SolidWorks Mechanical Design Services

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SolidWorks Design Services

The Many Faces of Mechanical Design: How SolidWorks Powers Modern Engineering Across Australia

At Hamilton By Design, we see the same pattern every day across mining, heavy industry, manufacturing, and complex brownfield environments: the quality of engineering outcomes depends directly on the quality of the models driving them. And when it comes to mechanical design, SolidWorks remains one of the most capable and versatile platforms on the planet.

From dragline components to sheet metal enclosures, from pressure vessel upgrades to bespoke robotics, SolidWorks enables engineers to turn ideas into precise, fabrication-ready models that reduce rework, eliminate uncertainty, and accelerate project delivery.

Below, we explore the full spectrum of mechanical design disciplines where SolidWorks excels — and how Hamilton By Design uses this capability to deliver accurate, reliable, engineering-grade outcomes across Australia.


Why SolidWorks Remains the Backbone of Mechanical Design

SolidWorks brings together parametric modelling, simulation, large assembly performance, surfacing, sheet metal tools, weldments, routing and visualisation under a single environment. The result is powerful:

✔ Engineering that is data-driven
✔ Models that are precise and fabrication-ready
✔ Assemblies that reflect true site conditions
✔ Designs that respond intelligently to changes
✔ Drawings that follow Australian Standards
✔ Seamless integration with LiDAR-based as-builts

When paired with Hamilton By Design’s LiDAR scanning workflows, SolidWorks becomes an engine for delivering zero-guesswork mechanical design.


Mechanical Design Disciplines Perfectly Suited to SolidWorks Modelling

SolidWorks supports a huge range of engineering tasks. Below is a deep dive into the disciplines where Hamilton By Design deploys it every day.


1. Machine Design: Precision for Moving Systems

SolidWorks is a natural fit for mechanical equipment upgrades and R&D design work, including:

  • Gearboxes, shafts, keys, couplings
  • Linear motion systems and actuators
  • Mechanical linkages, cams and levers
  • Robotic mechanisms
  • Safety guards, enclosures and subframes
  • Automation concept development

Whether we’re modelling a drive assembly for a conveyor or designing a new piece of automated equipment, SolidWorks gives us full control over the mechanics, kinematics, clearances and manufacturability.


2. Structural Mechanical Design: Frames, Platforms & Fabrication

Mining and industrial plants rely heavily on welded structures and access systems. SolidWorks weldments excel at:

  • Platforms, walkways and stair systems
  • Equipment bases, skids and structural frames
  • Gantries, monorails and supports
  • Pipe supports and brackets
  • Structural reinforcements and upgrade scopes

Built-in cut lists, profile libraries and FEA ensure every frame is practical, safe and fabrication-ready.


3. Pressure Vessels, Tanks & Piping Systems

SolidWorks is an ideal tool for pressure-bound components and interconnected plant systems:

  • Tanks, vessels, bins and hoppers
  • Nozzles, flanges, stiffeners and ladders
  • Pipe routing and spooled sections
  • Chute systems, transitions and flow paths
  • Wear liners and maintenance-friendly redesigns

With stress linearisation, buckling analysis and accurate geometry import from LiDAR scans, we ensure designs meet engineering intent and fit up perfectly on site.


4. Sheet Metal: From Light Fabrication to Industrial Ducting

SolidWorks is the industry standard for sheet metal components:

  • Ducting and HVAC transitions
  • Guards, housings and folded enclosures
  • Electrical cabinets
  • Chute panels
  • Laser-cut and folded brackets

Automatic flat patterns and K-factor control mean fewer mistakes at the plasma/laser cutters and more predictable outcomes for fabricators.


5. Heavy Industry & Mining Equipment Modelling

Hamilton By Design’s roots in mining and heavy industry make SolidWorks invaluable for:

  • Conveyor components and guarding
  • Diverter chutes, hoppers and flow-optimised transitions
  • Bucket-wheel reclaimer parts
  • Crusher and screen upgrades
  • Dragline component modelling
  • Structural deformation/realignment scopes

Combined with LiDAR scanning, SolidWorks becomes the tool that eliminates shutdown fit-up problems.


