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Download "Intro to Coordinate Metrology"
Understanding The CMM: The Coordinate System
We use a coordinate system to describe the movements of a measuring
machine. The coordinate system, invented by the famous French
philosopher and mathematician René Descartes in the early 1600's, lets
us locate features relative to other features on workpieces.
A coordinate system is a lot like an elevation map where the
combination of a letter along one edge of the map, a number along the
other, and elevations shown throughout uniquely describes each location
on the map. This letter/number/elevation combination is called a
coordinate and represents a specific place relative to all others.
Another example is a street map with buildings shown (Figure 1). To
walk to your hotel room at the Ritz Hotel from the train station (your
origin), you walk 2 blocks along Elm street, 4 blocks on Maple and up 3
floors in the Ritz. This location can also be described by the
coordinates 4-E-3 on the map, corresponding to the X, Y and Z axes on
the machine. These coordinates uniquely describe your room and no
other location on the map.
Understanding The CMM A coordinate measuring machine (CMM) works in
much the same way as your finger when it traces map coordinates; its 3
axes form the machine's coordinate system. Instead of a finger, the
CMM uses a probe to measure points on a workpiece (Figure 2). Each
point on the workpiece is unique to the machine's coordinate system.
The CMM combines the measured points to form a feature that can now be
related to all other features.
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Sheffield Measurement
a brand of Hexagon Metrology, Inc.
P.O. Box 1658
660 South Military Road
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin 54935
Toll Free Phone: 800.535.1236
Phone: 920.906.7700
Fax: 920.906.7701
info@SheffieldMeasurement.com
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