AI Assistant
Surveyors Local Coo...
 
Notifications
Clear all

Surveyors Local Coordinate System (lcs) Northing Easting

3 Posts
3 Users
0 Reactions
719 Views
oooldman
(@oooldman)
Posts: 1
Member
Topic starter
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

How does one convert the lcs grid northing and easting to lat/long or state plane coordinates (spc).?ÿ From time to time, a survey will show a 10,000 decimal , 1000 decimal, or 5000 decimal point northing and easting.?ÿ Attached a plan here to show the points.?ÿ

I work in the GIS mapping field, New Jersey, USA. Without a projected coordinate, I am left with only geo-referencing this map (based on objects can match to between survey and orthoimagery) to where I?ÿ"think" it is located. Problem is that "thought" may not be?ÿ"exactly" pinpoint?ÿto where the point of beginning is or bearing.?ÿ

Please let me know if there is a formula to get the northing/easting converted to latitude/longitude or state plane.


 
Posted : November 3, 2018 2:25 pm
bill93
(@bill93)
Posts: 9977
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Unless the surveyor provided conversion information (e.g., metadata in a note) there is no way to get an absolute location from the drawing.?ÿ It would require the matching of features as you mention, or sending someone back with a GNSS receiver.

This kind of coordinate system is usually used when the surveyor feel that locating things relative to each other on the drawing is sufficient for the intended uses, did not make the measurements by GNSS, and there is no legal requirement for finding the location relative to a larger coordinate system.


 
Posted : November 3, 2018 3:00 pm
Mark Mayer
(@mark-mayer)
Posts: 3371
Member
Translate
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

The coordinates are on an assumed local datum. The surveyor chose a point to call 5000, 5000 (or 10000,10000 - or whatever struck his fancy) and ran with it. It is probable that the surveyor himself made no attempt to tie this survey to any outside coordinate system. A majority of local boundary surveys are done this way, especially were GPS is not the primary tool used.?ÿ?ÿ


 
Posted : November 3, 2018 8:05 pm