Activity Feed › Discussion Forums › Strictly Surveying › Section Lines Are Straight
-
Section Lines Are Straight
Posted by Robby Christopher on July 2, 2010 at 4:39 pmYes siree. Straight as an arrow.
Just in case you were wondering. ;^)
Keith replied 14 years, 2 months ago 11 Members · 23 Replies -
23 Replies
-
And everyone knows that they are also all 5280′ in distance and North-South and East-West in direction. 😉
-
Man, just you wait til Keith figures out that we are at beerleg.com and not beerlegs.com–then he will give you whatfor!
-
Yeah, that beerlegs.com caught me once too. But I did get a great deal on a new keg fridge.
-
Section Lines Are Straight-EXCUSE ME
EXACTLY 5280.0000 IN ALL DIRECTIONS—EXCEPT ABOVE 14,000 FT WHERE THE LAWS OF KOOPER PREVAIL…TDD
-
Section Lines Are Straight-EXCUSE ME
As a matter of fact, they are straight. Ignore all that crapola about them being curved. Only certain points were placed on a theoretical curve. Everything between any two of those consecutive points is a straight line.
-
He already knows, but I bet he’s getting P oed, somebody should post something about how great Obama is and that will get him.
ROTFLMAOBTW, I thought it was 5285′ squared? 😉
-
If it’s up to me:
O.K., Obama is a pretty darn good president; and section lines are indisputably straight.
(Are you there, Keith?)
-
Social Security will be solvent for another forty years and Al Gore really did invent the internet.
-
The sorry part of this, is some believe it that east-west lines are straight.
I repeat that it surprised the heck out of me when somebody (a surveyor) who wanted
to know the curve data, if the lines were curved. -
I can understand that the surveyors who only are involved in lots and blocks, can’t see the real world, but if they would spend half the time trying to understand the world of land surveying, rather then concentrating on their measurement handbook; we would all be better off.
Keith 😉
-
I guess we needed a little nastiness. Everything was going so well.;-)
-
Dan,
We recently went through Little Rock and toured the Clinton Library. Very nice building….too bad it is for Slick! 😉
-
Dang, Keith!
You didn’t give me a shout???
I would have shown you around…and told you some ‘Slick’ stories that would have made your section lines curve.
DDSM
(The Surveyor’s Little Rock Welcome Wagon) -
Sorry about that Dan,
I bet you do have some stories about the famous ones from your area.
There could have been a bunch of places to stop and see some surveyors,
but we kept moving and covered 6000 miles. 🙂 -
Keith, I think it was me that wanted that info. It was asked because you seem to think that you can stay on a true curve just by setting up at random distances, point East then running another random distance and leave a retractable true curve behind you. You did not answer, nor did you get my point. The GLO surveys I retrace are straight lines except for the Base lines and correction lines. It was set up that way to expedite the work, otherwise we would not need correction lines or closing corners if Geodetic methods were being used. It seems that today that system as set up and intended to be conducted has been messed up by people who should known better. The curve is ingrained in you probably not as deep as the straight lines are in me. Will never be a meeting of the minds on this issue, I have listened and have never been convinced your position is correct, you don’t even seem to consider anything else but your view. Unfortunate that so many have grabbed onto it without researching the issue and considering the methods arrived by the GLO to get the work done quickly.
Good to see you here.
jud -
Jud,
I am sure we will not agree with the concept, but I can tell you that the field procedures that I used and I am assuming that the same procedures were used before me with the GLO guys, bent the random instrument straight lines so that the lats and deps came out on a curve.
Whether you want to believe it or not, that procedure made curved lines and if in fact the solar transit was used, it automatically created the curved lines.
I was there.
Keith
Log in to reply.