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Accredited CMM Calibration in Kenosha

CMM Calibration performed in Kenosha under ISO 10360 and ASME B89 acceptance criteria — on-site or in a temperature-controlled metrology laboratory.

ISO 17025Laboratory AccreditationISO 10360-2CMM AcceptanceNIST-TraceableReference Results19+ Metro MarketsCoverage
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Accredited CMM calibration work performed for Kenosha industry
Accredited CMM calibration — performed under ISO/IEC 17025

Calibration Delivery Options

On-Site CMM Calibration
Field-service calibration performed at the customer facility using portable artifact sets (swift-check gauge, ball plate, ball-and-cone artifact, end bar, length gauge blocks, KOBA step gauge, reference sphere).
Laboratory CMM Calibration
In-lab calibration in a temperature-controlled environment using gauge blocks, step gauge, ball plate, ball bar, reference sphere, and laser interferometer.

Standards Followed

ISO 10360-2 CMM Calibration
Length-measurement performance test (size and length error E0, EL, repeatability R0) using step gauge, ISO 3650 gauge blocks, ball bar, and laser interferometer; the headline acceptance test for bridge and gantry CMMs.
ISO 10360-5 CMM Calibration
Probing performance test (form and size error) using a 10-50 mm calibrated test sphere; companion test to ISO 10360-2.
ASME B89.4.1 CMM Calibration
Legacy US performance-evaluation standard for CMMs (now superseded by B89.4.10360.2). Artifacts: ball bar, reference sphere, step gauge.
ASME B89 CMM Calibration
ASME B89 standards family covering CMMs and adjacent dimensional metrology: B89.4.10360.2 (CMM performance), B89.4.19 (laser trackers, adjacent context only), B89.4.22 (articulated arms), and B89.7.x (traceability and uncertainty).

CMM Types Calibrated

Bridge CMM Calibration
Moveable-bridge and moveable-table / fixed-bridge configurations - the most common CMM topology across general manufacturing and quality labs.
Gantry CMM Calibration
Large-envelope gantry machines used for aerospace and automotive body-in-white inspection; laser-interferometer and ball-bar setups typical for large measurement volumes.
Horizontal Arm CMM Calibration
Plate-mounted, runway-mounted single-arm, and runway-mounted dual-arm horizontal-arm CMMs typical of automotive body checking.
Articulated Arm CMM Calibration
6-axis and 7-axis (scanning wrist) portable articulated arms, evaluated per ASME B89.4.22 and ISO 10360-12:2016. Includes hard-probe and laser-scanning-probe configurations.
Portable Arm CMM Calibration
Industry synonym for articulated arm; same scope and standards as the articulated arm entry above.
FARO Arm CMM Calibration
FARO Quantum X, Quantum Max, E Max, M Max, S 8-Axis, and Gage Max portable arms.
Romer Arm CMM Calibration
Romer (legacy brand for the Hexagon articulated arm line) - Absolute Arm 7-Axis, 6-Axis, Compact, and 83/85/87 Series.
Hexagon Absolute Arm CMM Calibration
Current product naming for the Romer line - Absolute Arm 7-Axis, 6-Axis, Compact, and 83/85/87 Series. Same family as Romer entries above.

Operating Modes Supported

Manual CMM Calibration
Hand-driven operation. ISO 10360 / ASME B89 acceptance criteria are identical to direct-computer-control machines.
DCC CMM Calibration
Direct computer control - the dominant operation mode for modern bridge, gantry, and horizontal-arm CMMs and the implicit default in most calibration content.
Renishaw UCC Controller CMM Calibration
Calibration of CMMs running Renishaw UCC controllers (T5, S3, T3 PLUS, T3-2, BI, MMI-2, UCClite-2, UCC2-2). Controller variant does not change the underlying calibration deliverable.

When To Recalibrate

Annual CMM Calibration
Default cadence covering the ISO 10360-2 (MPE_E) and ISO 10360-5 (MPE_P) acceptance and reverification cycle, including the 5-block MPE_E gauge-block verification and reference-test-sphere probing test.
Post-Relocation CMM Calibration
Triggered when a CMM is moved to a new facility or has experienced impact. Full ISO 10360 acceptance and reverification artifact set is re-deployed (step gauge, length bar, ball plate, hole plate, laser interferometer).

Performance Parameters Verified

CMM Volumetric Accuracy Calibration
Headline output of an ISO 10360-2 calibration. Artifact set includes hole plate, ball-bar / Invar ball bar, QuikChek, ball plate, calibrated gauge blocks, and laser interferometer.
CMM Probe Performance Calibration
ISO 10360-5 acceptance and reverification using 125-point reference-sphere probing for single-stylus, multi-stylus star, articulating, and stylus / probe-changer configurations across discrete and scanning probes.
21-Parameter CMM Error Mapping Calibration
Characterizes the 21 parametric errors (3 linear positioning, 6 straightness, 9 angular pitch / yaw / roll, 3 squareness) using laser interferometer, ball plate, ball-and-cone artifact, end / length bar, gauge blocks, KOBA step gauge, and swift-check gauge.
Tactile Sensor CMM Calibration
Probe qualification for touch-trigger kinematic, analog continuous-contact scanning, strain-gauge, piezoelectric, and LVDT sensors against a calibrated masterball per ISO 10360-5.
Optical CMM Calibration
Non-contact probe qualification - laser triangulation single-point, laser-line scanning, white-light scanning, vision / CCD imaging, capacitive optical, and optoelectronic sensors - per ISO 10360-7 (imaging) and ISO 10360-8 (optical distance sensors).