6. Product Design & Industrial Design

SolidWorks’ surfacing and parametric tools are ideal for:

  • Consumer products
  • Power tools and ergonomic items
  • Injection-moulded components
  • Kitchen or appliance prototypes
  • Concept development for early-stage R&D

It supports rapid iterations, rendering, and export for 3D printing.


7. Robotics & Automation Systems

With the rise of automated processing and Industry 4.0, SolidWorks continues to shine in:

  • End effectors
  • Robotic arms and actuators
  • Kinematic studies
  • Sensor housings
  • Concept layouts for automated cells

We frequently pair this with our LiDAR models of existing plants to create automation solutions that genuinely fit the space.


8. Tooling, Jigs & Fixtures

Fabrication and machining rely on accurate tooling, and SolidWorks helps us design:

  • Welding jigs
  • Machining fixtures
  • Assembly tooling
  • Positioning and inspection gauges
  • Drill guides and alignment tooling

Parametric updates make future modifications simple and consistent.


9. Material Handling Systems

Across mining, ports, agriculture and waste facilities, SolidWorks supports:

  • Conveyor layouts
  • Screw and chain conveyors
  • Transfer chute redesigns
  • Feeders, bins and flow systems
  • Skids and support structures

We routinely pair mechanical redesign with simulation, checking wear patterns, stresses and clearances.


10. Reverse Engineering & As-Built Modelling from LiDAR

This is where Hamilton By Design leads the industry.

We scan sites with millimetre-level LiDAR, then rebuild clean parametric models in SolidWorks for:

  • Brownfield upgrades
  • Fit-up verification
  • Clash detection
  • Replacements and like-for-like manufacturing
  • Structural deformation assessments
  • Shutdown planning

It is the combination of LiDAR + engineering + SolidWorks that gives clients complete confidence in their next project.


How Clients Benefit from SolidWorks-Driven Mechanical Design

✔ Reduced rework

✔ Faster shutdown upgrades

✔ Accurate manufacturing drawings

✔ Better communication between engineers, fabricators and site teams

✔ Safer and more predictable installations

✔ Clear, simulation-backed decision-making

From CHPPs to ports, from power stations to manufacturing plants, SolidWorks modelling allows Hamilton By Design to deliver engineering outcomes you can trust.


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Partner With Hamilton By Design for SolidWorks Mechanical Design

We support clients across:

  • NSW (Sydney, Newcastle, Central Coast, Hunter Valley)
  • QLD (Bowen Basin, Surat Basin, Mount Isa)
  • WA (Perth, Pilbara)
  • SA, VIC and regional Australia

If your next project needs mechanical accuracy, design certainty or LiDAR-integrated engineering, our team is ready to support you.

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3D Laser Scanning

Engineering Projects

Engineering Services

3D Laser Scanning for Engineering

Laser Scanning Hunter Valley: Delivering Engineering-Grade Accuracy for Mining, Manufacturing and Industrial Projects

The Hunter Valley remains one of Australia’s most important industrial regions. With world-class mining operations, CHPP facilities, fabrication workshops, power generation assets and major industrial precincts, the region depends on precision, reliability and efficient project planning. As plants age and infrastructure expands, the challenge of capturing accurate site information becomes increasingly critical.

This is why laser scanning in the Hunter Valley has rapidly become a foundational tool for maintenance, engineering, redesign, shutdown preparation and fabrication accuracy. Organisations across the region are turning to laser scanning because the demands of modern industrial work simply cannot be met with traditional tape measurements or outdated drawings.

Hamilton By Design is proud to deliver engineering-grade laser scanning throughout the Hunter Valley, supporting safer worksites, faster project execution and significantly improved installation outcomes. Below, we explore why laser scanning is essential, how the technology works and how it transforms operations across the region.


Why Laser Scanning Has Become Essential in the Hunter Valley

Across the Hunter, very few sites resemble their original drawings. Over decades, plants evolve—structures deform, temporary fixes become permanent, equipment shifts, and countless undocumented modifications occur.

These realities create a major problem:
Projects that rely on inaccurate measurements inevitably face delays, rework and installation challenges.

