Abstract

According to documentary standards for the performance evaluation of laser trackers (LT), long length reference artifacts are required. In this paper, we discuss the design, construction, and calibration of a long length artifact called a step gauge of nests (SGN). The SGN has several nests in line in which to place the LT probe; the two extreme nests of the SGN are at a distance of 3 m, approximately. The documentary standards establishes that the gauge’s length shall be known no matter the orientations it takes. However, for long gauges, factors like gravitational force, fixturing forces, change in the environmental conditions, among others, deform the gauge, and its length changes when its orientation changes. To evaluate these factors, we use a finite element simulation of the SGN in the design stage to predict such deformations (mainly length variations between the two extreme nests). The simulation takes into account the used material, its stiffness, straightness, distribution of the nest’s weight, and geometry’s change of the SGN to reduce the variations in its length. For the construction stage, we describe how the SGN was manufactured and how using high module carbon fiber reduces the influence of the temperature factor. The results of the finite element simulation show a length variation of around 20 µm between the horizontal and vertical SGN positions. That variation was validated with the calibration results of two different methods. The first uses the line of sight (LOS) meth-od, which involves the same LT under evaluation. The second uses an accurate CMM, using the overlap method for calibration. The traceability of the LOS method is accomplished with the wavelength calibration of the LT interferometer while the overlap method uses a CMM evaluated with a laser interferometer with calibrated wavelength.

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