Scaling and Stitching Workflow Suggestion
Posted: Thu Nov 22, 2012 6:47 pm
Hi,
I have a task that I need to do, and CC may or may not be the right tool. I'm looking for suggestions how to best do this. Perhaps in CC, perhaps in another tool, perhaps in a combination of tools.
I have a ~500 m long cylinder and I am studying the inside of it. I have digitized it into about 20 models with overlap.
All un-scaled, un-oriented, etc. An example segment can be seen here: 1) SCALING
In each model I have two known points. In the first model (M1), this is A01 and A02. There is overlap, so in the second model (M2) it is A02 and A03. Etc. For each model, I know the cross-section at the known points. (left, right, up, and down measurements). I also know the distance from point 1 to point 2, and the angle between them, both compass heading and inclination. Given this, each model can, theoretically, be oriented in space, and then scaled. And the scale can be independently verified 2x (if I scale using the A01 to A02 distance, then the left/right/up/down at A01 should be correct, and at A02 should be correct).
I imagine "marking" A01 and A02 in CC. I can pick these points. Using the camera icon, I manually enter the coordinates of point 1 so that it is now the center of rotation. Is there a faster way, or do I need to manually enter the x,y,z coordinates? Then I can measure to A02 and manually scale the model. The point-picking dialog shows distance between two picked points, but not angle and orientation. How to best determine angle and orientation within CC, or better yet, specify desired angle and rotation between two points?
2) STITCHING
Once each segment is scaled and rotated, I need to combine them all into one long pipe. How to best do this? Recall that M1 contains points A1 and A2, and M2 overlaps, containing points A2 and A3. Currently my work-flow would be:
Import M1 and M2. Manually align them as best I can. This should just be translation if they are both correctly scaled and oriented. An improvement might be to use the beta/in-development "Register" tool on the subsets of M1 and M2 that overlap, but this tool rarely works for me.
Thanks for any advice,
-k.
I have a task that I need to do, and CC may or may not be the right tool. I'm looking for suggestions how to best do this. Perhaps in CC, perhaps in another tool, perhaps in a combination of tools.
I have a ~500 m long cylinder and I am studying the inside of it. I have digitized it into about 20 models with overlap.
All un-scaled, un-oriented, etc. An example segment can be seen here: 1) SCALING
In each model I have two known points. In the first model (M1), this is A01 and A02. There is overlap, so in the second model (M2) it is A02 and A03. Etc. For each model, I know the cross-section at the known points. (left, right, up, and down measurements). I also know the distance from point 1 to point 2, and the angle between them, both compass heading and inclination. Given this, each model can, theoretically, be oriented in space, and then scaled. And the scale can be independently verified 2x (if I scale using the A01 to A02 distance, then the left/right/up/down at A01 should be correct, and at A02 should be correct).
I imagine "marking" A01 and A02 in CC. I can pick these points. Using the camera icon, I manually enter the coordinates of point 1 so that it is now the center of rotation. Is there a faster way, or do I need to manually enter the x,y,z coordinates? Then I can measure to A02 and manually scale the model. The point-picking dialog shows distance between two picked points, but not angle and orientation. How to best determine angle and orientation within CC, or better yet, specify desired angle and rotation between two points?
2) STITCHING
Once each segment is scaled and rotated, I need to combine them all into one long pipe. How to best do this? Recall that M1 contains points A1 and A2, and M2 overlaps, containing points A2 and A3. Currently my work-flow would be:
Import M1 and M2. Manually align them as best I can. This should just be translation if they are both correctly scaled and oriented. An improvement might be to use the beta/in-development "Register" tool on the subsets of M1 and M2 that overlap, but this tool rarely works for me.
Thanks for any advice,
-k.