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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Detecting spruce and fir log diameter under bark by using shape and image data

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Pages 440-448 | Received 06 Feb 2014, Accepted 21 Jan 2015, Published online: 18 Feb 2015
 

Abstract

The sawmilling industry stores and measures logs in bark in order to maximise efficiency, quality conservation and preservation. Billing is based on the diameter under bark, estimated based on manual or automatic bark detection. Although an automatic system is desirable for the industry, existing systems like tracheid effect scanners, X-ray or computed tomography either do not work reliably during all seasons or are very cost-intensive. This paper presents an approach for automatic determination of diameter under bark based on a multi-sensor approach including shape data, colour image data and tracheid effect data using laser scanning. For 686 spruce (Picea abies) and 79 fir (Abies alba) logs, diameters under bark are estimated and compared to the diameter after machine debarking. Estimation errors are close to zero and are below ±10 mm for more than 94% of the logs. Influences of season or characteristics like bark beetle are small. Specialised algorithms for diameter estimation in the presence of snow or bark beetle might further improve the result at the cost of required extra manual input.

Acknowledgements

We thank our project partners Donausäge Rumplmayr GmbH, MiCROTEC s.r.l. and the Salzburg University of Applied Sciences, Department for Research and Development.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Austrian Research Promotion Agency (FFG) and Wirtschaftsagentur Wien (ZIT) within the COMET K-project “HFA-TiMBER A.1.1”, (project number 820501).

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