tangents are the locations on the straights where the straights and bends meet.) |
MTA Measurements
MTA (Measured Tube Averaging), combined with UniScan measuring, is the the best type of measuring available in VTube-LASER. MTA allows you to measure multiple sides of the same tube, then average the results into a single final tube shape. |
Other Pages
- Back to VTube-LASER