CAD Forum - tips, tricks, discussion and utilities for AutoCAD, Inventor, Revit and other Autodesk products [www.cadforum.cz] ARKANCE | CONTACT - CZ | SK | EN | DE
Over 1.094.000 registered users (EN+CZ). AutoCAD tips, Inventor tips, Revit tips. Try the new precise Engineering calculator. New AutoCAD 2026 commands and variables.
RSS channel - CAD tips RSS tips
RSS discussions

Discussion Discussion forum

?
CAD discussions, advices, exchange of experience

CAD Forum - Homepage CAD discussion forum - ask any CAD-related questions here, share your CAD knowledge on AutoCAD, Inventor, Revit and other Autodesk software with your peers from all over the world. To start a new topic, choose an appropriate forum.

Please abide by the rules of this forum.
This is a peer-to-peer forum. The forum doesn't replace the official direct technical support provided by ARKANCE for its customers.
How to post questions: register or login, go to the specific forum and click the NEW TOPIC button.
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Events   Register Register  Login Login

Topic ClosedHouse on Fire Ancestral Pueblo Ruins in Autodesk’s Project Photo

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
BetweenTheLines View Drop Down
RSS robots
RSS robots


Joined: 20.Nov.2009
Status: Offline
Points: 751
Direct Link To This Post Topic: House on Fire Ancestral Pueblo Ruins in Autodesk’s Project Photo
    Posted: 09.Jun.2011 at 19:29

I visited South Eastern Utah this spring to capture in photos some of the natural geology like Arches National Park and also some of the amazing archeological sites from the ancient pueblo cultures from about 800-1500 year old.

I took a series of photos using my Nikon D7000 and a point and shoot Panasonic camera. Using the recently released free download of Project Photofly version 2 I was able to convert the photos into a 3D Photo Scene which is a 3D model constructed of 3D point and even a textured 3D mesh. The 3D photo scene was created from 110 photos and took NO manual point selection by me it was automagically converted to a 3D model using mathematical algorithms in Project Photofly.

Here you see the 3D Photo Scene in Project Photofly’s Photo Scene Editor.

3D Photo Scene in Project Photofly’s Photo Scene Editor

Here you can see the close up view of the created a 3D mesh.

Close Up view of the created a 3D mesh

Video animation of the House on Fire ruin photo scene created in Project Photofly

I then want to take the 3D data into AutoCAD 2012. I select the Export Scene As option  then select the Point Cloud format .LAS. Note the DWG format does not export the mesh it only exports any manually created points and lines.

Export Scene As in Project Photofly v2Export LAS in Project Photofly v2

Now in AutoCAD I use the Index Point Cloud and then Attach option and now have a nice point cloud generated from my consumer digital camera in AutoCAD.

The House on Fire Ruin Point Cloud loaded in AutoCAD 2012

Close up of the point nodes in AutoCAD. Point nodes represent 3D space y,x,z coordinates.

I then can use the point cloud as a reference to snap to nodes to get dimensions, or perhaps use to reference in a design for a walkway or a barrier to protect the fragile archeological ruins to protect them from people walking and degrading the site.

The House on Fire Ruin Point Cloud being referenced in a walkway design in AutoCAD 2012

Some Project Photofly References:

Autodesk Labs Project Photofly v2 A to Z in 7 minutes: http://fb.me/vgyPHFJ2

Project Photofly v2 Shooting Guidelines
http://autode.sk/is2ive

My quick overview video of Project Photofly v2
http://autode.sk/lgwKBC

Getting Started Guide (PDF)
http://autode.sk/iGVloq

Hovenweep Castle Ruin Video from Project Photofly
Hovenweep Ruin

In a future post I am writing I will talk about comparing Photogrammetry technology based product like Project Photofly and a laser scanner technology. One does not replace the other as they are really quite complimentary and each have unique strengths. Advancing technology and democratizing the ability for people to capture reality around them is good for all. I am also working on a Tips and Tricks blog post for Project Photofly.

Cheers,
Shaan

Go to the original post...

Between the Lines - Autodesk blog by Shaan Hurley
Back to Top

Related CAD tips:


 Post Reply Post Reply
  Share Topic   

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down



This page was generated in 0,082 seconds.