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Leica BLK2GO

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‘‘ Everything from the design of the device, to the ease of one button operation and the speed make the BLK2GO a highly desirable surveying and data capture tool ’’

As demand for more portable, rapid scanning solutions increases, Leica has unleashed its first, handheld SLAM device, the BLK2GO, together with a new cloud-based visualisation and collaboration platform, HxDR. Martyn Day reports

The laser scanning market tends to move glacially. It’s an old and mature technology, and revolution is not in its nature. There have been some glimpses of excitement over the years — when Faro brought out a £20k scanner that could fit in an aeroplane carry on, or when the major CAD software developers built point cloud engines into their core BIM tools, but critical mass has never been achieved.

Then in 2016 Leica did something atypical - it brought out the ridiculously gorgeous £15k BLK360. The compact laser scanner was ideal for scanning interiors and the device was tied into the equally innovative Autodesk Recap on an iPad, but just as we thought this might be a real catalyst for change, no other firms joined in at that price point. Laser scanning continued to stubbornly stay out of the reach of the masses, compounded by the fact that Leica couldn’t make enough of the BLK360 to satisfy the demand.

Now Leica has a new product and its styling looks like it’s from the future. Could this be the product that finally democratises point cloud capture?

BLK2GO The first thing that has to be said is that Leica must be employing an incredibly talented industrial design team. Both the BLK360 and the new BLK2GO are the most beautiful looking scanning devices that have ever been made. Even if you didn’t know what the BLK2GO did, you’d still want one and would want to hold it and show it to your friends like it was a Fabergé egg.

The BLK360 is a static laser scanning device for rapid point cloud capture over short distances. In contrast, the new BLK2GO is highly portable and adapts SLAM (Simultaneous Localisation And Mapping) technology, which was originally developed for robots and autonomous vehicles.

There is a price for this liberating scanning technology over a standard tripodmounted laser scanner and that’s accuracy. SLAM point clouds are typically accurate to around 20mm, which is still incredible when you consider a site that would take a day to capture through traditional methods, might be done ten times faster with a SLAM device. However, this limitation means there will be times when the BLK2GO isn’t appropriate compared to traditional surveying.

Leica’s BLK2GO has been designed to be as simple to use as possible. Featuring one button operation, it wirelessly links with a Leica iPhone app, so the operator can see in real-time the data it gathers in both 2D and 3D.

The device features enough internal storage for 24 hours of scanning (compressed), 6 hours uncompressed and has an exchangeable battery which lasts for approximately 50 minutes. The range, however, is not huge — from 0.5m to 25m — but this is a SLAM device so your feet can do the work. It combines a 420,000 pts per second laser scanner with a 12-megapixel camera, together

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with an additional 3 camera panoramic vision system.

Leica states that the BLK2GO can go down to 6-15mm accuracy and to achieve the highest accuracy, its case can be turned into a base for static scans. While the iPhone app is a useful tool for onsite feedback, the BLK version of Leica Cyclone is recommended for importation and scan clean up.

Everything from the design of the device, to the ease of one button operation and the speed make the BLK2GO a highly desirable surveying and data capture tool. The nature of the scanned data makes SLAM scans look a bit different to traditional point clouds, with more visible banding in the variance of point cloud density, but this does not impact the quality of the data captured.

So what’s the downside? Well, while this technology is something that everyone in the industry would absolutely love to have, it does cost around £40k a pop. For a surveying firm, this is a no brainer — it has the potential to deliver a huge productivity benefit. However, as far as liberating and democratising point cloud capture within the industry, I am afraid this beautiful device is not going to be the one to make that happen.

The BLK2GO is very much aimed at the traditional surveying firms or, as Leica told us, Hollywood, as a number of films have used the device to capture sets and scenes between takes. It will certainly lead to quicker, less obtrusive, more frequent scans and might bring the cost of data capture services down.

HxDR At CES, Leica unveiled its first foray into the cloud, a browser-based service called HxDR which will be a platform for uploading, registering and accessing customer project point clouds or 1 2 The handheld BLK2GO based on AI that was even city scale models for digi- can scan up to 420,000 announced between Leica tal twins. points per second and BricsCAD last October.

With the introduction of 3 Somerset House in London - captured with When this eventually technologies such as the the BLK2GO, viewed in arrives, it will be a game BLK2GO, the idea is that this Cyclone Register 360 changer. data can be uploaded to the 4 Leica currently has cloud from site for post prothe whole of Paris Conclusion cessing and giving teams access scanned, textured at high resolution in its HxDR As a company, Leica is certo the captured data. cloud platform tainly shaking off its image

As it stands, the system is of perhaps being the least very much in development and will not reactive of the scanning companies. It is compete with authoring tools like trialing price points and delivering techCyclone, which would still be used to do a nologies and designs that are leading the lot of the grunt work in filtering and pro- industry, while aggressively looking at cessing the data for uploading. addressing rapid scan to textured mesh.

In some ways, HxDR could be seen as BLK2GO and HxDR are two essential the ‘Unreal’ or ‘Unity’ for point clouds - components in that plan but they also the ultimate aim being the automatic reg- work happily in traditional desktop istration and production of an accurate, workflows. I’m fascinated to see what the detailed and textured model with mini- company does next. mal user interaction, enabling rapid The Leica BLK360 is still the closest scan-to-model, especially from BLK scanner at what we would deem to be a products. This could be created from data point cloud liberation price point, and derived from many scans and types of that product is so popular that Leica can’t devices to create what Leica calls a make enough of them to meet demand. ‘supermesh’. As an example of capability, Even the BLK360s that get refurbished Leica currently has the whole of Paris all get snapped up. scanned, textured and in the system at This should be a sign to someone out high resolution. there that there is a volume need for data

HxDR will be a subscription-based ser- capture. It might well be that the scanvice, allocating a defined level of cloud ning revolution will really start from the disk space and a number of seats. Users consumer end of the spectrum, as our can upload project work and use the ser- phones and tablet computers start to vice to share them. There will be many have LiDAR capability built in. other possibilities as the platform and With every generation of phone, we API develops. A company could use the know the quality and capabilities will technology to sell access to city models it evolve and rapid innovations in autonohas created, or there could be layers for mous vehicles, robots and consumer AR AI post processing or the ultimate goal of are driving the development of low-cost having real Scan to BIM capabilities, LiDAR technology solutions. which Leica is keenly looking at. It’s all starting to look like it’s within

As part of the Hexagon group of com- reach for all, but it might be trailblazed panies, there are a number of initiatives by games and consumer technology. to address Scan-to-BIM, including one ■ blk2go.com

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