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Silicon Nitride Probe life duration

I feel like we are going through probes very quickly. We do a lot of aluminum parts. Some of them are decent size. maybe 1 foot in width 2 feet in length. We do a lot of scanning because flatness is usually a concern. I had to replace my 1mm probe this morning because it was not getting accurate results. I got some pictures of it and it looks like material is already in bedded in it even though its got that nitride coating on it. I cant find a clear answer online so im hoping that i could get some info from the forums on what people are seeing on how often they are changing probes that are used for manly scanning.

I use all auto features for scanning planes for flatness. So what ever the software decides is the what I use for speed.
One picture is the side of the probe. That's the one that has the circles on the probe. The other one is top down. That could either be the glue holding it onto the step, or a flat. Hard to tell im leaning twords the glue hold the ruby onto the stem.

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  • hi,

    i try to avoid scanning aluminum, because the probe then picks up material to quickly and is no longer usable.

    it gets better with harder aluminum, but you can't usually choose the material​
    picking up soft material on the probe during scanning can never be avoided, you can only optimize the service life of the probe

    the lifetime is significantly increased the less you scan, leave the scanning of unnecessary elements from the parts
    maybe you can discuss with your colleagues / customers where it really has to be and where not .

    the better the surface roughness of the probe sphere, the less material is picked up.
    Silicon Nitride Probe is optimal, best is diamond sphere​ with 1000+ Euro per probe ^^

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  • hi,

    i try to avoid scanning aluminum, because the probe then picks up material to quickly and is no longer usable.

    it gets better with harder aluminum, but you can't usually choose the material​
    picking up soft material on the probe during scanning can never be avoided, you can only optimize the service life of the probe

    the lifetime is significantly increased the less you scan, leave the scanning of unnecessary elements from the parts
    maybe you can discuss with your colleagues / customers where it really has to be and where not .

    the better the surface roughness of the probe sphere, the less material is picked up.
    Silicon Nitride Probe is optimal, best is diamond sphere​ with 1000+ Euro per probe ^^

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