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<title>CUCC Expo Surveying Handbook: GPS</title>
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<h2 id="tophead">CUCC Expo Surveying Handbook</h2>
<h1>Locating entrances by GPS</h1>
<h3>First actions</h3>
<p>First of all, you need to <a href="/handbook/computing/myphone.html">set up your phone</a> in "expo mode" for recording locations on the plateau reliably. This is not just some technical settings, it also means a particular style of useage whch you need to learn.
<h3>Which point to fix</h3>
<p>The entrance to a cave significant enough to get a number and a survey
will eventually be marked by a numbered tag attached to a spit. This
will then become the primary survey station - ie. the point where an
underground survey will start, and the point to which a surface survey
should go. It's worth thinking about where you would put such a tag right
from the start. Unlike the first rigging bolt (often used as the first
point of a survey in the past) it should be sited with a particular
view to its visibility and accessibility without having to put on SRT
kit. If such a point has a clear view of the majority of the sky, then
this is the point to use for a GPS fix too.</p>
<p>If however, you are dealing with a cave at the foot of a cliff, or
otherwise with a restricted view of the sky, then choose instead a good
landmark with a wide, clear view of the sky, and with at least two survey shots
of the entrance. </p>
<p>Yes, you will have to manually do a surface survey leg using your survey instruments between the GPS point and the cave entrance tag station, and record that in your cave survex file.
<p>Since 2018 we have differential GPS which renders historical advice obsolete (e.g. Wookey's 1996 article) but altitudes are still always inaccurate
and GPS devices don't generally tell you how inaccurate they are. Also phones are now much more complicated than the dedicated GPS devices used in the past. It is now
<a href="/handbook/computing/myphone.html">the phone itself</a> we have to worry about, not just GPS. Phones try to be "helpful" these days and do not tell you what they are doing.
<h3>Taking the fix</h3>
<p>Once you have chosen your point, mark it in some way (could be a spit hole
or a cairn, for example - we don't use paint any more) and place
the GPS on the point. Don't build a cairn, they don't last for decades and we have survey stations that provide permanent locations. Give the GPS device a
minute to get a fairly good fix (the first figure reported may be
quite a way out is you have been moving). Then mark
the point as a waypoint (dedicated GPS devices or GPS apps only).
<h3>Camera locations</h3>
<p>Even if you have no intention of using your location or recording a track, the camera in your phone will record locations of your photos which are extremely useful to future expeditions - for reasons which only become apparent when you yourself try to work out what someione did 10 years previously.
<figure class=onright><a href='/handbook/computing/l/camera-ne-track.html'><img src='/handbook/computing/t/camera-ne-track.jpg' /></a><figcaption>Camera photo locations are not<br> on the track!</figcaption>
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<p>Your <em>camera</em> will use the same location settings as the rest of your phone, but sometimes with a bit of a delay. We have lots of examples of geo-located photos where the recorded location is alctually the location of the <em>previous</em> photo because someone has taken a quick photo but the phone hasn't had time after waking up to get a location, so it uses the previous one! And doesn't tell you!!
<p>So when taking a photo of an entrance, always take one photo; delete it, and take another. This will give your phone a chance to get synchronised properly.
<p>ALSO: always take 3 photos of any entrance, the obvious one about 10m away, a scene-setting one from 20 or 30m away, but also a really close one of 3 to 5m away, so that we can see if rocks have moved around the entrance and also for a much better identification in future. If there is a tag, <em>always</em> take a close-up photograph of it so that the letters are readable.
<h4>Averaging</h4>
<p> If you're feeling really keen and have a dedicated GPS device or sophisticated GPS app,
you can set it up for <i>averaging</i>, which used to give a more accurate fix &ndash; some GPS receivers
support this automatically, and with others you can just leave it recording a
track log, then record another waypoint at the same place just before you leave
so it's clear to someone examining the track log when you actually left.
</p>
<p>Averaging used to be very important, but today (2025) we have so many GNSS satellites in the sky that ionospheric effects are the significant error. These change slowly over 5 hours or so, so avergaing for a minute or and hour does nothing useful. You would need to average over several days. The solution for a fast fix is <a href="/handbook/computing/myphone.html#future">to use RTK</a>.
<p>While the GPS is averaging your location, you can do something useful
(like rigging the cave, doing a surface survey from the GPS point to the
marker spit, looking for other caves, or even having lunch!) Remember to stop
the waypoint averaging before moving the unit or changing the display page.
<b>Take a photo of your GPS point showing at least one of your cave entrances
too.</b></p>
<p>We all use the same coordinate system WGS84 these days, so <a href="coord2.html">the extensive discussion
on coordinate systems</a> has been moved to a different page. If you are really interested you can read
<a href="coord.htm">Olaf's article</a>too.
<hr />
<a href="newcave.html">Next survey guide page</a> - 'Base Camp: getting it in to the computer'<br />
<a href="/handbook/computing/myphone.html">Your phone on expo</a> - Do not select the "high accuracy" location setting on your phone<br />
<a href="/handbook/essentials.html">GPS essentials on the plateau</a> - Safety information<br />
<a href="/logbookentry/2024-07-21/2024-07-21c">Photo GPS</a> - Is unreliable unless you follow procedure<br /></body>
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