The consequences of bad data include:

  • Structural steel not fitting on site
  • Conveyor alignment issues
  • Misaligned chutes or transfer points
  • Inaccurate pipe spool lengths
  • Unexpected clashes in congested areas
  • Extended shutdown duration
  • Significant cost blowouts

By contrast, laser scanning in the Hunter Valley provides a millimetre-accurate digital representation of the real site, eliminating uncertainty and enabling confident engineering decisions.


How Laser Scanning Works

Laser scanning—also known as LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging)—captures millions of precise data points across a site in seconds. These points create a “point cloud,” a detailed 3D representation of the scanned environment.

The Hamilton By Design workflow typically includes:

1. On-Site High-Accuracy Capture

We scan assets such as:

  • Structural frames
  • Conveyors, transfer towers and walkways
  • Chutes, bins, hoppers and material-handling systems
  • Tanks and pipe networks
  • Mechanical equipment
  • Buildings and platforms
  • Processing areas and plant rooms

Scanning is performed safely, quickly and with minimal disruption to operations.

2. Point Cloud Processing

Individual scans are aligned and merged into a single, unified as-built dataset.

3. CAD Modelling

From the point cloud, we create:

  • Accurate 3D models
  • General arrangement drawings
  • Fabrication details
  • DXF files for workshop use
  • Digital templates for pattern development

4. Engineering & Fabrication Support

We run digital checks for:

  • Clearances
  • Misalignments
  • Bolt pattern accuracy
  • Clash detection
  • Fit-up assurance

This ensures all new components, structures and mechanical systems integrate correctly the first time.


Industries in the Hunter Valley Using Laser Scanning

1. Mining & Coal Handling Preparation Plants (CHPPs)

The Hunter Valley is one of Australia’s largest mining hubs, and laser scanning has become indispensable for:

  • Chute redesign and optimisation
  • Conveyor alignment and pulley checks
  • Structural replacements
  • Screening and crushing system upgrades
  • Transfer tower modifications
  • Bin and hopper geometry capture
  • Shutdown planning and scope definition

In CHPP environments—where dust, vibration, wear and deformation are constant—accurate as-built data is essential for safe and efficient upgrades.


2. Local Fabrication Workshops

Fabricators across Singleton, Muswellbrook, Rutherford and Thornton rely on precise digital information to ensure their products fit perfectly in the field. Laser scanning supports:

  • Steel replacement projects
  • Pipe spool fabrication
  • Custom chutes and transfer systems
  • Platform and walkway upgrades
  • Reverse engineering worn components

By basing fabrication on exact site geometry, rework and installation delays are dramatically reduced.


3. Power Stations and Energy Infrastructure

The Hunter Valley contains major energy assets requiring constant maintenance and upgrades. These aging facilities benefit greatly from laser scanning for:

  • Structural integrity assessments
  • Boiler house modifications
  • Pipe rerouting and replacements
  • Access platform upgrades
  • Plant room modelling
  • Compliance documentation

Laser scanning supports safe access, better planning and accurate engineering.


4. Industrial, Manufacturing and Infrastructure Projects

The region’s industrial footprint is expanding, and many facilities require precise as-built data for:

  • Renovations or expansions
  • Facility mapping
  • Mechanical upgrades
  • Brownfield redevelopment
  • BIM integration

Laser scanning provides the detail needed to plan these works correctly.


Benefits of Laser Scanning in the Hunter Valley

1. Millimetre Accuracy

Unlike manual measurements, laser scanning captures true geometry—not assumptions.

2. Reduced Rework

Digitally verified data ensures that fabrication is correct the first time.

3. Improved Safety

No need for workers to climb, stretch, or enter hazardous areas to measure.

4. Faster Shutdowns

Accurate pre-planning reduces onsite delays.

5. Digital Collaboration

Point clouds allow teams, contractors and engineers to review the site remotely.

6. Enhanced Engineering Confidence

Decisions are made on verified data, improving outcomes across the entire project lifecycle.


The Hamilton By Design Advantage

Hamilton By Design delivers more than just scanning—we combine decades of engineering, drafting and fabrication experience to interpret the data with real-world understanding.

What Sets Us Apart:

Engineering-Driven Approach

We understand the mechanical and structural context behind each scan.

Full Digital Workflow

From scan → point cloud → 3D model → fabrication drawings → installation, we support your entire project.

Local Knowledge of Hunter Valley Industry

We work routinely with mines, CHPPs, fabricators and industrial facilities across the region.

