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Assembly Check of Car Air-Conditioning Unit
This application has been taken from the book Industrial Image Processing by Christian Demant, Bernd
Streicher-Abel and Peter Waszkewitz, published by Springer (Berlin, Heidelberg, New York), ISBN 3-540-66410-6.
The image shows a car air-conditioning unit. There are a lot
of small parts, like tubes, screws and clips, attached to this unit. To check the presence of these parts is not very
difficult conceptually, but it poses some interesting problems.
The first problem is the size of the unit. It measures almost
3 feet in length, whereas some of the parts to be detected are smaller than a quarter of an inch. It is immediately clear
that such a check cannot be done using a single camera. The final setup consisted of fourteen cameras connected to
two camera inputs of a DT3152 frame grabber using external multiplexers. The multiplexers are switched from within
NeuroCheck using digital I/O. Images from all cameras are captured at the beginning of the check and stored on
NeuroCheck's image tray so that the test piece can be removed from the inspection station even before processing is
complete.
The second problem is lighting. It proved impossible to design an overall optimal illumination setup for the complete
unit. Therefore a specifically designed illumination was assigned to each camera. The lighting is automatically switched
together with the camera inputs by digital I/O.
The following images show the flat left and the curved right area of the unit. Under an unfavorable angle of incidence
the dark plastic reflects the light so strongly that the metal clips blend together with the background. It is obvious
that the different geometrical properties do not allow for simultaneously optimal illumination of both areas.
Another important aspect of this application is positioning. Due to the size of the unit and the elasticity of the plastic
position variations in the range of a few millimeters are inevitable. To overcome this problem, larger parts, which are
easily detected, are used as position reference. The following image shows the final result image for the left section of
a unit. 
Not only is the optical inspection much more flexible than the conventional combination of
mechanical components with inductive calipers, it has also proven to be more reliable, as it
has detected several units with missing parts which tested OK with the mechanical/electrical inspection system.
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