As you may know, the mechanical pitch is required when you want to interlace multiple images on the same lenticular sheet. The optical pitch is not enough and we need the mechanical pitch too.
A common way to measure the mechanical pitch is to print a pattern of vertical lines, place the reversed lens on the top of it and use a loupe to find the pattern having all vertical lines appearing exactly under every single lens. I find this technique very difficult.
I probably found an easier way to measure the mechanical pitch (the actual size of the lens) and I would like to get some feedback from you.
We start by printing a normal color optical pitch test and place the lens on the top of it as we usually do.
Instead of looking from the expected viewing distance and find the bar with the most uniform color, we instead look very close to the print through a narrow hollow cylinder.
We move our cylinder from left to right and we look for the color that moves at the same speed as our cylinder.
This bar gives the mechanical pitch. What do you think? From my simulated tests, this technique seems to give very precise values without using a loop.
Regards,
Giovanni