Fabrication-Ready Outputs

All models and drawings are created with workshop requirements and site constraints in mind.

Confidence Before Installation

We digitally confirm fitment before steel is cut—removing risk.


Applications Where Laser Scanning Delivers Immediate Value

  • Chute replacements
  • Conveyor system upgrades
  • Access platforms and walkways
  • Crusher and screen changes
  • Transfer tower redesign
  • Pipe spool fabrication
  • Structural steel alignment checks
  • Bin, tank and hopper measurement
  • Reverse engineering
  • Brownfield plant expansions

Anywhere accuracy matters, scanning is the superior choice.


Laser Scanning in the Hunter Valley: The New Standard

Across the region, laser scanning is now considered a must-have for safe, efficient and predictable project delivery. As plants age and the complexity of upgrades increases, organisations that invest in accurate data significantly outperform those relying on outdated drawings or manual measuring.

For engineering teams, maintenance planners, workshop fabricators and shutdown coordinators, laser scanning provides the certainty required to deliver work on time and on budget.


Partner with Hamilton By Design

When you choose Hamilton By Design for laser scanning in the Hunter Valley, you’re choosing:

  • Accuracy
  • Safety
  • Engineering reliability
  • Better planning
  • Reduced risk
  • Efficient installation

We’re ready to support your next shutdown, upgrade, redesign or fabrication project with the digital precision it deserves.

Contact Hamilton By Design today to discuss your site and discover how laser scanning can transform your project outcomes.

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Hunter Valley Laser Scanning: Transforming Engineering Accuracy Across Mining, Manufacturing and Infrastructure

3D Laser Scanning in Singleton and the Hunter: Delivering Accuracy for Mining, Manufacturing and Industrial Projects

3D Laser Scanning

3D Scanning in The Hunter Valley

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Mechanical Engineering Sydney: Why Local Expertise Beats Offshore Design

When Local Knowledge Makes All the Difference

Across Sydney, the Central Coast, and Newcastle, more contractors and plant managers are discovering a simple truth — offshore engineering might look cost-effective, but local expertise delivers better outcomes every time.

When drawings don’t meet Australian Standards, materials can’t be sourced locally, or site measurements are off by just a few millimetres, “cheap” design quickly becomes expensive rework.

That’s why businesses across NSW are turning to Hamilton By Design — a Sydney-based mechanical engineering practice that understands how to bridge design and construction through real-world experience, compliance, and precision.

Illustrated infographic showing Hamilton By Design’s 3D scanning workflow in Sydney, including onsite LiDAR scanning, point-cloud processing, SolidWorks modelling, and local fabrication, with Sydney landmarks in the background

Built for Australia, Not Adapted for It

Engineering design isn’t universal.
Sydney’s environment, industry, and regulatory framework are unique — from local council approval requirements to the coastal conditions that affect corrosion and material selection.

At Hamilton By Design, our drawings and models are created with Australian Standards front and centre. We design for:

  • AS 4100 (Steel Structures)
  • AS 3990 (Mechanical Equipment Design)
  • AS 1657 (Walkways, Platforms & Stairs)
  • AS 4991 (Lifting Devices)
  • AS 4024 (Machine Safety)

Designing to these standards means your project moves faster through approvals, fabrication, and certification — with no surprises down the track.

Offshore designers often mean well, but they don’t work within these standards every day.
A single misinterpreted load case or welding symbol can mean days of rework on site.
A local engineer gets it right the first time.


Drawings That Fabricators Love

A good drawing doesn’t just look professional — it saves hours in the workshop.
Hamilton By Design creates fabrication drawings that make sense to the people who use them.

We think like tradespeople because we’ve been tradespeople.
Our background in fitting, machining, and CNC fabrication ensures every detail — from weld prep to bolt clearances — reflects how the job will actually be built.

That means fewer questions from the shop floor, cleaner fit-ups, and faster turnaround from fabrication to installation.

FARO 3D laser scanner set up on a tripod capturing an industrial plant for LiDAR scanning and digital modelling, with Hamilton By Design branding in the corner

Local Materials. Local Supply Chains. Fewer Delays.

