Digital Engineering 24/7

Helping design and engineering professionals discover, evaluate and specify technologies and processes that shorten the design cycle and enable success.

Creaform Releases Portable Go!Scan 3D Scanner

Creaform Releases Portable Go!Scan 3D Scanner
Creaform's new portable Go!Scan 3D scanner. Courtesy of Creaform.

Latest Additive Manufacturing News

Latest Additive Manufacturing Resources

  • Digital Engineering April 2026

    In the latest issue of Digital Engineering, we take a look at the latest innovations in design for additive manufacturing, including the use of natural language inputs, social media cosplayers, and AI integration. The issue also includes a feature…

  • January Special Focus Issue: Design for Additive

    In this Special Focus Issue of Digital Engineering, learn about the latest advancements in design for additive manufacturing, including new software tools, additive in automotive, custom medical devices, and more.

  • More Resources

By John Newman  

October 23, 2012

The simplest way to reproduce an object in 3D is to use a 3D scanner. Rapid Ready Tech has covered a fair number of 3D scanners, but taking a look at the newest offerings is always educational. The most common elements in new 3D scanner releases seem to be portability and improved speed.

Creaform’s new Go!Scan is a handheld 3D scanner that is being marketed to industrial and professional users. The company already has a line of 3D scanners, but the Go!Scan is also being trumpeted as affordable.

Go!Scan 3D Scanner

I’d like to define what “affordable” amounts to, but I haven’t been able to find an actual price for the new scanner. Creaform’s current line of scanners clocks in at between $100,000 to $30,000, so, one presumes that an affordable scanner will start at below $30,000.

On the technical side, the Go!Scan uses a white LED light source, with a resolution of .500 mm, and an accuracy of 0.1 mm. It can cover a 15 x 15 in. scanning area, capturing up to 550,000 measurements per second. Creaform claims the speed of the Go!Scan is 10 times faster than other 3D scanners.

The new 3D scanner weighs 2.4 lbs., making it heavier than an iPad, but lighter than most cordless drills. It is point-and-shoot, or the scanner can be fixed in place to capture data while an object is rotated in front of it.

“The Go!SCAN 3D comes from our willingness to further expand our reach and make 3D scanning accessible to a much larger group of companies and individuals,” said Daniel Brown, product manager at Creaform. “We wanted to provide a scanning experience that combined incredibly quick results with real user-friendliness, at a very interesting price point. Thanks to these features and along with its reliable data, we believe that the Go!SCAN will really open up tremendous possibilities for scanning in a wide array of industries.”

So, if we evaluate this release as part of a general trend in 3D scanners, it seems to check off all the boxes. It also adds a nebulous affordable box that might become part of the general equation.

Below you’ll find a video of the Go!Scan in action.


Source: Creaform

 

Latest in Creaform

About John Newman

John Newman

John Newman is a Digital Engineering contributor who focuses on 3D printing. Contact him via [email protected] and read his posts on Rapid Ready Technology.

Follow DE
on Facebook
on Linkedin

Related Topics

Additive Manufacturing   3D Scanning   Resources   Rapid Ready Tech   Creaform   All topics
 

Subscribe

Subscribe to our FREE magazine, FREE email newsletters or both!

Join over 90,000 engineering professionals who get fresh engineering news as soon as it is published.

Subscribe today

 
 

From our Sponsors

Meltio Takes Metal Additive to the Next Level
Meltio's DED technology enables industries to tailor and customize their solutions to create & repair metal parts.
Easing the Transition from ETO to CTO with Configuration Lifecycle Management
Manufacturers are discovering that the Configure-to-Order (CTO) model provides significant benefits when it comes to customization.
Siemens + Altair = The Next Chapter in Design and Simulation
With its acquisition of Altair, Siemens creates a unified simulation portfolio combining generative design with high-performance computing and AI workflows.