Engineering:Pole (surveying)
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Short description: Surveyor's tool
In surveying, a pole is bar made of wood or metal and normally held vertical, upon which different instruments can be mounted: a prism, a GPS device, etc.[1] It may be manufactured with a predetermined length (e.g., 2 meters) or may be graduated for different heights or stages.
Technology advances have introduced tilt-compensation capability into survey poles, that allow the surveyor to measure points above ground or when the pole is off-vertical. [2]
References-
- ↑ Gay, Paul (2014) (in en). Practical Boundary Surveying: Legal and Technical Principles. Springer. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-3-319-07158-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=QbQjBQAAQBAJ&dq=%22prism+Pole%22+surveying+-wikipedia&pg=PA73. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
- ↑ "Tilt Compensation (at the Rod)". SurveyorConnect. 20 August 2018. https://surveyorconnect.com/community/surveying-geomatics/tilt-compensation-at-the-rod.
See also
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pole (surveying).
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