164 THE CANADIAN SURVEYOR May, 1960
TABLE II — ERRORS IN TERMS OF GROUND DIMENSIONS
Flat area | Hilly area* Profile
Instrument Specimen horizontal, | vertical, vertical,
| variance meters | variance meters | variance meters
- a. re EL fo | ral LR
A-8 | ai. — 550 | — +1.2
| 20 + 50 | 0.0 | —2.2
| 25 + 55 | 0.3 —0.4
| 27 +112 0.9 —0.7
| 28 + 96 0.3 —2.3
| 29 — 9 | 0.9 +0.1
| 30 —171 | 0.1 +0.2
mean -E rms | +22+100 | 0.5+0.12 | —0.6+1.4
A-7 2 | + 80 | 1.2 —1.9
6 | e | 0.1 —0.4
9 — 282 | 0.0 | +0.4
11 —123 0.8 | +0.6
21 | —205 | 0.2 |
| 26 | —405 | 0.3 | +1.9
35 | — 415 | 0.0 | —i.7
| —160 2-200 0.4+0.4 —0.2+1.5
|
C-8 22 | + 18 0.0 | —1.8
| 23 | | 4.1
| |
Kelsh | 7 — 26 0.1 | -2.5
10 149 0.5 | —0.8
12 — 124 0.1 | —0.8
14 —377 2.7 +0.6
31 3 0.1 —0.4
| 33 + 71 0.2 0.1
| 34 —202 0.0 | 31
| 38 | —429 | 1.4 | —0.4
| H 1.9 | 2.6
| es | sa
| 1554176 | 081410 | —ooxi4
Balplex 5 — 890 | 0.5 +4 .1
8 — 565 1.0 —0.5
4( —146 | 0.0 +3.2
— 534 +360 0.5+0.5 +2.3+3.6
*B factor of Table III.
** Not used in computing mean.
was not available. Measurements were made at 12 sections in order to have 10 values
of all the 4... B terms.
In general, all the tests proved to be considerably better than is normally obtained
in productive work, which is understandable from the standpoint that each participant
wanted to make a good showing. For example, one might be tempted to consider the
standard vertical deviation of the Kelsh plotter as about 1 meter, corresponding to a
U.S. c-factor of about 3800, inasmuch as the flight altitude was about 7600 meters. Of
course this is a dangerous philosophy for practical productive operation.
The discrepancies in the flat area were all quite large. The corresponding vertical
discrepancy is normal, but the flatness of the area made the work difficult and inexact.
The fact that little photographic texture was present in the flat cultivated fields prob-
ably accounts for part of the difficulty.