ChatterBank1 min ago
Laser Measurer
7 Answers
I've been given a laser measurer, a Suaoki S9, and the manual is of course hard to follow(!)
What I want to know is, can I use it in this way: point it at one end of an object, then point it at the other end, and get a reading of the object's length?
I can do this, after a fashion, with the Measuring Thingy on my iPad, but I can't work out how to do it with the Suaoki.
Any help?
Ta.
BB
What I want to know is, can I use it in this way: point it at one end of an object, then point it at the other end, and get a reading of the object's length?
I can do this, after a fashion, with the Measuring Thingy on my iPad, but I can't work out how to do it with the Suaoki.
Any help?
Ta.
BB
Answers
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https:/ /www.am azon.co .uk/Dis tance-D igital- Referen ce-Reco rding-M easurem ent/dp/ B071YPS 2J9
MEASURING MODES: it can measure single and continuous distances (min/max), area, volume, Pythagoras for height and triangular area, and features add/subtract function
Cautiously, yes, but only if the length you want to measure is one side of a right-angle triangle.
Those things usually work on the 'time of flight' principle. That means the thing has a super-accurate time and sends out pulses so that it fires a pulse and keasures the time before it sees a reflection.
If it can also measure and angle, then it 'could' have a simple trigonometry engine to estimate the 'thid side' of a triangle.
Looks to me from the quote above that it can do this, but is liited to somple right-angle triangles.
Usually, you would set it at the base of the thing you want to measure and fire it toward a target at the other end (such as an interior wall, for example).
Hope it helps.
https:/
MEASURING MODES: it can measure single and continuous distances (min/max), area, volume, Pythagoras for height and triangular area, and features add/subtract function
Cautiously, yes, but only if the length you want to measure is one side of a right-angle triangle.
Those things usually work on the 'time of flight' principle. That means the thing has a super-accurate time and sends out pulses so that it fires a pulse and keasures the time before it sees a reflection.
If it can also measure and angle, then it 'could' have a simple trigonometry engine to estimate the 'thid side' of a triangle.
Looks to me from the quote above that it can do this, but is liited to somple right-angle triangles.
Usually, you would set it at the base of the thing you want to measure and fire it toward a target at the other end (such as an interior wall, for example).
Hope it helps.
Great minds, IJK, that's what I was working on - i.e. using the triangle function, but not in their way - so measuring one side of a 'triangle' (which only exists theoretically) might give me what I'm after.
Ta for the link, Sanmac - unfortunately the manual (and the several videos on YouTube) aren't wonderfully helpful.
BB
Ta for the link, Sanmac - unfortunately the manual (and the several videos on YouTube) aren't wonderfully helpful.
BB
Hi BB
I was being thick. It doesn't measure angles. It just gets two measurements and does the squares and subtracts the smaller from the larger.
It does what it says: Pythagoras.
It's up to the user to make sure the measurements it takes are consistent with the calculation.
So long as you are sure that you are measuring a right-angle triangle, it would probably be easier to take the measurements and do the calculation by hand (or calculator) than to work out how to use the device to do those sums for you.
I was being thick. It doesn't measure angles. It just gets two measurements and does the squares and subtracts the smaller from the larger.
It does what it says: Pythagoras.
It's up to the user to make sure the measurements it takes are consistent with the calculation.
So long as you are sure that you are measuring a right-angle triangle, it would probably be easier to take the measurements and do the calculation by hand (or calculator) than to work out how to use the device to do those sums for you.
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