Warning

You are reading the documentation for an older Pickit release (3.0). Documentation for the latest release (3.4) can be found here.

Calibration

Robot-camera calibration is the process where the camera and the robot learn their relative position with respect to each other, which allows the camera to guide the robot to correct positions in the work cell.

Calibration can be performed once the camera and robot have been mounted in the work cell, and needs to be redone if the camera moved relative to the robot base (fixed camera) or flange (robot mounted camera).

Tip

You can learn about the main ideas behind robot-camera calibration by watching this video tutorial.

Pickit ships with a calibration plate that has special markers printed on it (below left). During robot-camera calibration, the robot shows this plate to Pickit from different viewpoints, and Pickit learns the relative position between camera and robot:

  • For a fixed camera mount (below center), the plate is attached to the robot end-effector, and Pickit learns the location between the camera and the robot base.

  • For a robot-mounted camera (below right), the plate is located at a fixed position in the work cell, and Pickit learns the location between the camera and the robot flange.

../../_images/calibration.png

Performing calibration

The most accurate results are obtained when the calibration plate is detected from multiple viewpoints, using multi poses calibration.

Although infrequent, in some applications the workspace might be too limited to detect the calibration plate from multiple viewpoints. For such cases, if the camera mount is fixed, Pickit supports the single-pose calibration method. Considering that it can produce less accurate results, it should only be used when multi poses calibration is not an option.

Note

Robot-camera calibration data is associated to the calibrated camera, not to the Pickit configuration (setup or product files).

Validating calibration

An incorrect or outdated calibration can lead to unexpected robot motions. An incorrect calibration can result from not following correctly the calibration prodecure. A calibration can become outdated if the camera moved relative to the robot since the last successful calibration.

Note

The robot-camera calibration quality relies on the robot accuracy and on the camera accuracy. Therefore, if you observe a persistent robot-camera calibration error that cannot be fixed with better calibration poses, it is recommended to verify the accuracy of both camera and robot.

There are two ways in which robot-camera calibration can be validated:

Attention

The first picks after performing calibration should be executed at a low robot speed, so unexpected behavior can be identified early enough to prevent the robot from colliding with people or the environment.