Two Years Ago
Rotary Laser
An early Craigslist find was a rotary laser for $80 that
sells at the big boxes for three times more. It
came with the tripod, the leveling rod and the sensor for the rod. My experience with a rotary laser was nil but
it seemed reasonable that it would be the ticket for surveying the building site, instead of paying for a professional survey, and would have myriad uses during construction.
Advantages of a Rotary Laser
The rotary laser has advantages over a conventional transit for the DIYer working alone. The battery operated sensor on the leveling rod beeps loudly when it is level with the laser beam. Consequently, measurements can be made working alone as opposed to the two-person team required for a transit -- one person to sight through the transit and the other to operate the leveling rod.
Tripod StationsThe rotary laser has advantages over a conventional transit for the DIYer working alone. The battery operated sensor on the leveling rod beeps loudly when it is level with the laser beam. Consequently, measurements can be made working alone as opposed to the two-person team required for a transit -- one person to sight through the transit and the other to operate the leveling rod.
In order to standardize and expedite setting up the laser, I made two tripod
stations near the east property line where they would not be in the way of future excavation. Each station comprised two half sheets of salvaged
plywood weighted down by stones. I set
up the laser on each platform in turn, marked where the tips of the tripod
touched the plywood and drilled holes just large enough to accept the
tips. I reset the laser and marked the
tripod legs with permanent marker at the telescoping point for each leg in case the legs were moved between uses. Then to store the laser at the end of the day, the laser could be left on the tripod, the tripod lifted from the plywood and the legs folded together without un-telescoping them. Each subsequent use of the laser then required only spreading the legs and setting them into the holes in the plywood followed by minimal tweaking of the laser for level as necessary.
"Surveying" the Building Site
The summer of 2012 was droughty. Our cool weather grasses were brown and flat
for weeks on end which gave me a rare opportunity to survey the building site
and the level ground north of the building site. I used a tape measure to mark off a grid of
20' x 20' squares and mark the intersections with marking paint. The dead grass was ideal for displaying and holding
the paint for the couple of days it took to complete the survey.
Survey
The day before surveying, I plotted the grid on a piece of
stiff project board that would not blow around in the wind. I set up the laser on the station highest on
the slope. I then moved about among the
paint marks with the leveling rod and detector and recorded each elevation
that could be measured from the first station.
Next I moved the laser to the lower station and finished recording the
paint marks.
The data points on the project board were transferred to a spreadsheet and given values for elevation above sea level. The sea level figures were based upon a Goggle Earth value for the highest point on the area surveyed. The square in the middle of the spreadsheet represented the proposed building footprint.
Data points (20' x 20' grid) plotted against sea level |
Accuracy
The data points are not close enough together to plot the contour
lines that would be standard for a professional survey. However, they gave me, as the builder, all of
the information I need. I did not pass the
DIY survey on to Steve, who is doing the construction drawings, in order not frustrate him by its lack of sophistication or cause him to stew over proper siting of the building.
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