Sydney’s fabrication and construction industry runs on locally available materials — from Bluescope steel to Bisalloy plate.
When offshore drawings specify unavailable materials or imperial sizes, fabrication stalls.

Our team specifies components, sections, and finishes that Sydney and Central Coast suppliers actually stock.
That reduces lead times, avoids substitutions, and keeps projects moving.

We also design with Sydney’s coastal environment in mind — using corrosion-resistant coatings, sealants, and fasteners suitable for marine-influenced locations like Parramatta, Botany, and Gosford.


Designed to Fit the Site — The First Time

It’s one thing to design in CAD; it’s another to make it fit in the field.
Sydney worksites can be complex — restricted access, uneven terrain, or legacy structures that don’t match the old drawings.

That’s why Hamilton By Design uses 3D scanning and LiDAR technology to capture accurate site data before design begins.
We integrate those scans directly into SolidWorks, building models that align with real-world geometry.

Every bracket, pipe run, and platform is verified in 3D before fabrication starts — ensuring a smooth installation with no rework.


Sydney Expertise with Regional Reach

We proudly serve clients across Sydney, Newcastle, and the Central Coast, working with builders, maintenance contractors, and fabrication workshops who value local knowledge.

Our typical projects include:

  • Plant upgrades and retrofits in brownfield sites.
  • Fabrication drawing packages for chutes, platforms, and pipework.
  • Reverse engineering from worn or obsolete components.
  • 3D scanning for as-built documentation.
  • Finite Element Analysis (FEA) for structural verification.

Every project benefits from our combined trade and engineering background — practical solutions grounded in decades of hands-on experience.


Smooth Communication. Real Accountability.

When you work with a local engineer, you’re not waiting overnight for an email response from another time zone.
You can pick up the phone, meet on site, or review models in person.

That direct collaboration saves time, reduces misunderstandings, and builds confidence between all stakeholders — engineers, fabricators, and project managers alike.

At Hamilton By Design, we value clear communication. You’ll know exactly what stage your project is at, what we’re designing, and how it aligns with your goals.


The Real Cost of Offshore Design

Offshore pricing often looks appealing — until you factor in delays, non-compliance, or fabrication mismatches.
Here’s what typically happens when projects cut corners:

ChallengeOffshore DesignLocal Expertise (Hamilton By Design)
Standards & CodesOften missed or misappliedFully compliant with AS/NZS standards
Material AvailabilitySpecified incorrectlyDesigned for Australian supply chains
CommunicationDelayed and unclearDirect, same-day response
Site UnderstandingBased on photosBased on 3D scans and site visits
Rework RiskHighMinimal – verified before fabrication

When you calculate the true cost — lost time, rework, freight, and approval delays — offshore design rarely saves money.

Technician using a FARO 3D laser scanner and tablet to capture a construction site for digital modelling, with 3DEXPERIENCE and SolidWorks logos shown on the side

Real Example: Central Coast Fabrication Success

A local contractor recently engaged Hamilton By Design to assist with a pump platform upgrade on the Central Coast.
Previous offshore drawings had mismatched hole patterns and unsupported loads.

We performed a quick 3D scan, remodelled the assembly in SolidWorks, and issued fabrication drawings ready for workshop production.
The new structure was installed without modification, saving the client several days of rework and earning rapid certifier approval.

That’s what local insight delivers — certainty and speed.


Why Choose a Sydney-Based Engineer

Sydney projects move quickly.
They need partners who can respond fast, understand the regulations, and coordinate seamlessly with site teams.

Hamilton By Design offers:
Over 25 years of trade and design experience
SolidWorks and FEA capability since 2011
3D scanning and as-built modelling for existing plants
Fabrication drawings built for local workshops
Practical designs created by people who’ve worked in the field

We’re based in Sydney and proud to support regional clients in Newcastle, the Central Coast, and Western Sydney.


Talk to a Sydney-Based Engineer Who’s Worked in the Field

Every project is a partnership — and great results come from working with people who understand your environment.
Hamilton By Design isn’t just another design service; we’re your local mechanical engineering partner — practical, responsive, and invested in your success.

If you’re planning a plant upgrade, mechanical installation, or fabrication project, let’s make sure your drawings are done right the first time.

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👉 Talk to a Sydney-based engineer who’s worked in the field.
Visit www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au or contact us today to discuss your next project.

