6 Differential Level
6 Differential Level
Introduction
Differential surveying is used to determine the difference in elevation between two or more points. It is commonly used to establish the elevation of a benchmark referenced to an existing benchmark. It is also useful for comparing the elevation of several points or objects.
The rod holder would then place the rod at several point along the forms to determine if they were at the correct height.
Establishing A Benchmark
Another use of differential leveling is establishing the elevation of a benchmark. When the existing benchmark and the location of the new benchmark can be seen from one instrument position, the procedure is very simple. The instrument is set up halfway between the points and leveled. A rod reading is taken on the existing benchmark, this is called a backsight. The backsight reading is added to the elevation of the benchmark to establish the instrument height (reference line).
HI = Elevation + Backsight
Benchmark Example-cont.
In this example the benchmark elevation is 850.47 feet and the backsight is 3.56 ft.
Benchmark Example-cont.
The instrument is rotated until it is aligned with the second benchmark. A rod reading (foresight) is recorded for the second benchmark. The rod reading is subtracted from the height of In this example the the instrument to find the elevation of the second foresight is 5.21 ft. benchmark. The elevation is: BM1 is 1.65 feet higher than BM2.
Benchmark Example TP
When both benchmarks cannot be reached from one instrument position, turning points are used. Because a turning point is a temporary A backsight is taken on BM1. benchmark, it must The 4.31 is added to the elevation of the bench be a stable structure. mark to find the height of the instrument (104.31).
A turning point is established and a foresight is recorded (4.92). The foresight is subtracted from the height of instrument to determine the elevation of the turning point (99.39) .
Then the instrument is moved to a point between the turning point and the next station. In this example the next station is BM2.
A backsight is taken on the turning point (4.22). The backsight is added to the elevation of the turning point to find the new instrument height (103.61).
The foresight on BM2 (2.35) is subtracted from the instrument height to determine the elevation of BM2 (101.08)
Tables are an excellent way of organizing numbers. Surveyors have developed a standard table for differential leveling.
HI = Instrument Height
FS = Foresight ELEV = Elevation The table for this example:
BM2
2.53
101.08
1. 2. 3.
The steps are the same. The instrument is moved and a backsight is recorded for BM2 (3.27).
The instrument is moved between TP2 and BM1 A BS is recorded on TP2 (3.29).
The instrument is rotated. The loop is closed by recording a foresight on BM1 (5.42).
Differential Table
STA BM1 TP1 BM2 TP2 BM1 BS 4.31 4.22 3.27 3.29 HI 104.31 103.61 104.35 105.43 FS 4.92 2.53 2.21 5.42 Elev 100 99.39 101.08 102.14 100.01
When the closing data is entered into the table the first error check is completed. The second check for error is called the note check. The note check uses an equation:
2. Note Check
STA BM1 TP1 BM2 TP2 BM1 BS 4.31 4.22 3.27 3.29 HI 104.31 103.61 104.35 105.43 FS 4.92 2.53 2.21 5.42 15.08 = OK Elev 100.00 99.39 101.08 102.14 100.01
BM1i
BM1c
15.09
0.01
0.01
The note check statement is true. The 0.01 difference in the elevation of BM1i and BM1c is not caused by a math error in the notes
AE = k M
AE = k M
The actual error was 0.01 and the allowable error is 0.04, therefore the survey is acceptable.
15.09
0.01
0.01
5280
Allowable Error-cont.
In this example the actual error was less than the allowable error.
What should happen if the actual error is greater than the allowable error?
Allowable Error-cont.
What would be the conclusion about the error in the data if a higher standard was used, k = 0.01.