This story is true. It happened yesterday.
I was sitting in my kitchen at about 12:30 yesterday afternoon, and this email pops up on the laptop where I was working.
Subject: 3D scanning project
Message:
Hello Mr. Salemi,
Our company is involved in a project in which we are scanning vintage
vehicles to create a 3D animation.
I am in need of a 1963 to 1971 MB 230/250/280 SL for this.
We are offering owner's compensation for their time and vehicle. We
are located in Farmington Hills, and the scan takes appx. 45 min.
If you have members with this vehicle and could forward this request I would
greatly appreciate it. If you have more questions feel free to call me at ...SERIOUSLY? yes! So I called the nice lady who sent the email. She gave me the address, told me briefly what they were doing, and I showed up at 2:30. I indicated that it was quite fortuitous for her that she puts the word out for a nearly 50 year old German import in the land of American Iron, and in two hours she had the car in the service bay!
The company is a professional engineering firm whose main line of business is litigation support and product failure analysis. Some large domestic auto manufacturer has been sued for a similar vintage roadster (you figure it out!
) being rear-ended, gas tank rupturing and car exploding. They researched and found a variety of roadsters of the era with similar fuel tank layout and placement, and called them all in. All the cars were scanned with a 3D infrared scanner, and somehow some software will stitch the scans all together into something to support the premise...what the premise is, I don't know. But the guy who did the scanning were PEs--that is, professional engineers.
I left with a nice fat check courtesy of some large domestic auto manufacturer who seems to spend a lot on legal stuff...wink.
Here's a photo of the car being scanned. Note that what is in the engineer's hand is both a receiver (top) and the bottom part is an IR light source. What you cannot see is a handheld "head" in his left hand that is collecting all the data and mapping the car. They did have to spray a powder on the chrome to reduce specular reflections.