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General RTK Survey Specifications

This document provides specifications for real-time kinematic (RTK) surveys for infrastructure projects in Meriden, including requirements for field procedures, satellite geometry, and office procedures. Key requirements include using RTK control stations to enclose the project area, collecting data when PDOP is below 5 and RMS is below 70 millicycles, occupying new stations for at least 30 epochs, and ensuring residuals from site calibrations are within 0.07 feet horizontally and 0.1 feet vertically. Field procedures must be followed, such as using fixed-height poles, collecting check shots, and measuring antenna heights precisely.

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Sajjad Munir
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
373 views

General RTK Survey Specifications

This document provides specifications for real-time kinematic (RTK) surveys for infrastructure projects in Meriden, including requirements for field procedures, satellite geometry, and office procedures. Key requirements include using RTK control stations to enclose the project area, collecting data when PDOP is below 5 and RMS is below 70 millicycles, occupying new stations for at least 30 epochs, and ensuring residuals from site calibrations are within 0.07 feet horizontally and 0.1 feet vertically. Field procedures must be followed, such as using fixed-height poles, collecting check shots, and measuring antenna heights precisely.

Uploaded by

Sajjad Munir
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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GENERAL RTK SURVEY SPECIFICATIONS FOR MERIDEN INFRASTRUCTURE SURVEY In a conventional RTK survey radial shots are observed

from a fixed base station to a rover unit. A delta X, delta Y and delta Z are produced from the base station to the rover unit on the NAD83 datum. From these values, coordinates of the points occupied by the rover unit are produced. 1A.1-1Conventional RTK Survey Design RTK survey design differs from static and fast static GPS survey design. The following criteria shall be used for RTK survey design: The project area shall be surrounded and enclosed with RTK control stations. (See the definition of RTK control station below.) If the RTK control station is used for horizontal control, the RTK control station shall have horizontal coordinates that are on the same datum and epoch as the datum and epoch required for the project. If the RTK control station is used for vertical control, the RTK control station shall have a height that is on the same datum as the datum required for the project. All RTK control stations shall be included in a GPS site calibration. (See the end of this section for the definition of a GPS site calibration.) If the RTK equipment does not support the use of a GPS site calibration, the RTK control stations shall be used as check shots. For third order RTK surveys, each new station shall be occupied twice. The second occupation of a new station shall use a different base station location. If the new station is being elevated by RTK methods, the second occupation of the new station shall have a minimum of 3 different satellites in the satellite constellation. This is generally achieved by observing the second occupation at a time of day that is either 4 hours before or 4 hours after the time of day of the first occupation. Log a 15 minute static file. Establish the new stations in areas where obstructions, electromagnetic fields, radio transmissions, and a multipath environment are minimized. Use the current geoid model when appropriate. Definition: An RTK control station is a station used to control a survey that utilizes RTK methods. The station shall have either horizontal coordinates, a height, or both. The order of accuracy of the horizontal coordinates and the height shall be at least third-order.

Definition: A GPS site calibration establishes a relationship between the observed WGS84 coordinates and the known grid coordinates. This relationship is characterized by a translation, rotation, and scale factor for the horizontal coordinates and by an inclined plane for the heights. By applying a GPS site calibration to newly observed stations, local variations in a mapping projection are reduced and more accurate coordinates are produced from the RTK survey. Note: A GPS site calibration can be produced from RTK observations, an office calibration, or from a combination of both. If the RTK control stations were established by static or fast static GPS techniques, then an office calibration may be used. The procedures for an office calibration are: Do a minimally constrained adjustment before normalization holding only one WGS84 latitude, longitude, and ellipsoid height fixed. The epoch of the fixed values shall correspond to the epoch of the final coordinates of the RTK survey. Associate the results of this minimally constrained adjustment with the final grid coordinates in a site calibration. 1A.1-2 Satellite Geometry Satellite geometry affects both the horizontal coordinates and the heights in GPS/RTK surveys. The satellite geometry factors to be considered for RTK surveys are: Number of common satellites available at the base station and at the rover unit. Minimum elevation angle for the satellites (elevation mask). Positional Dilution of Precision (PDOP) or Geometric Dilution of Precision (GDOP). Vertical Dilution of Precision (VDOP).

