Manual
VMA 11.6.2 AutoMeasure Manual
⨠What This Manual Is
This is the comprehensive guide to NEXIV AutoMeasure VMA 11.6.2 â distilled from 279 official Nikon guide files into plain English. Every feature, every measurement type, every calibration procedure, written for real users who need to get work done.
đ Table of Contents
Getting Started with VMA 11.6.2
What Is NEXIV AutoMeasure?
NEXIV AutoMeasure is precision measurement software for vision-based coordinate measuring machines. It combines high-speed optical measurement with powerful analysis tools to inspect parts with sub-micron accuracy.
đŦ Vision Measurement
Measure without touching. Edge detection, pattern matching, and surface scanning through the camera.
⥠Automated Replay
Teach once, measure forever. Create a recipe and replay it on hundreds of parts automatically.
đ Statistical Analysis
Built-in SPC tools. Track Cp, Cpk, trends, and process capability without exporting.
đž Recipe Management
Save complete measurement sequences. Load, modify, and share across your team.
System Startup Sequence
Always follow this exact order. Getting it wrong can cause errors or damage.
Understanding the Interface
| Area | Purpose | What You'll Do There |
|---|---|---|
| Video Window | Live camera view | See your part, position probes, verify alignment |
| List Panel | Teaching steps | See every measurement in your recipe |
| Output Panel | Measurement results | View values, check pass/fail, see statistics |
| Toolbar | Quick actions | Save, load, run replay, switch modes, zoom |
| Probe Panel | Measurement tools | Select edge calipers, circles, lines, wizards |
| Position Display | Stage coordinates | See current X,Y,Z position |
Understanding the Five Modes
AutoMeasure operates in distinct modes. Each mode shows different tools and controls. You cannot access all features from every mode â this is by design to prevent accidents.
Teaching Mode â Create Recipes
In Teaching Mode, you manually navigate the stage, place measurement probes, measure features, and build a sequence of steps that can be replayed later.
What you can do:
- Create new measurement tools (circles, lines, distances, etc.)
- Set up coordinate systems and datums
- Define tolerances on output items
- Add comments and documentation to steps
- Configure illumination and magnification settings
Replay Mode â Automated Measurement
Replay Mode executes your saved teaching file automatically. The software moves the stage, switches probes, adjusts lighting, and collects data without human intervention.
Result View Mode â Review Your Data
After replay completes, switch to Result View Mode for data analysis and reporting.
Key capabilities:
- View results per sample or aggregated across a lot
- Export to CSV, Excel, or print reports
- See color-coded pass/fail indicators
- Calculate statistics: Cp, Cpk, mean, standard deviation
Machine Setup Mode â Calibration & Configuration
Calibrate the system and configure hardware settings.
Available settings:
- Vision processor calibration (magnification, parcentricity, camera alignment)
- Light amount calibration
- CNC speed settings
- Joystick sensitivity
- Fence limits (software travel limits)
Select Application Mode
If your facility has multiple NEXIV systems or different software configurations, this mode lets you choose which AutoMeasure application to launch.
Teaching Mode: F9 | Replay Mode: F10 | Result View: F11 | Machine Setup: F12
Creating Your First Recipe
The Recipe Creation Workflow
A "recipe" (teaching file) is a saved sequence of measurement steps. Here's the proven workflow:
Switch to Teaching Mode. Verify the List Panel is visible and empty.
Adjust diascopic (backlight) and episcopic (front light) to clearly see your features.
Select zoom level that shows features clearly. Higher magnification = more precision but smaller field of view.
Set up a coordinate system. This defines where (0,0) is. Most recipes fail because this step was skipped.
Use base elements or AutoMeasure wizards to create geometric elements.
For each output item, set nominal values and tolerance limits. This enables automatic pass/fail during replay.
Save with a descriptive name including part number and revision.
