Computed Tomography (CT) has its roots in medical diagnostics during the late ‘70s and since the ‘90s it has been used in industry as a method for nondestructive testing (NDT). Recently, the technology has taken a step forward and entered a new field of use for high-precision dimensional measurement. For the first time there is a technology which is able to fully capture and measure three-dimensional geometry regardless of whether features of interest are accessible from the outside or hidden from sight inside an object.