Laser Systems for Geometric Alignment for lasge machines, machine tools, Larg parts, Flanges OPTODYNE LASER EUROPE
Features:
One of the critical components of any laser alignment system is the straightness or flatness of the laser beam or plane, as this is the reference from which the measurements are made. The L-743 features the flattest laser plane in the world that is flat to 1/2 an arc second or 0.0025 mm/m in a 360º sweep and 1/4 arc sec in a 90º sweep or 0.001 mm/m.
30m Straightness and Squareness Alignment Measurement Capability
The 3 laser planes are square to within 1 arc second or 0.005 mm /m). This squareness can be projected out 30.5 m, allowing squareness and straightness measurement of even the tallest machine in the world to be easily checked. The L-743 also features 2 built-in level vials that are accurate to 1 arc second.
New Line of Wireless Targets
One Setup for Most Laser Alignments
Laser Alignment Applications
Machining center alignment, gantries, Automotive transfer-line Injection molding machines and presses
Aircraft assembly (seat track alignment, setting water, butt and station planes, wing-to-body and body-to-body join alignment, etc.)
Roll alignment in: Paper mills, Printing presses Film lines
High-precision, laser and water-jet cutting machines Circuit board drilling machines
Measuring and aligning:
Surface flatness of almost any surface (squares, frames, ways, flanges, circles, etc.)
The squareness of up to 3 surfaces
The straightness measurement of horizontal and vertical surfaces
The straightness and flatness measurements of horizontally and vertically traversing axes
The parallelism of horizontal and vertical surfaces even if those surfaces are 100 feet (30.5 meters apart)
Checking plumb of a vertical surface up to 100 feet (30.5 meters)
Checking way twist and parallelism between horizontal surfaces
Checking way twist and parallelism between vertical surfaces
Measuring surfaces up to 200 feet (61 meters) long with 1 setup
Powerful Alignment Software Downloads Data Automatically
Our Machine Tool Geometry Software shows flatness, straightness, parallelism and squareness errors on an easy-to-read report.
05 July 2011















