Geo Week News

April 12, 2017

Mantis Vision’s F6 isn’t Your Average Handheld 3D Scanner

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Last week, Mantis Vision announced its new best of breed handheld 3D scanner. The F6 is unique from previous offerings in that it provides real-time scanning feedback and full color texturing. It also includes a few unexpected features—including the ability to perform dynamic scanning in an an array—that should make it more versatile than the average handheld 3D scanner.

Specs and Real-Time Feedback

At about 12 x 5 x 2 inches and only 1.4 kg, the F6 can be held in one hand or mounted on a tripod. It captures 640,000 points per second with very low noise—Mantis Vision says less than 0.5mm at a meter’s range—and the accuracy is 0.1 to 0.2% of the scanning distance.

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Example data

Crucially, since the device is designed to be used in field applications, it includes an internal battery and is rated for use in ambient lighting “from complete darkness to daylight.” That means it will work either indoors or out.

The F6 can scan from 0.5 meters to 4.5 meters. As director of sales Yossi Benbenishti put it, that means a single F6 scanner can capture anything from a small object up to an object the size of two cars.

Mantis Vision’s latest offering also includes registration software that offers real-time feedback on a tablet or laptop of your choosing. Connect it to your device using a USB 2.0 interface, and watch as you scan to ensure that you’re gathering enough data for your construction field work, forensics capture, or reverse engineering project.

Meshing, Color, Static, Dynamic, and Up to 16 at a Time

The F6 includes a novel colorization feature that Mantis Vision calls Scan n’ Mesh. Benbenishti describes it like this: As you scan, the device captures RGB video at 8 frames per second. Next, the processing software slices the video into jpegs that it stitches over the point cloud. The final product is a detailed, textured, 3D scan.

Perhaps most noteworthy is that you can use the F6 to perform dynamic as well as static scanning, and you can use multiple scanners at once, up to 16 at a time. This means you can use the F6 to capture what amounts to colorized 3D video of a larger scene—perhaps even in a semi-permanent installation.

Lastly, the scanner and its registration software include VR integration. Users can export data easily to the HTC Vive and view their 3D capture in full virtual reality.

The F6 is priced low enough that users could purchase multiple units. Mantis Vision will begin selling the F6 on May 31st, 2017 at a price of $15,000. This cost covers the scanner, registration software, and a hard case.

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