AutoCAD Is Still in the 1980s — Gasping for Air in a 3D World

In the 1980s, AutoCAD was revolutionary. It replaced drafting boards and sharpened pencils with a digital drawing tool. Architects, engineers, and designers suddenly had a new way to bring ideas to life — faster, cleaner, and more accurate than ever before.

But here’s the problem: it’s 2025 now, and AutoCAD is still trying to breathe the same thin air it did back then.

Illustrated comparison showing traditional mechanical engineering on one side and modern digital engineering on the other, with the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House in the background, highlighting themes of maintenance, safety, reliability, simulation, digital twins, and innovation.

Stuck in 2D While the World Moved On

Today’s engineering isn’t about drawing — it’s about designing.
It’s about simulating real-world forces, visualizing assemblies, testing tolerances, and producing manufacturable parts before a single prototype is built.

AutoCAD, at its core, is still a 2D drafting platform trying to wear a 3D mask. The workflows are fragmented, the feature set feels patched together, and it lacks the intelligence modern teams demand.

By contrast, SOLIDWORKS was built for this century — fully parametric, model-driven, and collaborative. When you make a change to a design in SOLIDWORKS, every part, drawing, and assembly updates instantly. That’s not an upgrade; that’s evolution.


Design Needs Intelligence, Not Layers

AutoCAD still asks you to think in layers and lines — the language of draftsmen.
SOLIDWORKS speaks the language of relationships, assemblies, and constraints — the language of engineers and innovators.

Modern design tools must integrate simulation, visualization, and manufacturability. They must predict behavior, test fit, and optimize before production. AutoCAD just can’t breathe in that environment anymore — it’s stuck flipping between tabs while SOLIDWORKS users are already printing parts.


Collaboration and Data: The New Oxygen

The world doesn’t design in isolation anymore. Teams are global, deadlines are tighter, and innovation cycles are shorter.
AutoCAD’s file-based approach is like passing blueprints across a fax machine.

SOLIDWORKS integrates cloud data management, real-time collaboration, and digital twin technology — letting design teams iterate and innovate in real time, anywhere in the world.


The Future Is 3D — and It’s Already Here

You wouldn’t build an electric vehicle using a typewriter.
So why design modern products with 1980s software?

SOLIDWORKS represents the present and the future — intelligent modeling, simulation-driven design, and integrated manufacturing tools that push boundaries instead of tracing them.

Humorous comparison illustration showing outdated AutoCAD workflows from 1984 versus modern SolidWorks 2025 with smart parametric assembly, simulation, and advanced design automation

Final Thoughts

AutoCAD made history — no one can deny that. But history belongs in the museum, not the manufacturing floor.

If your software is still gasping for air in a 2D world, maybe it’s time to give it a well-earned retirement.
SOLIDWORKS doesn’t imitate innovation — it defines it.

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3D Scanning Sydney

Engineering Services

Choosing the Right 3D Scanner for Construction, Manufacturing, and Mining Projects

At Hamilton By Design, we know that 3D scanning has become an essential tool for modern engineering — from capturing as-built conditions on construction sites to modeling complex processing plants and validating manufacturing layouts. But not all scanners are created equal, and selecting the right technology is crucial to getting reliable data and avoiding costly surprises later in the project.

3D Scanning for Construction Sites

For construction and infrastructure projects, coverage and speed are the top priorities. Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) and LiDAR systems like the FARO Focus S70 are ideal for quickly capturing entire job sites with millimetre-level accuracy. These scanners allow engineers and project managers to:

  • Verify as-built conditions against design models
  • Detect clashes early in the process
  • Support accurate quantity take-offs and progress documentation

TLS works well in tough environments — dust, sunlight, and complex geometry — making it a perfect fit for active building sites.

3D Scanning for Manufacturing & Processing Plants

When it comes to manufacturing facilities and mining processing plants, accuracy and detail matter even more. Scans are often used for:

  • Retrofit planning and clash detection in tight plant rooms
  • Structural steel and conveyor alignment checks
  • Equipment layout for expansion projects

Here, combining TLS with feature-based CAD modeling allows us to deliver data that is usable for engineering design, ensuring that new equipment fits exactly as intended.