Understanding the List Panel
The List Panel is your recipe. Each row represents one measurement step.
| Column | What It Shows | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| ID | Sequential number | Step reference for editing or reordering |
| Tool Name | Type of measurement | Circle, Line, Distance, etc. |
| Value | Measured result | Diameter, distance, angle, etc. |
| Message | Optional label | Your documentation |
| Output | Yes/No indicator | Whether this step appears in reports |
Setting Up Coordinate Systems
This is the most critical step in recipe creation. Get this wrong, and every measurement will be wrong.
Quick Coordinate Setup Methods
Two-Point Coordinate Axis: Pick two points to define your X or Y axis. First point becomes origin.
Line as Axis: Select an existing measured line element to serve as your axis.
Origin Point: Set just the origin (0,0) without changing axis orientation.
Rotation: Rotate your coordinate system by a specific angle.
Working with Teaching Comments
Every step can have a comment. Use them liberally.
Good comment examples:
- "Primary datum â used for all hole positions"
- "Mounting hole â 1/4-20 clearance"
- "Critical dimension per drawing A-1423"
Base Element Measurements
Base elements are the fundamental geometric shapes you measure. Every complex measurement starts with these building blocks.
Common Controls (All Base Elements)
| Control | What It Does |
|---|---|
| [Continue measurement] | Toggle continuous tool creation on/off |
| [End by minimum point inputs] | When checked, element is created once minimum points are entered |
| [Coordinate system] | Toggle between Cartesian and Cylindrical |
| [Projection plane] | Cycle through XY, YZ, ZX planes |
| [Output item setting...] | Configure which values appear and set tolerances |
Circle
The most common measurement. Used for holes, pins, bosses, and cylindrical features.
| Method | Min Points | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Least-squares | 3 | General purpose, best overall fit |
| Minimum zone | 4 | Form tolerance evaluation |
| Recall (points) | 3â10,000 | Refitting from existing point data |
| Recall (circle) | 1 | Using an existing circle as-is |
Output: Center X, Y, Z | Diameter D (or Radius R) | True Position | Circularity E | BONUS tolerance
Standard: Distance from nominal à 2
MMC+ (Maximum Material Condition): For holes â bonus tolerance as hole gets larger
MMC-: For pins â bonus tolerance as pin gets smaller
Line
Straight edges, flat surfaces, linear features.
| Method | Min Points |
|---|---|
| Least-squares / 2-point | 2 |
| Minimum zone | 3 |
| Recall (line) | 1 |
Output: Angle N1 | Deviation E (straightness) | For 3D lines: Angle N
Plane
Flat surfaces. Essential for establishing datums and measuring flatness.
Input: 3+ points for least-squares, 4+ for minimum zone
Output: Normal vector angles | Flatness deviation
Arc
Partial circles â chamfers, radiused corners, partial slots.
Key difference from Circle: Includes start angle A1 and end angle A2.
Sphere
Spherical features like ball bearings, spherical mounts.
Input: 4+ points (3D fitting requires more data)
Ellipse
Oval holes, elongated features.
Input: 6+ measurement points
Output: Center X, Y, Z | Long Diameter LD | Short Diameter SD | Angle N1
Oblong (Rectangle)
Rectangular slots with sharp corners.
Input: 8+ points (2 per side minimum)
Oval (Straight Slot)
Similar to oblong but with semicircular ends â stadium shape.
Quick Reference: Points Required
| Element | Least-Squares | Minimum Zone |
|---|---|---|
| Circle | 3 | 4 |
| Arc | 3 | 4 |
| Line | 2 | 3 |
| Plane | 3 | 4 |
| Sphere | 4 | 5 |
| Ellipse | 6 | â |
| Oblong/Oval | 8 | â |
AutoMeasure Wizards
AutoMeasure wizards automate repetitive measurements. They perform a "pre-measurement" during teaching to establish the feature's approximate location, then during replay they automatically distribute measurement points evenly.
AutoMeasure Circle
Automatically measures a circle by specifying start angle, end angle, and number of points.
