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 Automotive Manufacturing
 
 
  VW Halves Fit-and-Finish Inspection Times for its Premium Flagship Model
 
 
  Škoda Cuts Inspection Times, Streamlines Operations
 
 
  Leica T-Probe & T-Scan Combo Perfect Match for Body-in-White Inspection
 
 
  DaimlerChrysler Dusseldorf saves time, improves accuracies
 
 
  Outsourcing Bottlenecks Eliminated With Portable CMM
 
 
  BMW Leipzig: Made to Measure
 
 
  Laser Tracker Helps Opel Measure Up to the Future
 
 
  Raising functionality of laser tracking with Leica T-Probe
 
 
  Laser trackers right at home in assembly line production
 
 
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Leica T-Probe & T-Scan Combo Perfect Match for Body-in-White Inspection

T-Scan at DaimlerChrysler for Optimal Part Fitting
The first thing you’d notice while walking up and down the seemingly endless corridors of DaimlerChrysler‘s sleek, ultra-modern Bremen plant is the almost complete absence of people. Hundreds of robots go about their work with surgical precision, bringing different sheet metal parts into place, welding them together, moving completed parts onto the next station and transporting finished products overhead to maximize space utilization. Viewed from afar, the ubiquitous robots seem to be dancing. The few factory workers you do see use “old school” bicycles to jet between different parts of the factory: hi-tech and low-tech harmoniously coexist here side by side.
Technological progress in the manufacturing processes has meant that more daring body shapes can make the leap from the designers’ drawing board to the assembly line. In the not-so-distant past, cars had relatively simple, square shapes, with individual parts fitting to one another along more or less straight-forward lines. On the other hand, modern cars boast far more complex shapes than the cars of yore. And the task of inspecting how these parts fit to one another has gotten increasingly more complex as well.