An old 3D printer becomes a new EMI imager | Arduino Blog Blog Home > > Beyond Edge AI: bringing local intelligence to Arduino UNO Q Star Stream is bringing F1-level telemetry to every race team – and every fleet – with Arduino UNO Q Blog Home An old 3D printer becomes a new EMI imager Arduino Team β€” June 6th, 2026 EMI (electromagnetic interference) can be a real nuisance in sensitive circuits. That might be from one device affecting another, but it can also happen when a circuit on a PCB interferes with another circuit on the same PCB (or another PCB in the same device). Engineering to prevent that entirely is really difficult and it helps a lot to be able to see where the interference is, which is why element14 Presents’ Clem Mayer converted an old 3D printer into a new EMI imager . The goal here is to capture a β€œpicture” of the device or PCB in question that shows the areas where EMI is highest. That picture looks like a heat map, with hot spots corresponding to areas of high EMI. But it isn’t something you can capture by snapping a photo with your Nikon.

That’s where this EMI imager comes in. Using an old 3D printer as a motion system, Mayer’s EMI imager moves a detector back and forth across the entire area, scanning EMI levels as it goes. At many points across that area, the system records both the XY coordinates and the EMI level. After scanning, a simple script can turn that data into a 2D image.

Source: https://blog.arduino.cc/2026/06/06/an-old-3d-printer-becomes-a-new-emi-imager/