Engineering-Grade & Metrology-Grade 3D Scanning

Engineering-grade and metrology-grade 3D scanning in an industrial plant environment.

Choosing the Right Tool for the Right Scale

At Hamilton By Design, we do not approach 3D scanning as a visual service โ€” we approach it as an engineering measurement tool.

Different projects require different levels of accuracy, coverage and control. For this reason, we operate with two distinct scanning capabilities:

  • Engineering-Grade Terrestrial Laser Scanning
  • Metrology-Grade Handheld 3D Scanning

Each serves a specific purpose within industrial, mining and mechanical environments.


Engineering measurement workflow combining plant scanning and precision component capture.

Engineering-Grade 3D Scanning

Capturing Entire Environments with Structural Accuracy

Engineering-grade laser scanning is used when capturing:

  • Processing plants
  • Conveyor systems
  • Structural steel platforms
  • Brownfield facilities
  • Infrastructure corridors
  • Stockpiles
  • Full building interiors and exteriors

This system is tripod-based and captures large-scale environments with millimetre-level accuracy across significant distances.

Typical Performance:

  • Up to hundreds of metres scanning range
  • ~2 mm accuracy at 10 m
  • Full 360ยฐ environmental capture
  • Suitable for survey control alignment

Used For:

  • As-built plant documentation
  • Structural verification
  • Clearance assessments
  • Shutdown planning
  • Retrofit design
  • Compliance validation under AS standards

If you can walk inside it โ€” this is the correct tool.

This system establishes the macro geometry of a site.


Metrology-Grade 3D Scanning

Capturing High-Precision Component Geometry

Metrology-grade handheld scanning is designed for detailed component-level capture.

This system is compact, highly accurate, and capable of sub-0.05 mm precision.

Typical Performance:

  • Accuracy to ~0.020 mm
  • Volume accuracy to 0.015 mm + scale factor
  • Ideal for complex surfaces and confined spaces
  • Suitable for reverse engineering

Used For:

  • Worn chute liners
  • Flanges and bolt patterns
  • Pump housings
  • Lifting lugs
  • Machined components
  • Distorted structural connections
  • Deep hole geometry
  • Fit-up verification prior to fabrication

If you can hold it โ€” this is the correct tool.

This system establishes the micro geometry of a part.


Why Both Matter

Industrial projects often require both levels of capture.

Example: Mining Shutdown

  1. Engineering-grade scanning captures the entire transfer station.
  2. Metrology-grade scanning captures the worn liner plate.
  3. Data is combined to:
    • Verify fit
    • Model replacement components
    • Reduce fabrication risk
    • Avoid rework during shutdown

This integrated approach reduces:

  • Site time
  • Fabrication errors
  • Installation clashes
  • Cost overruns

Measurement With Engineering Intent

We do not scan for visualisation alone.

We scan to support:

  • Structural compliance
  • Mechanical design
  • FEA validation
  • Access verification
  • Brownfield modification
  • Asset documentation
  • Engineering governance

Scanning without engineering oversight introduces risk.

Scanning with engineering intent reduces it.


When To Use Each Scanner

ScenarioEngineering-Grade ScannerMetrology-Grade Scanner
Full plant captureโœ”
Structural steel verificationโœ”
Conveyor alignmentโœ”
Large-area as-built surveyโœ”
Reverse engineering a componentโœ”
Flange or bolt pattern captureโœ”
Wear measurementโœ”
Fabrication fit verificationโœ”
Confined detailed geometryโœ”

Hamilton By Design logo displayed on a blue tilted rectangle with a grey gradient background

National Capability

Hamilton By Design provides:

  • Engineering-grade terrestrial scanning
  • Metrology-grade handheld scanning
  • Integrated modelling and verification
  • Compliance-aligned documentation

Across mining, industrial and infrastructure environments throughout Australia.


If your project requires both macro capture and micro precision, we can deliver a structured scanning approach aligned with engineering outcomes.