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Innovative Apixa to be on display at LIGNA 2025

 Thursday, May 15, 2025

Apixa_Ligna

Apixa from Heverlee, Belgium, will showcase the newest additions to its line of industrial solutions for the manufacturing of wood panels at LIGNA 2025 in Hanover: the 3D tongue and groove scanner and the 3D edge scanner. Together with Apixa’s wider array of 3D vision technologies, these solutions were created to facilitate edge quality control and promote the adoption of the industry 4.0 standards in the production of wood-based panels.

Apixa creates top-of-the-line AI solutions for the wood industry that automate production, optimise processes, improve safety, and provide inline quality control. For regulating and keeping an eye on crucial stages in the manufacturing of wood-based materials, the systems incorporate industrial-grade 3D scanning technology.

A 3D edge scanner verifies the final product’s structural soundness

An industrial-grade device for in-line, real-time assessment of printed circuit board edge quality is Apixa’s 3D edge scanner. It offers early insight into the final product’s structural soundness and measures edge thickness and uniformity with sub-millimeter accuracy. Continuous quality monitoring along the production line is made possible by the scanner, which also notifies operators of irregularities before they result in substantial material losses. By offering information for adjusting press factor, trimming parameters, and resin and catalyst usage while preserving excellent edge quality, the system also aids in process optimisation.

Accurate real-time tongue and groove edge measuring

Accurate real-time measurement of tongue and groove edges during manufacturing is possible with Apixa’s 3D tongue and groove scanner. It is intended for inline use in industrial settings and can identify profile deviations with sub-millimeter accuracy right after cutting. To make sure every board satisfies the requirements, the system assesses several factors, including edge location, angle, and surface quality. The scanner decreases downtime, minimises callbacks, and helps prevent large-scale faults by promptly calibrating the equipment. As a result, the final goods have dependable, secure connections and constant quality.

Read more news on: LIGNA, automation, manufacturing, materials, wood-based panels, technology, surface

Get such updates through the American woodworking industry website: woodandpanel.us

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