Seal Lite Scanner by 3DMakerpro is it worth it? This tutorial will help you decide...

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2024
  • Got a Seal Lite for Christmas. Was super excited. I have ZERO experience with 3D scanners or photogrammetry (I tried Meshroom once...) Tried to use it and I was a few hours in and I still had NO success. I was beginning to wonder if the scanner was junk or defective or the software was not working or was I just missing something. Yup. I was missing something. Eventually I found the two or three keys to actually getting a working scan. The JMStudio software is actually brilliant BUT it is challenging to make such a complex task completely intuitive in a user interface. Add to that they are developing for MacOS and Windows which means that the user interface is neither MacOS nor Windows native. I hunted for tutorials from 3DMakerpro and things that were called tutorials were more like marketing videos. I hunted on CZcams and found reviews that helped a bit but really didn't explain the steps or were using a different version of JMStudio that looked different. . I am using JMStudio Version 2.5.15 2023 in this video. I suspect new versions will follow soon.
    I just hope this 18 minute boring video gives others the tidbits they need to get started quicker than I was able to struggle through the learning process.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 18

  • @charlieh.7664
    @charlieh.7664 Před 26 dny

    glad i came across ur sharing. i am selling my 1 week old seal lite due to all the frustrations of not getting any usable outcomes. .and what even bothers more is i got no interest even trying to get rid of it with big discount of it being something like pretty much new..
    i will take it out of the box and give it a try again..
    can u share some tutorials on scanning smaller objects ? like a nut,or something 2cm by 2cm ? thank u.

  • @Iskelderon
    @Iskelderon Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you!
    I'm currently in the market for a scanner that won't break the bank, since it will just have to serve for stuff like scanning the compound curve contours of model kids (e.g., scan a car model to get the contours to model widebody extensions to be printed). Seems like this would do the trick, especially with a coat of washable color to remove the reflections interfering with the scan.

  • @Sloganlogo
    @Sloganlogo Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great Video. I too have had a Seal for Xmas and was going to send it back seemed not fit for purpose. Maybe I will give it another go.

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 5 měsíci

      Yes give it another shot. I know I didn’t use fancy screen recording etc but I think you can clearly see what I was doing mouse wise as I went through the steps.

    • @johnprouty6583
      @johnprouty6583 Před 5 měsíci

      @tjones99 THANK YOU! I went ahead and bought a Seal Lite and turntable and while waiting for delivery watched some previous reviews, few of which were complementary, I started doubting my purchase. But I think you’ve driven home the point that the learning curve is steep but the device and software are very capable given practice. I’m confident that this will meet my needs eventually. Great tutorial.

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@johnprouty6583 I do t think you will be disappointed once you are over the hump. It’s getting the steps to that first successful scan that is killer. I was close to throwing in the towel a few times before my first successful scan. It’s all been improvement since then. Is it perfect? Nope. Is it as easy to use as a photocopier? Nope. But the task itself performing is complex and with a little experience it gets much easier. Oh and scanning like thousands of frames is pretty much a waste of time I find. 200-400 good frames is better than 1400 frames. A few angles with 300 frames each and a little cleanup gets you a pretty good 3D model.

  • @thomaspegoda1763
    @thomaspegoda1763 Před 5 měsíci

    Have you done anymore scanning? It seems really accurate for the price. My friend sent me an inspire to try out but its not great at small detail.

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Yes but primarily learning turntable operation. I haven’t tried anything really detailed yet. But I’m loving it.

  • @aurktman1106
    @aurktman1106 Před 5 měsíci

    I bought a Seal Lite for Christmas, I definitely need to work on how to use it.

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 5 měsíci +1

      I had serious doubts for the first two days. Then I had a few key moments. Now I am at the “this is wicked amazing” stage!!!

    • @aurktman1106
      @aurktman1106 Před 5 měsíci

      @@tjones99 awesome! I have a 57 Chevy 4 door hardtop that has quite a few pieces needed that are not reproduced yet. I will scan them, clean up the STL, and have them machined, cast, or 3D printed. I also have a ton of other projects too.

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@aurktman1106 I can't stress enough how significant cleaning up the scans before alignment is... Getting rid of the base for starters... This is one area where Table Scan rocks... and my valuable lesson with table scan I learned (the hard way as usual) was the table itself has to have a recognizable pattern of depressions in it so the scan software knows what angle the table is at at all times! Cleanup is huge. I have ordered the 3DMakerPro table to see if it is better than my home made pattern.
      I also experimented with "dry shampoo spray" that will really help with shiny car part (shiny anything) scanning. This dry shampoo coats with a dull white finish that comes off easy... why anyone would put this on their hair is beyond me but it works for scanning.
      Oh and I found it very hard to align a part I was scanning that was MOSTLY symetrical... easy to confuse the align algorithm (and me in manual align) ... so I used hot glue to put a few irregular spaced blobs on the part which made it easier for alignment and MUCH easier for manual alignment (which I use a lot) and then once all are aligned and the Process stage looks great other than the hot glue bumps I just delete the bumps from the scan like you would delete noise and let the "fill gaps" take care of the removed portions and rerun the process stage.

    • @aurktman1106
      @aurktman1106 Před 5 měsíci

      @@tjones99 thanks for the info! I will start doing that tomorrow, going to order some dry shampoo spray now. A bunch of the parts I want to scan are chrome plated so it’s a must to dull them up.

    • @lilietto1
      @lilietto1 Před 21 dnem

      ​@@tjones99thank you for the tutorial, I'm thinking about buying this to scan small parts and it really helps seeing someone using the software. Ps: dry shampoo absorb oils in your hair, then you brush it away (hopefully outside) and so it manages to give your hairs somewhat of a "clean" look... That said is mostly catered towards unwashed teenage girls xD

  • @TrueNorthStar7
    @TrueNorthStar7 Před 4 měsíci

    I can't get mine to connect to a computer (have tried 2 at this point) and haven't found any videos offering any help. So...

    • @tjones99
      @tjones99  Před 4 měsíci

      While the Seal Lite scanner has a USB-C prot on it, it appears to require special cabling to connect. It comes with a Y cable to USB-C where one part of the Y goes to your computer and one part goes to their provided power adapter. Are you using their cable and their power adapter?

    • @TrueNorthStar7
      @TrueNorthStar7 Před 4 měsíci

      I see where I didnt have the right cable going to the scanner, but unfortunately its still not detecting the scanner.

    • @TrueNorthStar7
      @TrueNorthStar7 Před 4 měsíci

      That was my issue. Thanks!