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Wanted part time civil eng. to work with surveyor on projects requiring storm water controls, must be reg. in Pa. Great for the retired eng. I'll do the field work you do the design of ponds sewers etc. Four or more projects per year. Centeral Pa. area but you could be located anywhere.Return to Top
Please visit the WWW site of C E Ball & Partners, Chartered Quantity Surveyors, Construction Cost Managers and Project Managers. Active throughout the UK on major projects and with a keen interest in the cost management of M&E; and vertical transportation installation as well as general construction works, high quality fitting out and retail shopfitting. http://www.ceb.co.uk/ The site include lots of construction and design related www links. C E Ball are also founder members and active participants of CITE and 2 years ago were the first QS in the UK to produce CITE compliant Electronic Bills of Quantity (EBQ's). Please also then visit ..... CITE (Construction Industry Trading Electronically) the Home page for this UK initiative to provide a pragmatic approach to the electronic transfer of Tender information in the form of Bills of Quantity (EBQ's) between the Client QS and the Contractor's Estimator - and back. Download a trial 'zip' file to see what its all about. Visit CITE at: http://www.cite.org.uk/ Here you can find out about the various CITE Initiatives, find out how to join, lookup members activity and links to their own websites, and download the CITE BOQ FREEWARE! Please visit soon! _____________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hudson BSc FRICS, C E Ball & Partners, London cebab@cix.compulink.co.uk _____________________________________________________________________Return to Top
>This can be a very good thread, I think. These are issues we need to >deal with and the internet is the ideal forum in many ways. I hope >you don't mind my posting this reply in the news group. > It seems to me that there are four verbs that pretty much encompass the work of land surveyors: - Dig, - Measure, - Judge, and - Preserve. Only one of these describes a part of surveying that is much affected by GPS technology, all of the marketing hooplah to the contrary not withstanding. D i g g i n g : Surveyors dig up (both figuratively as well as literally) the evidence that pertains to the question of the location of specific land boundaries. In my view, deed research at the County Clerk's office is digging and so are preparing working sketches and making up "shopping lists" of things to be examined further upon the ground. Obviously digging is an essential part of a land survey, otherwise one could measure forever without ever discovering anything about the property rights that are the real object of the land survey investigation. Digging is a professional skill that cannot be easily taught because the inquiry depends upon what is found and requires a varied knowledge of the habits and customs of the previous surveyors one is following. The best actual corner monument finders I know are both older colleagues who have spent a good bit of professional time in field. The worst records for corner recovery probably belong to firms who have decided that the investigative part of surveys can be done by inexperienced staff directed by remote control from the office. M e a s u r i n g : It is the measuring aspect of land surveying that is the activity that is fixed in the mind of the public (and of the people who sell survey equipment) as being what land surveying is all about. When the newspaper comes to interview you, would you rather be photographed standing next to a surveying instrument or carrying a shovel, or slaving at a desk over a pile of deeds? I'm afraid that I would head for the instrument if I wanted a picture that non-surveyors would recognize. Measuring as a professional skill lies in knowing how to efficiently perform reliable measurements, matching suitable equipment and methods to a particular task. It also lies in knowing what sorts of things can go wrong, so that the work is carried out with an eye open for blunders and an awareness of the effect of the inevitable small errors. As measuring equipment gets more sophisticated, the surveyor is roughly in the same relation to it as the well qualified airline pilot is to the automated flight control systems. I don't know about you, but the first time I hear a synthesized voice say "this is your pilot ...", I'll be wishing that I had my parachute with me. Technology is great until it doesn't work. I would think that roughly one-fourth of the work of a typical land survey is the actual measuring. I consider the fundamental calculations to be an extension of the measuring process. Inverse calculations from surveyed co-ordinates are a sort of second or third generation measurement, and some knowledge of the uncertainties in the co-ordinate values is just as important as, say centering the instrument or plumbing the prism rod was in the field. GPS technology will only effect this small part of land surveying in Texas, the measuring, for the forseeable future. J u d g i n g : The digging and measuring present the surveyor with evidence to be weighed and considered. This judging of the evidence is where the experience and skill of a professional indispensible. Judgment comes from being in the arena, trying to apply general principals to specific situations that have a remarkable way of resisting generalization. What makes surveying a fit profession for an adult is that one can work at it for a lifetime and still find novel situations that defy any "cookbook" procedure. Unfortunately for the popular conception of surveying, it is a perfectly sedentary activity that does not lend