Calibration Methods And Tools

Volumetric Ball Bar CMM Calibration
Uncalibrated and calibrated / traceable archival ball bars, length-standard ball bars, and Renishaw QC20 telescoping ballbars; 20-position volumetric performance test.
Laser Interferometer CMM Calibration
Heterodyne, homodyne, multi-axis 6-DOF, Michelson, Zeeman-stabilized HeNe, AOM, and SIOS-style linear-axis displacement interferometers - the primary instrument for 21-parameter error mapping and large-envelope volumetric verification.

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Service Detail

In-Depth Reference for Kenosha

DOC REF: TCS-SVC-LOC
Kenosha County Manufacturing and CMM Calibration Demand

Kenosha County occupies the southeastern corner of Wisconsin, bounded by Illinois to the south and Lake Michigan to the east. The I-94 corridor running through the county functions as an industrial spine connecting Chicago's manufacturing basin to the Milwaukee metropolitan area, and that position has drawn a sustained concentration of contract manufacturers, precision machining operations, and component suppliers that feed both metro supply chains from a single location. CMM assets accumulate in this environment because dimensional verification appears as a formal contractual requirement at essentially every supply chain tier - automotive, medical device, industrial equipment - and the density of such operations in Kenosha County generates corresponding demand for periodic, documented calibration.

The most prominent manufacturing anchor in the city proper is Snap-on Incorporated, whose headquarters and engineering operations on Kenosha's south side represent decades of precision tool and equipment development. That presence has historically attracted a supplier and subcontractor ecosystem distributed across the county. In the southern portion of Kenosha County, the LakeView Corporate Park and Pleasant Prairie Corporate Park in the Village of Pleasant Prairie contain a varied mix of contract manufacturers, plastic injection molders, electronics assemblers, and precision machining shops. The geographic clustering of these operations along the US-41 and I-94 corridors creates a calibration service density where machine populations in adjacent facilities often share similar calibration schedules and documentation requirements.

Manufacturing facilities in Kenosha County operate under a layered set of regulatory frameworks that treat measurement traceability as a formal system requirement rather than a recommended practice. Automotive Tier 1 and Tier 2 suppliers certified to IATF 16949 must maintain calibrated measurement equipment with defined recalibration intervals and documented traceability, and any out-of-tolerance condition triggers a formal suspect-product review that reaches backward through production records. Medical device component manufacturers - several of which are located in the Pleasant Prairie corridor - carry FDA 21 CFR Part 820 quality system regulation obligations that specify measurement system adequacy. Facilities maintaining AS9100 certification for aerospace subcontract work face equivalent requirements. Across each of these frameworks, a CMM calibration certificate that lacks adequate documentation of NIST-traceable uncertainty is itself an audit finding, not a paperwork gap.

Standards, Traceability, and Calibration Documentation Requirements

CMM calibration is governed principally by ISO 10360-2, which defines acceptance tests and reverification procedures through maximum permissible error (MPE) specifications. The standard addresses length measurement error (E_L,MPE), single-stylus form measurement error (P_form,MPE), and probing size error (P_size,MPE) as distinct performance parameters, each requiring evaluation under controlled environmental conditions with temperature documented at regular intervals throughout the test sequence. For calibration laboratories operating under ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation, the reference artifacts used in CMM calibration - gauge blocks, step gauges, ball plates, and ball bars - must themselves carry calibration certificates establishing NIST-traceable measurement uncertainty. It is the artifact traceability chain, not equipment brand or software platform, that constitutes the technically defensible basis for NIST-traceable dimensional results. Any gap in that chain - an artifact with an expired certificate, or one calibrated by a laboratory lacking applicable ISO/IEC 17025 scope - invalidates the downstream measurement record for audit purposes.

Volumetric performance testing, which characterizes a machine's spatial error map across the full working volume rather than at a single reference position, is the technically rigorous approach for CMMs that have been relocated, subjected to structural maintenance, or operated in thermally variable environments - conditions that occur with regularity in the industrial buildings typical of Kenosha County's manufacturing parks. Ball bar testing per ASME B89.4.10360 provides a practical interim verification method, but does not substitute for full volumetric reverification in those circumstances. ASTM-referenced metrology procedures apply in specific artifact qualification contexts where ISO documents do not prescribe full method detail. The calibration certificate produced at the conclusion of the work must report expanded measurement uncertainty (U, k=2), environmental conditions logged throughout the test, the serial-numbered artifact traceability chain with associated accreditation scope references, and a clear disposition of measured values against the applicable MPE specifications - the documentation set expected by ISO/IEC 17025 accredited customers and required at source inspection by aerospace and automotive prime contractors sourcing from the Kenosha-area supply base.

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Request a Calibration Quote

One form. An itemized quote covering scope, turnaround, and pricing is returned directly.