Key parameters:
- Preliminary measure checkbox: Enable/disable pre-measurement during replay
- Start angle: -360.0 to 360.0 degrees
- End angle: -360.0 to 360.0 degrees
- Number of measuring points: 3 to 10,000
AutoMeasure Line
Automatically measures a line with evenly distributed points.
Key parameters: Number of measuring points (2â10,000)
AutoMeasure Plane
Automatically measures a plane with grid distribution.
Key parameters: Horizontal points à Vertical points (up to 10,000 total)
AutoMeasure Line Width
Measures width by automatically probing both edges with 180° rotation between them.
AutoMeasure Search
Searches for features that may be partially outside the field of view.
Use case: Large features that don't fit in a single camera view.
AutoMeasure Image
Captures images in various formats: EDF (Extended Depth of Field), Stitching, BMP, JPEG.
Distance & Dimension Measurements
Distance measurements calculate the separation between geometric elements. These are derived measurements â they use existing elements rather than measuring new points.
Distance Between Two Points (Dist2P)
Simple distance between two point elements.
Output: Distance D | Delta X | Delta Y | Delta Z
Point-to-Line Distance (DistPL)
Perpendicular distance from a point to a line.
Input: 1 point element + 1 line element
Point-to-Plane Distance (DistPA)
Perpendicular distance from a point to a plane.
Input: 1 point element + 1 plane element
Point-to-Height Distance (DistPH)
Vertical distance from a point to a reference height.
Width Measurement
Measures width between two parallel edges or surfaces.
Minimum/Maximum Distance
Finds the minimum or maximum distance between elements.
Batch Distance (DistB)
Measures multiple distances in a single operation.
Use case: Measuring distances from one reference to multiple targets.
Coordinate Systems
Coordinate systems define the reference frame for all measurements. Understanding coordinate systems is essential for accurate measurement.
Setting a Datum
A datum is a reference point, line, or plane from which measurements are made.
Common datum types:
- Point datum: Single reference point (origin)
- Line datum: Reference axis
- Plane datum: Reference plane for Z=0
Coordinate Rotation
Rotate the coordinate system by a specific angle or align it to a measured feature.
Methods:
- Rotate by angle: Enter specific rotation angle
- Rotate to line: Align coordinate system to a measured line
- Rotate to two points: Align axis through two points
Coordinate Translation
Shift the origin without changing rotation.
Use case: Move origin to a feature location while keeping alignment.
Coordinate Recall
Return to a previously saved coordinate system.
Use case: Switch between different coordinate setups in a single recipe.
Setting the Projection Plane
Determines which plane measurements are projected onto.
- XY plane: Top-down view (most common)
- YZ plane: Side view
- XZ plane: Front view
Geometric Tolerancing (GD&T)
Geometric tolerancing measures how much a feature deviates from its ideal geometric form. These are critical for quality control and meeting engineering specifications.
Parallelism
Measures how parallel a surface or line is to a reference datum.
Input: Measured element + reference datum (line or plane)
Perpendicularity
Measures how perpendicular a surface or line is to a reference datum.
Input: Measured element + reference datum
Angularism
Measures angular deviation from a specified angle relative to a datum.
Position (Position 2D/3D)
Measures how far a feature's actual position deviates from its theoretical position.
Output: True position value | Bonus tolerance (with MMC)
Concentricity
Measures how concentric two circular features are (share the same center).
Input: Two circle or cylinder elements
Symmetry
Measures how symmetric features are about a center plane or axis.
Runout
Measures surface variation as a part rotates around an axis.
Types: Circular runout | Total runout
Surface Roughness
Measures surface texture and roughness parameters.
Calibration
Calibration ensures measurement accuracy. Regular calibration compensates for mechanical wear, thermal drift, and optical variations.
Vision Processor Calibration
Calibrates the relationship between camera pixels and real-world coordinates.