Infographic titled ‘Choosing the Right 3D Scanner for Your Project’ with the tagline ‘Not Selling, Just Helping.’ The left side shows a construction site with a tripod-mounted 3D scanner and benefits listed: fast coverage, millimetre accuracy, and clash detection, leading to BIM model or digital twin outputs. The right side shows a manufacturing and processing plant with a scanner and benefits: retrofit planning, equipment layout, and alignment verification, leading to CAD model overlay results

We’re Here to Help

Hamilton By Design doesn’t sell scanners — we focus on providing unbiased, engineering-driven advice. If you’re unsure which scanning approach is right for your project, we’re happy to share our experience and guide you toward the best solution.

Feel free to get in touch to discuss your project needs — whether it’s a construction site, manufacturing facility, or processing plant, we can help you turn accurate scan data into actionable engineering insights.

3D Scanning for Construction Sites |  3D Scanning for Manufacturing | 3D Scanning for Processing Plants

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Seeing the Unseen: How LiDAR Scanning is Transforming Mining Process Plants

In modern mining, where uptime is money and safety is non-negotiable, understanding the geometry of your process plant is critical. Every conveyor, chute, pipe rack, and piece of equipment must fit together seamlessly and operate reliably — but plants are messy, dusty, and constantly changing. Manual measurement with a tape or total station is slow, risky, and often incomplete.

nfographic showing how LiDAR scanning is used in mining process plants, with illustrations of conveyors, crushers, tanks, mills and chutes. Labels highlight applications such as stockpile volumetrics, crusher inspections, safety and risk management, chute wear and blockages, mill wear measurement, tank deformation monitoring and creating digital twins.

This is where LiDAR scanning (Light Detection and Ranging) has become a game-changer. By capturing millions of precise 3D points per second, LiDAR gives engineers, maintenance planners, and operators an exact digital replica of the plant — without climbing scaffolds or shutting down equipment. In this post, we’ll explore how mining companies are using LiDAR scanning to solve real problems in processing plants, improve safety, and unlock operational efficiency.


What Is LiDAR Scanning?

LiDAR is a remote sensing technology that measures distance by firing pulses of laser light and recording the time it takes for them to return. Modern terrestrial and mobile LiDAR scanners can:

  • Capture hundreds of thousands to millions of points per second
  • Reach tens to hundreds of meters, depending on the instrument
  • Achieve millimeter-to-centimeter accuracy
  • Work in GPS-denied environments, such as inside mills, tunnels, or enclosed plants (using SLAM — Simultaneous Localization and Mapping)

The output is a point cloud — a dense 3D dataset representing surfaces, equipment, and structures with stunning accuracy. This point cloud can be used as-is for measurements or converted into CAD models and digital twins.


Why Process Plants Are Perfect for LiDAR

Unlike greenfield mine sites, processing plants are some of the most geometry-rich and access-constrained areas on site. They contain:

  • Complex networks of pipes, conveyors, tanks, and structural steel
  • Moving equipment such as crushers, mills, and feeders
  • Dusty, noisy, and hazardous environments with limited safe access

All these factors make traditional surveying difficult — and sometimes dangerous. LiDAR enables “no-touch” measurement from safe vantage points, even during operation. Multiple scans can be stitched together to create a complete model without shutting down the plant.


Applications of LiDAR in Process Plants

1. Wear Measurement and Maintenance Planning

LiDAR has revolutionized how mines measure and predict wear on critical process equipment:

  • SAG and Ball Mill Liners – Portable laser scanners can capture the exact wear profile of liners. Comparing scans over time reveals wear rates, helping maintenance teams schedule relines with confidence and avoid premature failures.
  • Crusher Chambers – Scanning inside primary and secondary crushers is now faster and safer than manual inspections. The resulting 3D model allows engineers to assess liner life and optimize chamber profiles.
  • Chutes and Hoppers – Internal scans show where material buildup occurs, enabling targeted cleaning and redesign to prevent blockages.

Result: Reduced downtime, safer inspections, and better forecasting of maintenance budgets.


2. Retrofit and Expansion Projects

When modifying a plant — installing a new pump, rerouting a pipe, or adding an entire circuit — having an accurate “as-built” model is crucial.

