Rockwell Automation 5370-CVIM2 Module User Manual

Page 58

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5

Chapter

Chapter 3

Image Acquisition Parameters

3–19

Scale –– When the “

Computed

” calibration mode is selected, this field

will display the computed “scale” value, which is the ratio of the “world
units” dimension (such as inches) of the calibration object to the same
dimension in pixels (the

Nominal

or “learned” value). When the

Absolute

” calibration mode is selected, you can enter a predetermined

scale value directly into this field.

P&P Gage –– The

button activates the gage pick and place

function. You can change the length and position of the calibrate gages,
but you cannot rotate them from their X– or Y–axis orientation. For
details about this function, see Chapter 5, Pick and Place Functions.

Threshold –– The

button accesses the threshold cursors. For

details about this function, see Chapter 8, Thresholds, Filters, and
Morphology
.

Feature A, Feature B –– The

and

buttons accesses

the “feature,” or edge selection panels for the respective features.

Units –– When you pick this field, a “typewriter” keyboard appears on
the display, on which you can enter the appropriate name of the “world
units” (such as “

Inches

”).

Done –– When you pick the

button, the system exits back to the

Camera

setup panel.

Calibrate Mode: Computed Mode vs Absolute Mode

The calibrate function provides two methods of calibration: the

Computed

mode, and the

Absolute

mode.

Computed mode –– The calibrate function defaults to the

Computed

mode,

which is the appropriate mode when you want the CVIM2 system to compute
the calibration scale on the basis of you choice of “world units” (such as
inches) per pixel. Using this mode, you position the calibration gages and
perform a

Nominal

(or “learn”) function to “learn” the calibration object

dimension in pixels, then enter that dimension in world units (such as inches)
to perform the scale computation.

Absolute mode –– The

Absolute

mode is appropriate when you already

know the scale values; that is, you know that each pixel in the image field
represents n world units (such as inches), or fractions thereof. Using this
mode, you simply enter the scale value, n. The calibration gages are not used.

Figure 3.12 (page 3–20) shows a

Calibrate

panel with the

Computed

mode

selected for the X calibration gage and the

Absolute

mode selected for the Y

calibration gage (normally, both calibration gages would use the same

Cal.Mode

selection).

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