Scanning the Inside of a Cast
Start the scan on the outside of the cast Move the scanner up to point it down at the inside Slowly walk around the cast, pausing when it tells you to Try to keep the distance guage within the green range. Orange is starting to get too far, and red is too far. Not sure if your color scan was good? Click the hexagon icon “regular” to view the real scanSome readersGetting Started with the Protosthetics 3D Scanning App
Installing and Setting Up Protosthetics Apple App for iPad (Adding Practitioners) Detailed Steps Install Protosthetics App The Protosthetics App can be downloaded onto an iPad by going to Apple App Store and using the search feature found in the lower right hand corner (magnify glass icon). Once inside the Apple App Store, click on the magnify glass iFew readersScanning via iPhone Protosthetics Scanning App
Scanning via iPhone Protosthetics Scanning App Learn how to install and use the Protosthetics Scan & 3D Print app on your iPhone. Click here to watch video guide (https://www.youtube.cFew readersScanning with Color
Scanning with Color This page we will go over the three different color scanning modes which are None, Per ertex and Texture. None is the default scanning color mode. It only captures the shape (no color). Per Vertex scanning mode will capture color and takes less processing time compared to the Texture scanning mode which captures the color and the texture of the scanned object. We recommend that you use the Per Vertex scanning color mode. Detailed Steps: Click on the Menu iconFew readersRecalibrating the Structure Sensor
Here are a few links to help you recalibrate your structure sensor: This link is a guide from the Manufacturer: This is an Article from the Manufacturer:Few readersHow to Improve the Structure Sensor's Depth Coverage
How to Improve the Structure Sensor's Depth Coverage “All of our sensors leave our manufacturing facility well-calibrated but a rough delivery, a drop, or other similar physical impact may create a discrepancy between the sensor’s twin IR cameras. The result is similar to if you were to cross your eyes--the sensor will not be able to converge the two IR feeds to generate full depth coverage. This phenomenon is called an IR offset. Fortunately, this is not a physical defect of the sensor andFew readers