  • As-Built Capture – LiDAR provides an exact snapshot of the existing plant layout, eliminating guesswork.
  • Clash Detection – Designers can overlay new equipment models onto the point cloud to detect interferences before anything is fabricated.
  • Shutdown Optimization – With accurate geometry, crews know exactly what to cut, weld, and install — reducing surprise field modifications and shortening shutdown durations.

3. Inventory and Material Flow Monitoring

LiDAR is not just for geometry — it’s also a powerful tool for tracking material:

  • Stockpile Volumetrics – Mounted scanners on stackers or at fixed points can monitor ore, concentrate, and product stockpiles in real time.
  • Conveyor Load Measurement – Stationary LiDAR above belts calculates volumetric flow, giving a direct measure of throughput without contact.
  • Blending Control – Accurate inventory data improves blending plans, ensuring consistent plant feed quality.

4. Safety and Risk Management

Perhaps the most valuable application of LiDAR is keeping people out of harm’s way:

  • Hazardous Floor Areas – When flooring or gratings fail, robots or drones with LiDAR payloads can enter the area and collect data remotely.
  • Fall-of-Ground Risk – High walls, bin drawpoints, and ore passes can be scanned for unstable rock or buildup.
  • Escape Route Validation – Scans verify clearances for egress ladders, walkways, and platforms.

Every scan effectively becomes a permanent digital record — a baseline for monitoring ongoing structural integrity.


5. Digital Twins and Advanced Analytics

A plant-wide LiDAR scan is the foundation of a digital twin — a living, data-rich 3D model connected to operational data:

  • Combine scans with SCADA, IoT, and maintenance systems
  • Visualize live process variables in context (flow rates, temperatures, vibrations)
  • Run “what-if” simulations for debottlenecking or energy optimization

As AI and simulation tools mature, the combination of geometric fidelity and operational data opens new possibilities for predictive maintenance and autonomous plant operations.


Emerging Opportunities

Looking forward, there are several promising areas for LiDAR in mining process plants:

  • Autonomous Scan Missions – Using quadruped robots (like Spot) or SLAM-enabled drones to perform routine scanning in high-risk zones.
  • Real-Time Change Detection – Continuous scanning of critical assets with alerts when deformation exceeds thresholds.
  • AI-Driven Point Cloud Analysis – Automatic object recognition (valves, flanges, motors) to speed up model creation and condition reporting.
  • Integrated Planning Dashboards – Combining LiDAR scans, work orders, and shutdown schedules in a single interactive 3D environment.

Best Practices for Implementing LiDAR

To maximize the value of LiDAR scanning, consider:

  1. Define the Objective – Are you measuring wear, planning a retrofit, or building a digital twin? This affects scanner choice and resolution.
  2. Plan Scan Positions – Minimize occlusions and shadow zones by preplanning vantage points.
  3. Use Proper Registration – Tie scans to a control network for consistent alignment between surveys.
  4. Mind the Environment – Dust, fog, and vibration can degrade data; choose scanners with appropriate filters or protective housings.
  5. Invest in Processing Tools – The raw point cloud is only the start — software for meshing, modeling, and analysis is where value is extracted.
  6. Train Your Team – Build internal capability for scanning, processing, and interpreting the results to avoid vendor bottlenecks.

Infographic showing a 3D LiDAR scanner on a tripod surrounded by eight best-practice principles: start with clear objectives, plan your scanning campaign, prioritize safety, optimize data quality, ensure robust registration and georeferencing, establish repeatability, integrate with downstream systems, and train people with documented procedures

LiDAR scanning is no longer a niche technology — it is rapidly becoming a standard tool for mining process plants that want to operate safely, efficiently, and with fewer surprises. From mill liners to stockpiles, from shutdown planning to digital twins, LiDAR provides a clear, measurable view of assets that was impossible a decade ago.

For operations teams under pressure to deliver more with less, the case is compelling: better data leads to better decisions. And in a high-stakes environment like mineral processing, better decisions translate directly to improved uptime, reduced costs, and safer workplaces.

The next time you’re planning a shutdown, a retrofit, or even just trying to understand why a chute is plugging, consider pointing a LiDAR scanner at the problem. You may be surprised at how much more you can see — and how much time and money you can save.

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