Key calibrations:
- Magnification calibration: Pixel size at each zoom level
- Parcentricity: Image center vs. stage center alignment
- Camera calibration: Lens distortion correction
Camera Calibration
Corrects for lens distortion and optical aberrations.
Calibration types:
- Low magnification: For wide field of view
- High magnification: For detailed measurements
Light Amount Calibration
Ensures consistent illumination across the field of view.
When to calibrate:
- After changing light sources
- When lighting appears uneven
- Periodically as part of maintenance
Shading Calibration
Compensates for uneven illumination across the field of view.
Stroke Calibration
Calibrates stage position accuracy for dual-objective systems.
AF (Auto-Focus) Calibration
Calibrates height measurement accuracy for AF probes.
Magnification Calibration
Verifies and corrects the pixel-to-micron ratio at each magnification level.
Running Replay
Replay Mode executes your saved teaching file automatically. This is where you see the benefit of careful recipe creation.
Before Running Replay
Ensure the following:
- Part is clean and properly positioned
- Coordinate system is set (if needed)
- Teaching file is loaded
- Stage area is clear of obstructions
Replay Settings
Repeat count: Number of times to run the sequence
Lot number: Identifier for grouping samples
Error handling: What to do when errors occur
- Stop on error
- Skip and continue
- Prompt user
Initial Coordinate System
For parts that may not be positioned exactly the same as during teaching, set an initial coordinate system before running replay.
Methods:
- Manual alignment using datum features
- Automatic pattern recognition
- Fixture-based alignment
Running Multiple Samples
For batch measurement:
- Set up the first part
- Run replay
- Replace the part
- Run again (lot number increments automatically)
Results & Reporting
Result View Mode provides comprehensive data analysis and export capabilities.
Viewing Results
Per sample: Individual measurements for each part
Per lot: Aggregated statistics across all samples in a lot
Trend analysis: Track measurement changes over time
Statistical Analysis
Built-in SPC calculations:
- Mean: Average value
- Standard deviation: Spread of data
- Max/Min/Range: Extreme values
- Cp: Process capability
- Cpk: Process capability index
Export Options
- CSV: Spreadsheet-compatible format
- Excel: Direct Excel export with formatting
- Print: Formatted report
- Custom templates: User-defined report formats
Pass/Fail Indicators
Color-coded results for quick visual inspection:
- Green: Within tolerance
- Yellow: Warning zone (approaching limits)
- Red: Out of tolerance
Data Management
Save results: Export to database or file system
Compare samples: Side-by-side comparison
Historical tracking: Trend analysis over time
Troubleshooting
Common Problems & Solutions
Stage Won't Move
Possible causes:
- Emergency stop engaged
- Controller not powered on
- Software not connected to controller
- Fence limit reached
Measurements Are Inconsistent
Possible causes:
- Illumination not calibrated
- Magnification calibration needed
- Part not clean or stable
- Inconsistent probe placement
Replay Measurements Wrong Location
Solution: Set initial coordinate system before running replay. The part is positioned differently from when teaching was done.
AF Probe Not Working
Possible causes:
- AF probe not calibrated
- Surface too reflective or too dark
- Height range exceeded
Edge Detection Failing
Possible causes:
- Insufficient contrast
- Lighting too bright or too dim
- Edge outside search area
Software Running Slowly
Possible causes:
- Too many teaching steps
- Large image files loaded
- Computer needs restart
Error Messages
Common error codes and meanings:
| Error | Meaning | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Communication Error | Lost connection to controller | Check cables, restart controller |
| Stage Limit | Stage reached travel limit | Move stage away from limit |
| Calibration Required | Measurement accuracy degraded | Run calibration procedure |
| Probe Error | Probe measurement failed | Check probe, verify settings |
- Calibrate regularly per your quality schedule
- Keep parts clean and fixtures secure
- Document your recipes with clear comments
- Back up teaching files regularly
đ¯ Ready to Master Your System?
You now have complete mastery of VMA 11.6.2 fundamentals.
Continue to Advanced Training