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surveying iii (topographic and geodetic surveys) - Modern Prepper

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laterally across the front of the eyepiece. If the crosshairs appears to move with respect to the observedobject, parallax is present.d. Parallax Removal. Parallax can be removed by turning the focusing ring (3) until the objectivelens is the proper distance for the image to fall in the plane of the vertical crosshair. If the crosshairsappear fuzzy or dim, readjust the black diopter ring <strong>and</strong> repeat the process. Check for parallaxperiodically throughout the day, since the focal distance of your eyes changes as you tire. However, donot refocus the crosshairs during the observation of a position.e. Circle Reading. Both circles are read in the microscope directly alongside the telescope's readingeyepiece (16). On the outer side of the right-h<strong>and</strong> support is the changeover knob (13) for the circleimages. To make the horizontal circle visible, turn the knob clockwise as far as it will go; to make thevertical circle visible, turn the knob in the reverse direction. Simultaneously, on either of the circleimages, the image of the scale of the seconds drum will be visible below the circle image. To bring theimages to sharpness, turn the telescope's edged eyepiece (6). During the reading, the illumination of thecircles should always be bright <strong>and</strong> uniform. Control the illumination by turning <strong>and</strong> tilting theilluminating mirrors (9 <strong>and</strong> 2). Do not alter the illumination during the angle measurement.f. Horizontal-Circle Reading. When reading the horizontal circle, set the telescope on the object,<strong>and</strong> look in the microscope to view the images of the two diametrically opposite parts of the circleseparated by a fine line. In the middle of the lower circle image is a fixed index mark. Bring thegraduation lines of the upper <strong>and</strong> lower circle images into coincidence with each other in the immediatearea of this fixed index mark by turning the micrometer milled head (12) on the right-h<strong>and</strong> bearingblock. This causes the images to move relative to each other. The making of the coincidence must bedone with all possible care, as it conditions the accuracy of the reading. The final movement of themilled head must always move clockwise.(1) The unit of graduation of a circle is 4 minutes. When coincidence has been achieved, theindex mark should be either on a graduation line or between two graduations. Read off the wholedegrees from the upright number left of the index mark, <strong>and</strong> count the graduation intervals from thenumbered degree line to the index mark. Each graduation interval represents 4 minutes. If the indexmark lies in the middle of a graduation interval, count this as only half an interval (of 2 minutes). Thisreading is taken to 2 minutes on the circle itself. To this reading, add the reading of the seconds drumseen in the lower image. The seconds drum is divided into 60 numbered seconds. Each numberedsecond is further subdivided into tenths (10 intervals). The numbers represent seconds <strong>and</strong> tenths ofseconds <strong>and</strong> are read directly. The drum only shows 60 seconds, <strong>and</strong> the circle reading always shows 2minutes equal to 120 seconds, so the drum reading must be doubled. The best way to double the drumreading is to repeat the coincidence adjustment <strong>and</strong> read the seconds again, thus obtaining anotherreading for the seconds. The two are then added together. The circle reading plus the sum of the twodrum readings give the correct reading. The plate circle of a 2/10-second theodolite is divided into 360°<strong>and</strong> each degree into 15 graduations or 4 minutes per graduation. The coincidenceEN0593 3-18

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