Getting Started with 3D Printing
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Eolas PrintsArticle published at:
June 08, 2026
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Choosing the right 3D scanning technology is one of the most important decisions you will make before purchasing a scanner. Get it right and you have a tool that pays for itself on the first project. Get it wrong and you have an expensive piece of equipment that does not suit your workflow, your environment, or your accuracy requirements.
This guide explains how each technology actually works, what it excels at, where it fails, and which type of buyer each is designed for — with specific product recommendations from the Eolas Prints scanner range.
Structured light scanners project a known pattern — typically a grid or series of stripes — onto an object and use cameras to measure how that pattern deforms across the surface. By calculating the deformation mathematically, the scanner builds a precise 3D point cloud of the object's geometry.
The scanner and object must remain stationary during capture. Multiple scans from different angles are merged in software. Best results come in controlled lighting — bright sunlight can wash out the projected pattern and reduce accuracy significantly.
Strengths: Extremely high accuracy (typically 0.05mm or better on professional systems). Excellent for capturing fine surface detail — texture, engraving, micro-geometry. Repeatable results in controlled environments. Generally lower cost than LIDAR at equivalent accuracy levels for small objects.
Limitations: Short range — most systems work within 0.3 to 3 metres. Sensitive to ambient light. Object and scanner must remain stationary. Reflective or transparent surfaces cause errors. Not suitable for large outdoor environments.
Best for: Industrial inspection, reverse engineering of mechanical parts, dental and medical applications, jewellery and small object scanning, quality control in manufacturing.
From the Eolas Prints range: Seal, Moose, and Toucan all use structured light and are optimised for close-range, high-detail capture.
Photogrammetry reconstructs 3D geometry from overlapping photographs. Software identifies common feature points across dozens or hundreds of images and uses their positions to calculate the 3D structure of the scene. No specialised hardware is required beyond a camera — making it accessible, but heavily dependent on software quality and processing time.
Strengths: Very low hardware cost. Excellent colour and texture capture. Scalable — works on objects from coins to buildings. Works outdoors in natural light.
Limitations: Very slow processing — hours of computation for large scenes. Lower accuracy than dedicated scanners. Struggles with featureless or reflective surfaces. Results depend heavily on operator skill. No real-time preview during capture.
Best for: Architecture and heritage documentation on a budget, film and game asset creation, aerial mapping with drones, general-purpose object capture where processing time is acceptable.
LIDAR scanners emit laser pulses and measure the time it takes for each pulse to return after bouncing off a surface. This time-of-flight measurement directly calculates distance with extreme precision, building a point cloud in real time without projecting any pattern onto the scene. Because LIDAR measures absolute distance rather than relative geometry, it operates at ranges and scales that other technologies simply cannot match.
Advanced LIDAR systems combine this with SLAM (Simultaneous Localisation and Mapping) algorithms to track the scanner's position in real time as you move through a space — meaning you can capture an entire building by simply walking through it, without any targets, tripods, or stationary setup.
Strengths:
Limitations: Lower surface detail resolution than structured light at close range. Higher cost for equivalent capture volume. Not ideal for objects requiring sub-millimetre accuracy.
Best for: Architecture, construction, and building documentation; large-scale surveying and topographic mapping; infrastructure inspection; heritage preservation; urban planning and GIS; real estate digital twins; any environment too large, complex, or inaccessible for structured light scanning.
| Criterion | Structured Light | Photogrammetry | LIDAR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical range | 0.1–3m | 0.1m–1km+ | 1m–200m+ |
| Point accuracy | 0.05–0.5mm | 0.5mm–5mm | 2mm–20mm |
| Outdoor use | Limited | Yes | Yes (all conditions) |
| Real-time preview | Some systems | No | Yes |
| Processing speed | Minutes | Hours | Minutes |
| Large environments | No | Possible | Yes |
| Skill required | Medium | High | Low–Medium |
Choose LIDAR when one or more of these applies:
3DMakerpro Raven (from €1,935) — Ultra-lightweight handheld LIDAR with a 50-metre scanning radius, 360° × 40° field of view, and 2cm accuracy. Ideal for architects, surveyors, and anyone digitising buildings and large spaces. At just 1.1kg, it is comfortable for extended field sessions.
3DMakerpro Eagle with RTK (from €4,354) — Survey-grade LIDAR with integrated RTK GPS for centimetre-level geo-referenced accuracy up to 200 metres. Designed for land surveyors, civil engineers, and GIS professionals. Scan data integrates directly with CAD, GIS, and BIM platforms.
Not sure which scanner is right for you? Contact the Eolas Prints team for a free consultation. We work with professionals across Spain and Europe to match the right technology to each project.