itself to being photographed in the Swiss alps, or at a construction site wearing designer clothing. I think that we would hear more about the judging aspect of land surveying if the professional magazines were to solicit advertising from the makers of Maalox. P r e s e r v i n g : When all is said and done, the actual tangible products of a land survey are maps, reports, written descriptions, and possibly some new boundary markers. Since they are the actual thing that the client receives, they are from a professional practice standpoint the most important part of a land survey. The ability to explain in clear language to a client what one has done and found is a professional skill that cannot be automated. The art of writing descriptions that can be located, and properly understood, by some land surveyor fifty years from now, is not easily mastered. Of the above, only measuring is the part that has really changed much over the last forty years in Texas, where I practice. It would be interesting to know whether measuring figures more significantly in the land surveying process for surveyors practicing inside a Torrens system of title registry (such as the Australians and New Zealanders have), and digging less so. How does the above mix of activities play out in their respective practices? Kent McMillan, RPLS Austin TXReturn to Top
Neil Giesbrecht wrote: > > With modern instruments is turning the angles twice on opposite sides of > the 'plate' necessary? In my case I own a Leica TC600 and turning angles > (actually bearings) twice on opposite faces is basically a pain in the ass > since the display is only on one side of the gun and it doesn't 'hold' the > foresight to use as the subsequent backsight. Does the circuitry of these > new guns make such a routine unnecessary? > > It has me wondering "Modern instruments make VERY accurate measurements. We no longer have a need for doubling." --> I made that statement when I got my first Wild T1 in about 1973. I was right then and am still right. Doubling does NOT increase the _accuracy_ enough to warrant the effort. The REAL reason to double is (and always has been) to eliminate People Errors. 1. We ALL make transcription errors. It is Very common to swap numbers, write unclearly, record the vertical instead of the horizontal, . . . . The list is endless. "I am very careful and don't do that": BS, we are human. "I use a data collector": not out of the woods yet! 2. We ALL make pointing errors. In the best of conditions we get complacent and make silly, sloppy errors; in tough conditions we can be mistaken. Pointing to the wrong sight can and does happen, pointing a little off the target happens too. A bad double tells you that you have an error someplace. This is probably the only way the error can be found. Balancing a traverse does no more than spread the error thru your Good work. **>>> Don't Skip Doubling, you will screw up, guaranteed. <<<** We are getting lost in technology and forgetting real life conditions. ----- (you may replace "doubling" for "redundant independent measurement" at any point in this discussion) ----- -- Peter Ehlert mailto:petere@sonic.net Oooo. .oooO ( ) ( ) ) / \ ( (_/ \_) Sea Dance Internacional, SRLdeCVReturn to Top
Neil Giesbrecht wrote: > > With modern instruments is turning the angles twice on opposite sides of > the 'plate' necessary? In my case I own a Leica TC600 and turning angles > (actually bearings) twice on opposite faces is basically a pain in the ass > since the display is only on one side of the gun and it doesn't 'hold' the > foresight to use as the subsequent backsight. Does the circuitry of these > new guns make such a routine unnecessary? We use a TC-600 at Algonquin College in Ottawa. We take angles on both sides of the plate, and yes, it is indeed a pain in the ass. The sales rep from Leica told us that a second keyboard and display could be attached to the other side of the unit. I'm already very impressed with the TC600, and a second keyboard would make it even better. -- Humans are merely a life support system for their cats. ======================================================= Chris J. Hall jkh@synapse.net Ottawa ON Canada =======================================================Return to Top
Paul Kunkel wrote: > I once test-ran a very inexpensive Leica total station at a > convention. That may have been the TC600. It appeared to be built for > staking and topo, the kind of work that requires little high-order > traversing. One-sided angles may be safer now that such things as > dual-axis compensation and stored error constants are available, but does > that instrument even have those features? As a side note, we were only able to accomplish a 1:27000 accuracy on a 13 angle, 2100m traverse. Then again, we are only students, however we took 4 or 5 sets at each station and were out by 24" on the whole traverse. I don't know if that's good or bad for a total station that really isn't made for traversing. -- Humans are merely a life support system for their cats. ======================================================= Chris J. Hall jkh@synapse.net Ottawa ON Canada =======================================================Return to Top
I am searching for users of Survey Complete to share hints and ideas. Specifically: using a TDS data collector and creating figures, and creating 3D breakline files for InExpress. Adam West, PLS Skees Engineering Louisville, Ky.Return to Top
