
CMM Construction
Originally ALL Coordinate Measuring Machines were manufactured to a
high very precision and were mechanically accurate. It was not
uncommon for manufacturers to offer 2 different grades of CMM
accuracy for the same model; the higher accuracy being attained by
dedicating more care and attention in the final assembly and
calibration process.
The first error mapping techniques were introduced to aid the linear
accuracy calibration of individual CMM axes. The magnitude of errors
introduced into the map was very small, generally limited to scale
error and squareness error, indicating the intrinsic accuracy
in-built into the CMM. Later many CMM manufactures were building
CMM’s from Aluminium; an initiative that started a trend that has
subsequently become the norm. The only issue they faced was
how to make Aluminium CMM’s accurate.
Answer: throw the large errors prevalent in an Aluminium structure
into the error map and force the map to make the CMM structure
accurate.
Maps were designed to only meet the accuracy standard currently in
vogue and assist the manufacturer in passing the "test". One by one
manufacturers went to Aluminium structures attracted by much reduced
manufacturing costs. Manufacturers became dependent upon error
correction software; their confidence in this fundamental technique
increased with time and subsequently relaxed manufacturing
tolerances further as they improved with experience error collection
and mapping procedures.
Aluminium CMM’s are typically built by unskilled personnel and have
no accuracy whatsoever until error mapped into specification.
Aluminium CMM’s offer no benefit, other than price, to the end
users. Manufacturer of Aluminium CMM’s claim Aluminium is the
perfect material for CMM build, but how so since its coefficient of
expansion is almost four times that of granite and yet its specific
weight is only 1% less than granite, therefore Granite is the choice
of material for CMM Manufacture not Aluminium.

Wenzel has retained the original manufacturing techniques for CMM’s.
Wenzel and has grown dramatically by bucking the Aluminium and error
map trend and has subsequently become the 4th largest CMM
manufacture in the world as a consequence.

Wenzel is delivering CMM structures that are manufactured to
exacting tolerances, built by skilled tradesmen and achieve their
competitive accuracies without the use of error mapping techniques.
The key to the Wenzel success is a vertically integrated
manufacturing facility where the investment has been in people,
manufacturing processes and thoroughbred engineering with no
compromises.
A CMM built mechanically accurate over 20 years ago still remain in
regular use today, what length of life can you expect from an
Aluminium CMM today?
Wenzel is proud to be able to quote CMM accuracies of its products
with and without error maps. The difference is an indication that
Wenzel structures are intrinsically accurate. Maybe the CMM industry
should be asked what the accuracy of its product is with the error
map switched off?
The Wenzel CMM accuracy is inbuilt, not added on and so we ask the
CMM industry a sincere question;
Why map it when you can lap it?
Thermal Compensation.

The thermal compensation employed by manufacturers of aluminium
machines only modifies 3 of the 21 error map parameters namely axis
linearity and the software must assume linear thermal expansion
which does not occur in practice. The diagram below was extracted
from a February feature on thermal compensation from Quality Digest
Magazine and highlights the disadvantage of the triangular bridge
design used by some CMM manufacturers.
Granite – The Material of Choice for CMM Manufacture.