ADJUSTING ANGLES
Adjustments applied to angles are independent of the size of the angle
Methods of adjustment:
Make larger corrections where mistakes were most likely
Apply an average correction to each angle
Or a combination
Never make an adjustment that is smaller than the measured accuracy
DETERMINING BEARINGS OR AZIMUTHS
Requires the direction of at least one line within the traverse to be known or assumed
For many purposes, an assumed direction is sufficient
A magnetic bearing of one of the lines may be measured and used as the reference for
determining the other directions
For boundary surveys, true directions are needed
LATITUDES AND DEPARTURES
The latitude of a line is its projection on the north-south meridian and is equal to the length of
the line times the cosine of its bearing
The departure of a line is its projection on the east-west meridian and is equal to the length of
the line times the sine of its bearing
The latitude is the y component of the line and the departure is the x component of the line
LATITUDES AND DEPARTURES
The algebraic sum of all latitudes must equal zero or the difference in latitude between the
initial and final control points
The algebraic sum of all departures must equal zero or the difference in departure between
the initial and final control points
CALCULATION OF LATITUDES AND DEPARTURES
Using bearings
Station Bearing Length Latitude Departure
A
N 26° 10'E 285.10 +255.88 +125.72
B
S 75° 25'E 610.45 -153.70 +590.78
C
S 15° 30'W 720.48 -694.28 -192.54
D
N 1° 42'W 203.00 +202.91 -6.02
E
N 53° 06'W 647.02 +388.48 -517.41
A
MISCLOSURE -0.71 +0.53
RECTANGULAR COORDINATES
Rectangular X and Y coordinates of any point give its position with respect to a reference
coordinate system
Useful for determining length and direction of lines, calculating areas, and locating points
You need one starting point on a traverse (which may be arbitrarily defined) to calculate the
coordinates of all other points
A large initial coordinate is often chosen to avoid negative values, making calculations easier.
CALCULATING X AND Y COORDINATES
Given the X and Y coordinates of any starting point A, the X and Y coordinates of the next
point B are determined by:
COORDINATES
Balanced Balanced
Station Latitude Departure Y-coord X-coord
A 10000.00 10000.00
+255.96 +125.66
B 10255.96 10125.66
-153.52 +590.65
C 10102.44 10716.31
-694.07 -192.69
D 9408.37 10523.62
+202.97 -6.07
E 9611.34 10517.55
+388.66 -517.55
A 10000.00 10000.00
TOTALS 0.00 0.00
LINEAR MISCLOSURE
The hypotenuse of a right triangle whose sides are the misclosure in latitude and the misclosure
in departure.
TRAVERSE PRECISION
The precision of a traverse is expressed as the ratio of linear misclosure divided by the
traverse perimeter length.
expressed in reciprocal form
Example
0.89 / 2466.05 = 0.00036090
1 / 0.00036090 = 2770.8
Precision = 1/2771