I am currently a second year student in Algonquin College's Survey Technician program. I will graduate this spring as a Survey Technician. I have some questions about finding decent employment: 1) Will a Survey Technician have professional status if trying to obtain a work VISA in the US? Is it necessary to upgrade to Survey Technologist? 2) Is there any way to upgrade from Technician to Technologist in North America? All community colleges in Ontario have dropped the third year of instruction which upgrades to technician. 3) Is there sufficient demand for Survey TECHNICIANS in the US that a propective employer would sponsor a Canadian candidate for a work VISA? 4) What type of job should a Survey Technician expect? I have heard that we can do better than Rod/Chainperson, and should expect about $10-12 an hour with our degrees. Any info would be greatly appreciated. -- Humans are merely a life support system for their cats. ======================================================= Chris J. Hall jkh@synapse.net Ottawa ON Canada =======================================================Return to Top
"kdgmh"Return to Topwrote: >Is there any >shareware or freeware >^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ >out there to automatically (90%) write >legal descriptions by picking the appropriate entities in Autocad? >Preferably the routine will write the data to a text file. Any help is >greatly appreciated. Thanks. (hchase@i1.net) Most all commercial COGO/Survey add-ons for AutoCAD will do this. Some low cost ($50-$150) packages are available (I am pretty sure) which will take an imported DXF file and write a legal description. You might try contacting the University of Florida Surveying department, the USGS, or the USFS for shareware/freeware. Don't use Eagle Point (Steve knows better...) + Thomas S. Blue - tsblue@longleaf.com - www.longleaf.com Environmental Consulting and Engineering PhD student - Civil Engineering & Soil Science +
In article <01bbd10a$d11f7b00$7046aecc@neilkg.netshop.net>, Neilkg@netshop.net says... > >With modern instruments is turning the angles twice on opposite sides of >the 'plate' necessary? In my case I own a Leica TC600 and turning angles >(actually bearings) twice on opposite faces is basically a pain in the ass >since the display is only on one side of the gun and it doesn't 'hold' the >foresight to use as the subsequent backsight. Does the circuitry of these >new guns make such a routine unnecessary? > >It has me wondering From my experience in deformation and general control surveys, the use of a Total Station does not relieve the Surveyor from the responsibility of applying basic principles and precautions in carrying out any type of survey. Many surveyors regard the Total Station as a magic wand and they conveniently overlook the fact that at each set-up the theodolite has to be fully calibrated anew. Only when this is done can we speak of advantages of the Total Station. The use of Least Squares in adjusting traverses is quite meaningless as the redundancies in a traverse are very small in number. The use of Least Squares assumes that, apart from small random errors in the measurements, the number of redundancies is significantly large. Nonetheless, many surveyors keep on using least squares to adjust traverses. Bowditch would be much more preferable.Return to Top
In upstate New York, there is practically no demand at all for surveying technicians. Those few who find jobs can expect to earn $6-$9 an hour. The work is seasonal and unsteady. Job security, benefits, vacations, and such are unheard of. My class graduated 7 Surveying Technicians in 1992. I am the only one still surveying, another is doing construction inspection. Both of us were older students. None of the graduates in their 20's without prior surveying experience ever got any survey work. One of them carries the U.S. mail, he makes a lot more than me. Alan B. Chace, PLS Bainbridge, New YorkReturn to Top
Has anyone had any experience with a new draughting package called FelixCad? It is out of Germany, and is being promoted in Canada by an company based in B.C. The dealer is combining FelixCad with Schreiber's Quick Surf and Micro Survey's Co-go package and marketing same under the name of Micro SurveyCad Pro. The promo sounds good, but I just wanted to find out if it had been road tested by anyone in the trade. Thanks, P. Johnson Network Technical Services Ltd.Return to Top
Chris HallReturn to Topwrites: >As a side note, we were only able to accomplish a 1:27000 accuracy on a >13 angle, 2100m traverse. Then again, we are only students, however we >took 4 or 5 sets at each station and were out by 24" on the whole >traverse. >I don't know if that's good or bad for a total station that really isn't >made for traversing. Let me suggest that it may be misleading. One major source of theodolite error is eccentricity of the trunnion axis, the axis about which the scope plunges. If the trunnion axis is not horizontal, then as the scope is tilted, the line of sight will cut a plane which is not vertical. This will lead to angular error, but it is quite possible to get a deceitfully good closure in spite of it. Suppose that the trunnion axis is skewed clockwise from the gunner's perspective. Now suppose that a traverse is being run down a steep hill, and that the instrument is not being inverted. All of the angles will appear larger than they actually are, say 15" larger. If it takes six stations to get to the bottom, that comes to 1'30". After traversing through a few more stations at the bottom, the party heads back up the hill. This time the observed angles are 15" too small, because the conditions have been reversed. If they use six stations going up the hill, then the angular error will have been completely canceled. That is not a good traverse though. Those who read from both sides and use the same instrument every day may notice this effect when they reduce notes. The error will tend to be greater on the steep shots, and its sign will depend on whether the traverse is running uphill or downhill. Kunkel