Title: Basic GPS Surveying Techniques
1Basic GPS Surveying Techniques
Presented by Neil Gray, Teacher-in-Charge,
Columboola EEC. On behalf of ICT Innovators
Centre, STiS Project.
2Surveying Techniques
- 3 Levels of GPS Surveying
- Point Positioning uses stand alone receivers,
taking measurements from the code carried on the
signal. Many sources of error adding up to 10
15 metres with Selective Availability turned off. - DGPS (Differential) uses two receivers
recording position data concurrently. One Base
receiver is set up at a known position and the
data from this is compared to rover data to allow
a correction. - Precision Surveying (Phase Observable)
differential technique based on the carrier
phase, not the codes. Direct radio signal
measurement results in errors being reduced to
the mm-cm level.
3- Point Positioning
- Uses recreational level GPS units. Any
particular point measurement will be within 10-15
m of a known point. (Under ideal conditions, this
error range could be worse under less than
favourable conditions.) This reading will cycle
around the point over time. - Accuracy can be improved by averaging, that is
by taking a minimum of 10 readings for a required
point over a 10-20 minute period and averaging
the results to determine the point. - The results of this process are displayed on the
following slides.
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5Surveying exercise completed for a single point.
Data displayed using MapSource.
6UTM positions can be seen in the data table for
the program. Note how similar most appear in
terms of at least one parameter.
7The same points displayed in DNRGarmin. Note how
different the points are now in terms of the
cartesian coordinates (x y proj.). This is
because the program records the position without
rounding off.
8The previous 10 records of the one position have
been sent to a GIS for display. Here it can be
easily seen how a GPS unit scatters the readings
even though the readout might show an unchanging
Cartesian coordinate!
9DNRGarmin can calculate a mean value, standard
deviation and circular error of probabilities to
enable statistical analysis and determination of
the point (mean).
Click Edit
10The mean value can be used to create a new point
in DNRGarmin. This can be saved to the GIS for
display. Note the mean point positioned at the
cross.
11- The mean (known) value is actually none of the
measured points but a best fit for the analysed
records. The scattering of the records is caused
by inherent errors in the GPS system used namely - Clock Errors
- Signal Multipath
- Dilution of Precision (SV constellation)
- Atmospheric Factors
- Human Error
- All GPS based measurements need some degree of
processing to improve base level accuracy,
professional grade units have this feature built
in at a significant cost.
12- Other Surveying Techniques
- Recreational GPS is affected by buildings,
vegetation and fences. - Surveying to these objects may require more
traditional measurement techniques. - Some options include offset points or lines,
measuring distances and bearings from known
points.
13- Other Surveying Techniques
- DGPS
- Base units with the software and a subscription
to a DGPS service are costly (1000s). - Precision Surveying
- As above except the cost can now be very high
(10000s).