Revopoint new MINI Blue Light 3D Scanner

@Karl-D it serves a different purpose.

Hi @TinWhisperer ,

Thank you for your attention.

I will create a post in this forum when it is launched.

Best Regards
Cassie

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@TinWhisperer

Yeah - thatā€™d be much better for a lot of the stuff Iā€™d like to do. Will see what happens - not completely against getting the MINI as well.

I had the exact same feelings when I saw the announcement for the MINI right when my Kickstarter for the POP2 was getting shipped.

But now that Iā€™ve read the available information and I understand what it is for I am going to buy a MINI when itā€™s launched.

Just another tool to digitize reality.

@TinWhisperer definitelly , if you need it , you need to have it, because why not ?

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High, I am new here, and even though the post is old, just for those new like meā€¦:
Why would you use blue light?

  1. Avoid chromatic aberration. Light diffracts differently with different wavelength ( :rainbow:). You get sharper grayscale images if you use monochromatic light as illumination. Here it is true that in principle any color is ok, as long as it has one wavelength (or a small range in wavelengths).
  2. Short wavelengths are able to interact with smaller features. This is true, but, I do not think the effect is large.
  3. The spectrum of sunlight has less blue than other wavelengths like green and red. That should help to scan outside.

I hope it helps, sorry if you already mentioned it somewhere.
Thanks PUTV for your posts. You help a lot!
Cheers

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I actually use Blue light recently with Mini series and MetroX on a lower level as fill light but not too bright.

For infrared scanners usually LED with CRI of 95 for textures and darkness for scanning if possible.

Thanks @LAG-ME for you contribution post!

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