teadaemon, you are probably not aware that I have been working with one of the top non destructive testing engineers on ultrasonics for boat laminate condition determination. How do you think that the military and aerospace people test their laminates? Ultrasound is one of the primary modalities. Part of our delays are related to high demand for the instruments by military.
We have the instruments designed and we cut up 20 hurricane damaged boats to prove the technology. We started with smaller sections, such as thru hull and deck cut outs. The problem is that the company we are working with (which used to be owned by my friend) is selling similar instruments to the military and aerospace companies for from $10,000 up to $60,000 an instrument. The instrument can be commercially built for less than $1,000. But then if these same "cheap" instruments were available to the high end (government) buyers, the sales of the expensive instruments would dissapear. We are still working on this aspect. It is our goal to get instruments in the hands of surveyors for $1000 to $1500. Ultra sound works very well in solid laminates. There are a number of other ways that ultrasound can be used--such as having a sending transducer on one side, and a recieving transducer on the other side(difficult to do on a built out boat--but easy on an airplane wing)--or doing what is called a Pitch and catch--where the beams are shot off an interface, which allows the echo pattern to be visualized from the "front side". Also available is mapping technology--where there are A/B plots, and all of the data is stored in the memory and then down loaded onto a computer, where a 3 D model of the laminate can be constructed--along with its defects. The methodology is extremely accurate and will find defects smaller than a grain of sand in a laminate. It is just the price at this point.
Incidently there are one dimensional ultra sound devices which are excellent in steel and glass for about $1000. It is the two and three dimensional devices which get expensive. Yet very few surveyors own these for guaging tanks, steel boats, laminate thickness, pipe wall thickness etc.
Thermal imaging is relitatively rarely used because of the expense of the cameras. We have done some experimentation with modification of digital cameras--but probably this will be best addressed as the cost of purpose built color IR cameras decreases. (Again--if the number of produced units are high, the cost per unit will be lower). Thermal imaging is perticularly useful in wet cores, (moisture in the core gives a lower radiated temperature), delaminated cores, in determining if and where repairs have been made on a hull. It is also very useful in looking at wiring, electrical installations, heating and cooling installations and engines--such as heat exchangers and manufolds--as well as engine blocks. A couple of years ago, the cheapest digital color thermal imaging unit was about $15,000. Today there are some for less than $6,000. (these are lower resolution than the more expensive cameras) For some examples of marine use go to:
http://www.goinfrared.com/industries/marinesurveyor/
Hopefully at some point marine survey will catch up with current technology--but at this time the costs of these technologies, plus the unfamilarity of the value of the technologies have discouraged the use. I personally would have been willing to pay twice the fee if these technologies had been used in boats I had purchased in the past. Even in new boats, these technologies would find many manufacturing defects. As we were looking at the market for the ultrasonic devices, the high end manufacturers were very interested in purchasing an instrument--even at a higher price. The high end customer wants assurance of a quality hull. The mass producers were not at all interested--and they are the ones who need to do quality control!
Perhaps at some time, the boat buyer will demand that this modern technology be used--because it is at the buyer's expense that the repairs to the boat must be made. A few hundred dollars more in the cost of a survey, to avoid thousands in repair costs makes good economic sense.