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Jan 2016

Actually, if you get a kinect v1, the previous model, it´s work as well with pretty much the same quality even if the scanning time is longer. Otherwise, it work with USB 2.0, windows 7 and 32/64bits computer. The kinect v1 is also quite cheap if you succeed to get one on second hand. So it a worth to try. Keep in mind than photogrammetry is also a good alternative. In both case, keep in mind that the model should stay still during the scanning process.

I am not quite sure about the Kinect v2 but the Kinect v1 work with infrared light so you could scan even in the dark. Of course, you will get only the surface not the texture. But in 3D printing, except in you have color 3D printer, the texture of the model doesn´t matter.

Cool! Nice handle!

I was already wondering how I can make this a little more portable. Right now it’s fairly bulky to carry around an object, but it works pretty decent if I keep it stationary.

I have noticed that I need a lot of “flood” type lighting to get a nice quality image and scan. The infrared part of the sensor picks up the object pretty well in low light, but does some weird things with the negative angles that have shadows or are lower lit areas.

3 months later

Kind of funny that the picture you put up has the repair the image dialog at the top and you hadn’t done it yet. The Xbox One Kinect doesn’t work like the v2… I’m finding that out the hard way Time to go backwards and get a Kinect 360 or V2 and actually be moving forwards