User's Manual

HiPer Ga/Gb Receiver Setup and Survey
HiPer Ga/Gb Operator’s Manual
4-4
Step 2: Measuring Antenna Height
The location of the antenna relative to the point being measured is
very important for both surveys in which the elevation of the points is
important and in surveys for horizontal location only. Horizontal
surveys are often larger in area than can reliably fit on a flat plane;
therefore, the antenna adjustment must be done in three dimensions
and then projected onto a two dimensional plane.
The receiver calculates the coordinates of the antenna’s phase center.
To determine the coordinates of the station marker, specify the
following:
Measured height of the antenna above the station marker
Method of measuring the antenna height
Model of the antenna used
Antennas have two types of measurements:
Vertical – measured from the marker to the antenna reference
point (ARP) located on the bottom of the receiver at the base of
the mounting threads.
Slant – measured from the marker to the lower edge of the
antenna slant height measure mark (SHMM) located on both end
panels of the receiver.
The surveying point that GPS/GLONASS measures is called the
“Phase Center” of the antenna. The Phase Center is analogous to the
point that a distance meter measures in a prism. Enter the prism
offset to compensate for this point not being at a physical surface of
the prism. For a GPS/GLONASS antenna, the offset entered depends
on the type of measurement taken.
For vertical, the offset is simply added to the measured vertical
height to produce a “true” vertical height.
For slant height, the vertical height must first be calculated using
the radius of the antenna, then the offset can be added.
The offsets are different because of the difference in location between
the slant measuring point and the vertical measuring point.