1A.1-3 Conventional RTK Field Procedures Proper field procedures shall be followed in order to produce an effective RTK survey. For Thirdorder RTK Surveys, these procedures shall include: It is recommended that the field base station occupy a provided RTK control station with known coordinates for horizontal RTK surveys and known heights for vertical RTK surveys. A fixed height tripod shall be used for the base station. A fixed height survey rod or a survey rod with locking pins shall be used for the rover pole. A tripod and a tribrach may also be used. If a fixed height survey rod or a survey rod with locking pins is not used, independent antenna height measurements are required at the beginning and ending of each setup and shall be made in both feet and meters (as a check). The antenna height measurements shall check to within 0.01 feet. A bipod/tripod shall be used with the rover units survey rod. The data transfer link shall be established. A minimum of five common satellites shall be observed by the base station and the rover unit(s). The rover unit(s) shall be initialized before collecting survey data. The initialization shall be a valid checked initialization. PDOP shall not exceed 5. Data shall be collected only when the root mean square (RMS) is less than 70 millicycles. A check shot shall be observed by the rover unit(s) immediately after the base station is set up and before the base station is taken down. The GPS site calibration shall have a maximum horizontal residual of 0.07 feet for each horizontal RTK control station. The GPS site calibration shall have a maximum vertical residual of 0.10 feet for each vertical RTK control station. The new stations shall be occupied for a minimum of 30 epochs of collected data. The precision of the measurement data shall have a value less than or equal to 0.03 feet horizontal and 0.03 feet vertical for each observed station. The rover unit(s) shall not be more than 6 miles from the field base station.

The second occupation of a new station shall have a maximum difference in coordinates from the first occupation of 0.07 feet. The second occupation of a new station shall have a maximum difference in height from the first occupation of 0.13 feet. When setting supplemental control by RTK methods for conventional surveys, it is recommended that the new control points be a minimum of 1000 feet from each other. When establishing set-up points for conventional survey methods, set three intervisible points instead of just an azimuth pair. (This allows the conventional surveyor a check shot.) For general-order RTK surveys, these procedures shall include: It is recommended that the field base station occupy a provided control station with known coordinates for horizontal RTK surveys and known heights for vertical RTK surveys. Fixed height tripods are recommended for the base station. If fixed height tripods are not used, independent antenna height measurements are required at the beginning and ending of each setup and shall be made in both feet and meters (as a check). The antenna height measurements shall check to within 0.01 feet. A fixed height survey rod or a survey rod with locking pins shall be used for the rover poles. A tripod and tribrach may also be used. If a fixed height survey rod or a survey rod with locking pins is not used, independent antenna height measurements are required at the beginning and ending of each setup and shall be made in both feet and meters (as a check). The antenna height measurements shall check to within 0.01 feet. A bipod/tripod shall be used with the rover units survey rod. The data transfer link shall be established. A minimum of five common satellites shall be observed by the base station and the rover unit(s). The rover unit(s) shall be initialized before collecting survey data. The initialization shall be a valid checked initialization. PDOP shall not exceed 5. Data shall be collected only when the root mean square (RMS) is less than 70 millicycles

A check shot shall be observed by the rover unit(s) immediately after the base station is set up and before the base station is taken down. The GPS site calibration shall have a maximum horizontal residual of 0.07 feet for each horizontal RTK control station. The GPS site calibration shall have a maximum vertical residual of 0.10 feet for each vertical RTK control station. The precision of the measurement data shall have a value less than or equal to 0.05 feet horizontal and 0.07 feet vertical for each observed station. The rover unit(s) shall not be more than 6 miles from the field base station. The rover unit(s) shall not be more than 20 miles from the RTN base station.

1A.1-4 Office Procedures Proper office procedures must be followed in order to produce valid results. These procedures shall include: Review the downloaded field file for correctness and completeness. Check the antenna heights for correctness. Check the base station coordinates for correctness. Analyze all reports. Compare the different observations of the same stations to check for discrepancies. After all discrepancies are addressed, merge the observations. Analyze the final coordinates and the residuals for acceptance. 1A.1-5 General Notes The data transfer link shall not step on any voice transmissions. If a radio (UHF/VHF) frequency is used for the data transfer link, it shall be checked for voice transmissions before use. The data transfer link shall employ a method for ensuring that the signal does not interfere with voice transmissions.

Table 1A-1 Third-order RTK Survey Specifications Specification RTK Survey Field
Minimum accuracy of RTK control stations Operators name Data collector model number, serial number Receiver model number, serial number, ARP used by diagram Base station in field occupies a provided control station RTN base station* Supply raw data file to include RMS,PDOP, satellites, elevation mask angle and average residual readings Maximum PDOP during station observation Minimum number of satellites observed simultaneously Maximum epoch interval for data sampling Minimum satellite mask above the horizon Maximum RMS during a station observation Minimum number of epochs of collected data for each structure Horizontal precision of the measurement data for each structure Vertical precision of the measurement data for each structure Third-order Required Required Required Recommended Optional * Required 5 5 5 seconds 15 degrees 70 millicycles 30 Less than or equal to 0.03 feet Less than or equal to 0.05 feet

*When using RTN base station, all daily static files shall be submitted in RINEX format

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