Activity Feed › Discussion Forums › Software, CAD & Mapping › ?? manual for SDR-Map (or TrimMap) Roads
-
?? manual for SDR-Map (or TrimMap) Roads
Posted by jimcox on July 16, 2023 at 8:38 pmDoes anyone here happen to still have a copy of the manual for the Roads module of SDR-Map or Trim-Map?
A question has come up, and that manual was lost in a fire here Trimble Chch a little while ago.
Just want to check out the ‘extend to alignment’ template item
Thanks
=J=
.
Â
OleManRiver replied 1 year, 2 months ago 5 Members · 20 Replies -
20 Replies
-
I will check my storage and see if i still have one of those. Talking about shaking the dust off my brain lol . The first thing that comes to my mind was a version of the sdr33 and while slope staking and catching the catch point if you went directly to the offset and set it the stories were wrong. What we did was learned after finding the catch point to clear out and re catch the catch point in one shot store it then offset point and stories were then correct. I know that has nothing to do with your needs but it just popped into my head . I don’t think I ever used the sdrmap for road comps. We always entered them in the field directly from plans into the sdr33 electronic field book.  Amazing how forward thinking they were. It was a great data collector in many aspects.Â
-
No luck for me finding either manual. Who knows where it went. I found my old gpsurvey manual pre tgo. But not the sdrmap or trimap. Fyi. Sorry I couldn’t help.Â
-
I thought I had a COMPLETE set of Trimmap modules when I sent everything I had Trimmap-related to someone in Romania a bit over nine years ago, as recorded in this SurveyorConnect link.
But I do not see the Roads module listed there, could it be under TrimMOSS?
If what you are seeking is in that list and you are still needing it, I have the email thread and will provide the recipient’s email address if you send me a private message.
Eleven months after that exchange the recipient sent me an email along with a couple of pics of the software running. He said he had to look awhile to find a Pentium 1 computer onto which he could install the software.
He closed his email message with “Please don’t throw anything away . . . ask a friend first!”
GB
-
Worst thing ever was Trimble buying and killing SDRmap, if it had been windows-ised 12d would never have got a foothold for surveyors. Did everything you needed and nothing more from what I can see.
-
just fyi, we still use SDR Map We have all the modules. I trashed all of the manuals last year when house cleaning (maybe 16″ of bookshelf). Would have placed them on fundraiser forum if in place.
Pretty sure the code for sdr map was written in the mid to late 80’s. The code appears to have migrated to Sokkia/Datacom (SDR Map) and then to Intergraph Fieldworks?) and Bentley Inroads via a programmer.
Agree, is user friendly, easy to edit, ran in batch mode.  Little if any bells and whistles. Â
-
@lukenz i used it in colorado back in mid and late 90’s.  It was a good little program and made light work for field to finish type work. I used it some in the usmc but we moved to terramodel and so i had to adapt.
-
@hpalmer are you hiring. Â Lol. I wonder if i could re learn that program. I use a Trimble Business Center now and am slowly getting it squared away to eliminate as much cad work as possible and still not put a burden on the field crews.
-
in the late 80’s we used SDR2 data collector with field codes, TSP to process field data, and POGO/iPOGO for field to finish. Then Ustation/now Microstation to prepare Plats. That system would do much of what our software will do today.
Times have changed but the basics are still the same.
I expect that in several years, you will be able to tell a machine where your project is and to collect existing data in vicinity. Then maybe tell it you want a subdivision and ask it to give you some preliminary layouts and costs to develop. Or, an Industrial park. AI will know where to go to get the zoning regulations, DOT regulations, the GIS with the ‘boundary’, the topo, aerials, environmental. Will still need someone to review and validate. Â
When asked about errors in AI, Google CEO Sindar Pichai said: Error with confidence is called hallucination. No one has yet solved the this problem. All mortals have this as an issue.
-
@lukenz I believe Sokkia licensed the software from Datacom (New Zealand programmers) or Sokkia hired them to write it and marketed same. Datacom or Sokkia sold the code to Trimble. The final compilation was dos based but would run in a dos box inside windows. This is likely why Trimble deep sixed it.
Just fyi, I reached out to Trimble in September 1999 to inquire about the code. They said to refer questions to Sokkia who had no idea. Not sure they even marketed it at that time.
-
@hpalmer Wow. I used a SDR24 and SDR33. It was a known issue in the SDR 24 that once we got to around 900 points we would stop. Because the records limit would cause it to crash. The SDR33 was much better and stable. That was in 90’s. We had those and we ran a wild and wildsoft. For mapping and topo. Now we have data collectors that i we can do just about anything the office can. Dwg dxf create surfaces. It’s unbelievable.
-
@hpalmer Wow. I used a SDR24 and SDR33. It was a known issue in the SDR 24 that once we got to around 900 points we would stop. Because the records limit would cause it to crash. The SDR33 was much better and stable. That was in 90’s. We had those and we ran a wild and wildsoft. For mapping and topo. Now we have data collectors that i we can do just about anything the office can. Dwg dxf create surfaces. It’s unbelievable.
-
@olemanriver pm me for learning software.
Agree, we go to field with much of functionality of what office can do. Office has more checks and especially when hot and humid. I vaguely remember point limits.
-
@hpalmer i will do for learning for sure. I am preparing now for PS and VA state specific exam. Been reading wattles last couple nights. Always studying and trying to learn all of this.
-
@hpalmer i will do for learning for sure. I am preparing now for PS and VA state specific exam. Been reading wattles last couple nights. Always studying and trying to learn all of this.
-
The final compilation was dos based but would run in a dos box inside windows. This is likely why Trimble deep sixed it.
That’s pretty much it – plus issues with memory management and licensing.
A good deal of the codebase underlying Trimble’s GeoSpatial product line today stems from there. It formed the basis of many libraries used today. Some of it might even still be the original code…
-
@jimcox When i am in Trimble Business Center i see some sdrmap thinking and Terramodel thinking. I guess that is why i am able to figure it out quicker than i can civil3d. Â Survey controller was easy to transition to because it was not that different than some of the sdr 33 flow and terminology. Now access is a beast. I did a half day course at the office not long ago for my field crews showing some of its cogo power. Trying to make my life a bit easier than receiving a phone call to compute a point or set up a building on same bearing as a property line or road etc. now they can do a lot themselves. Simple stuff like identifying encroachments and such with point to line etc.
-
When i am in Trimble Business Center i see some sdrmap thinking and Terramodel thinking.
Yes, TBC is sort of a bastard love-child of the pair of them.
Quite some effort goes into keeping TBC and Access workflows and functionality aligned. TBC will always be able to do much more than Access – but it should do it in a way that makes sense to an Access user
Did you ever play with Trimble Geomatics Office (TGO)?
Â
Â
-
@jimcox I have used TGO and its predecessor GPSurvey. We had the military add ons for go survey and then also tgo. Loved tgo. I like tbc for the ability to combine different data types. Gps terrestrial etc levels.  Some kinks still but tbc in my opinion is not far from a total package. So computations processing and cad deliverables. I am close to doing everything in TBC. I men everything from start to finish deliverables. I am actually trying it on a project now. Have a guy that is going to get me over the hump soon and train me more on the dynaviews etc drafting side. I have been experimenting with what i have self taught myself on that side and now i am at a road block. And it’s mostly the drafting and inserting into a title block that i can pass off to civil 3d users as well if i need help. Civil 3d is the standard where i am. But what i have learned is if done correctly i can be just as productive in tbc. Now many in house clients and external clients need civil 3d so i have to balance that oh and microstation bently.
Log in to reply.