Showing posts with label digital twin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital twin. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Why Chain of Custody Matters in 3D LiDAR Scanning and Engineering Data

 Why Chain of Custody Matters in 3D LiDAR Scanning and Engineering Data


In today’s engineering environment, capturing data is no longer enough — proving the integrity of that data is what matters most.

As 3D LiDAR scanning becomes standard across mining, manufacturing, and infrastructure projects, a new question is emerging:

👉 Can your scan data stand up in a dispute, audit, or court of law?

This is where Chain of Custody and Data Governance come into play.


What is Chain of Custody in Engineering Data?

Chain of custody is the documented record of how data is captured, handled, transferred, and stored over time.

It creates a traceable, auditable history of your data — from the moment it is scanned through to final design, modelling, and decision-making.

Without it, even the most accurate LiDAR scan can be questioned.


Why This Matters for LiDAR Scanning

In engineering and construction environments:

  • Scan data is used for design decisions
  • It informs modifications and upgrades
  • It can be referenced in claims, disputes, and compliance reviews

If there is no verified chain of custody:

  • Data can be challenged
  • Accuracy can be disputed
  • Liability can shift

A broken chain means the data may not be considered reliable — regardless of how good the scan looks.


The Shift from “Point Clouds” to “Trusted Data”

Traditionally, scanning providers focused on delivering:

  • E57 files
  • RCP / RCS datasets
  • Meshes or visual outputs

But the industry is moving beyond that.

The real value is now:

✔ Who captured the data
✔ When it was captured
✔ How it was processed
✔ Who accessed or modified it
✔ What version is being used

This is data governance, not just data delivery.


Where Engineering-Led Scanning Changes the Game

At Hamilton By Design, scanning is not treated as a standalone service.

It is part of an engineering workflow, where:

  • Data is captured with design intent in mind
  • Processing aligns with CAD and modelling requirements
  • Outputs are structured for FEA, drafting, and fabrication
  • Governance is maintained from scan to final deliverable

This approach ensures the data is not just usable —
it is defensible.


Digital Chain of Custody + 3DEXPERIENCE

Modern platforms like Dassault’s 3DEXPERIENCE enable:

  • Controlled access to models and drawings
  • Revision tracking (IFR / IFA / IFC)
  • Centralised data storage
  • Full audit trails

This creates a digital chain of custody, where every interaction with the data is recorded and traceable.

The result:

➡ Confidence in decisions
➡ Reduced risk
➡ Stronger legal standing


Why It Matters Now More Than Ever

With increasing legal scrutiny and data-driven decision making:

  • Engineers need verified inputs
  • Clients need accountability
  • Projects need traceability

Chain of custody is no longer optional —
it is becoming a requirement.


Learn More

For a deeper breakdown of how this applies to LiDAR scanning, engineering workflows, and real-world project risk:

👉 https://www.hamiltonbydesign.com.au/chain-of-custody-lidar-scanning-data-governance/


Final Thought

Anyone can deliver a scan.

But not everyone can deliver data you can trust, defend, and build from.

That’s the difference between
scanning providers and engineering-led reality capture.