Inspection, Metrology & Quality · UK suppliers

Multi-Sensor Metrology

Multi-Sensor Metrology is part of Inspection, Metrology & Quality on Industrial Connected - UK suppliers who specialise in multi-sensor metrology for buyers across Aerospace, Medical Devices, Defence and beyond. Post one project and receive structured applications from verified suppliers, with Trust Scores and capability data side-by-side.

Multi-Sensor Metrology - UK suppliers in Inspection, Metrology & Quality
Overview

UK multi-sensor metrology suppliers

Multi-Sensor Metrology is part of Inspection, Metrology & Quality on Industrial Connected - UK suppliers who specialise in multi-sensor metrology for buyers across Aerospace, Medical Devices, Defence and beyond. Post one project and receive structured applications from verified suppliers, with Trust Scores and capability data side-by-side.

When to use
  • You're investing in metrology equipment - CMMs, portable arms, 3D scanners or optical measurement systems
  • You need traceable calibration or gauge management for production equipment
  • You require first-article inspection, dimensional inspection or independent measurement bureau support
  • You need NDT, material testing or laboratory testing for critical parts and welded assemblies
  • You're implementing or improving a quality management system or QA function
What to look for
  • UKAS accreditation for calibration and ISO/IEC 17025 for testing laboratories
  • Sector-specific approvals (Nadcap for aerospace, ISO 13485 for medical, IATF 16949 for automotive)
  • Capability for your part size, tolerance regime and measurement technology
  • Application support, training and metrology software expertise
  • Reporting formats your customers expect (FAIR, PPAP, ISIR, AS9102)
Buyer FAQ

Common questions about Multi-Sensor Metrology

Do I need UKAS calibration?

If your quality system, customer or regulator requires traceable measurement, UKAS-accredited calibration is the default standard in the UK.

When should I use a metrology bureau?

For first-article inspection, capacity overflow, or measurements your in-house equipment can't handle - very large parts, optical, laser scanning and reverse engineering work.

What's the difference between testing and certification?

Testing produces data; certification is independent confirmation that a product meets a standard. Many partners in this category can do both.