Wow! Thanks for the replies guys! I actually am really interested in doing this... I'm working on a project that this would benefit greatly... Plus, how cool would that be? :)
Rudy, I'm sure it's complicated... and I've done some searching around.. I think they use stuff like this to do annuals on airliners, etc as well for metal fatigue... I might be wrong about that.. ;)
Simon, heck yea! I'd love to hear about your friends work! Thanks!
Ceri, I understand... But I also tend to try harder when someone tells me it's too difficult or not possible.... ;)
Ali Reza, I think the biggest problem (unless it's in another spectra of light) would be the depth that imaging can provide... I'm looking at trying to find bubbles that may be several layers of fiber below the surface...
I was thinking something like a sending unit on one side, with the receiver on the other in some sort of rig to keep them aligned, etc. that would allow you to pass the device across the area under test and output either via ethernet (or wireless) to a remote terminal that might be used to do the secondary signal processing/analysis, etc...
Anyways, anything on this would be great to hear!! Thanks!
So, would anyone have some advice on how to get started using the mbed to build a device that can detect tiny airbubbles, cracks, or other flaws in materials like carbon fiber structures, etc...?
I'm guessing some sort of ultrasonic transducer, some fancy coding to send a pulse back.....compare it and produce some levels based on the density of the resin, etc... Anyone done this before?
Thanks!!