Tim Watts and I went on the course in South Wales on laser surveying last weekend. It was excellent!
It is a long time since I have had to sit down for two whole days and absorb intense information, but I am very glad that Tim was there to master the techy stuff. I am very impressed how quickly he can work on his laptop with completely strange software.
The laser gun Tim had has now been professionally fitted up as an accurate survey tool, and it seems it is now talking to his portable number cruncher. Our next task is to actually survey a simple cave system and post the results on a universal depository that has been set up for all cave and mine data.
I was also overwhelmed by the size and magnificence of the South Wales caves. We only went into the first few chambers of Ogof Ffynnon Ddu, but a vast map on the wall of the study room showed the full extent of the system, and there is another just as big on the opposite wall Dan yr Ogof. It makes Poachers seem so small. These caves are also fully walk in and walk about. Ian would love them because the floors are relatively flat and the lower areas fully washed out. I had no idea there were caves like this in the UK.
I was also very impressed by the club hut - a row of nine railway cottages. Plan to go there again for a few days and actually explore the caves with Bella. Anyone else interested?
PS There is also a way to virtually explore this magnificaent cave at http://ogof.net/
Yes, I am intertested, :woohoo: :woohoo: :woohoo:
back in work now so other than weekends, i cant do anything.
Theres LOADS of caves like that in the UK
Have you been there before Doug? Ogof Ffynnon Ddu. It would be great for us if there was someone who knows their way around the place.
[quote="JohnNicholson" post=11712]Have you been there before Doug? Ogof Ffynnon Ddu. It would be great for us if there was someone who knows their way around the place.[/quote]
Sorry John, I think I have been there, :S but I dont remember anything about it.
by the way, if you are in my area anytime the rocking chair is more or less done.
OFD is the finest cave in the UK B)
Obviously not as good as the caves on Mendip though... :whistle:
Other cavers in the club hut asked if I had been to Mendip. We will come there one day Les to be sure. There is always so much to juggle in life.
high John i have donr dan-yr-ogof its a walk in walk out for the show cave but not for the cavers flat out crawls 100 yds deep canals and all your party will be required to show bca insurance and under 18 not allowed
did'nt you get lost and nearly die last time you wher in south wales :evil: :evil:
right did not get lost but remember the dinghy bursting in the canals
and shimming up the stal in the roof
think it was a bit of an eye opener for poor John! ;-)
[quote="timwatts" post=11735]..... an eye opener for poor John! ;-)[/quote]
'Poor John' had frightfull Neuralgia over the weekend, but thankfully feel much better now.
Until now I have thought that OHA was one of the longest caves in Britain, (if not the longest), and only a few cavers have ever managed to get to the very end (including Doug, Tim, Mike and others so recorded on video).
So can you imagine why I felt quite sick inside to see a whole wall covered in sprawling tangled and twisted cave mappage.
I now feel much humbled that the caves we have been brought up on are so pixy wicxy small, but I do still love them too.
When I go to any future caving event I must be careful not to say I come from North Wales, because it is like going to Brands Hatch in a pedal Noddy car.
[quote="JohnNicholson" post=11745]When I go to any future caving event I must be careful not to say I come from North Wales, because it is like going to Brands Hatch in a pedal Noddy car.[/quote]
We have some awesome bloody mines though... who needs caves... nasty, wet crawly things, caves... :evil:
Did this Surveying include a DistoX? If so, I may have to bug You to pass some knowledge on, as I plan on getting one after Xmas.
Not sure you will get a DistoX after Christmas, unless you have one reserved somewhere as there are none left and no components for any more.
http://ukcaving.com/board/index.php?topic=13606.msg186087#msg186087
:(
This is a big worry Les.
I asked many times during the survey weekend if we will be able to obtain more Disto A3 and the add-on boards. It seems not. But VERY fortunately, Timm Watts has got the last board ever made, and already has bought a Disto A3 and the PDA. This was all soldered up by 'Footleg' at the course. So UCET does have one working kit. (It did let us down on the practical part of the course, so we had to manage using a different kit, but all seems well now)
But the whole concept seems morribund if there are no more add on boards and even the parts can no longer be obtained.
However, I feel that brilliant though this initial system is, there are better ways of working. The Disto-PDA technolgy is a long and tedious way to make a skeletal grid of a cave system, and the final maps still rely upon the skill and endurance of the surveyor in drawing the finer details on the slippery PDA screen underground, and then re-interpreting them on a graphic map on a PC in the warm. I got very cold whilst surveying (even though I was doublly dressed), and that was in a dry flat cave. You just don't move around enough whilst fiddling with electroinics.
I would like to work with others to bring forward a new approach using component parts now available (RS, Maplin etc) so the data is collected directly in the cave by a constantly spinning form of disto. I am very impressed by the virtuial images posted by Nottingham Cave Survey, and we saw a similar survey displayed of an amazing cave produced by a very expensive laser scanner (£60K plus).
I am sure there will be a boffin build alternative solution that can be concocted at home, and I am sure there is the technical expertise available amongst our caver members. It is a matter of contacting the right people with the relevant sectors of knowledge.
One thing that did impress me about the Survey Weekend is that the cost was £10.00. I was expecting more like £100 - or more, for the quality information provided by the five experts who ran the course, plus the array of computer equipment they dbrought along. I am assured that the course was strongly supported by the British Cave Association (or similar).
If they support this course then maybe they would support a similar project to advance the available technology. What has been achieved in terms of software development, and setting up a platform for the publication and exchange of data is an excellent framework for cave mappers using any form of collection technology.
From a Health & Safety perspective, as well as form mapping biology and bats etc a good 3D cave mapping system is very important. The cost would be enormous if done by any other way than through the enthusiasm of amateur cave mappers.
Can someone enlighten me to the differences between the readily available Leica Disto and the DistoX? Why isn't the standard one suitable?
Disto does distance only I think whereas DistoX (modified disto A3 i think they are) will do your compass, clino & distance which then gets sent via bluetooth to a PDA where you can draw up what you see :-) Very easy way to survey and can be a lot more detailed and precise.
Yes, it was the distoX combination that we were using. In practice it is tiresomly tedious to work with, and it only produces a sort of wirework skeleton of the cave shape, and needs a lot of extra hand drawing on the part of the cave surveyor to produce anything useful.
I have spotted some other laser ideas on other forums. There is a lot to digest.
John,
although surveying with the DistoX is tedious, that is surveying generally.
The DIstoX is far superior to other electronic devices that have been developed before. Currently people are working on a variant of DistoX that works with a newer Disto and uses available components, however, so far they have yet to perfect it...
The old way of surveying was sighting through a compass and clinometer and measuring survey legs with a tape measure, write the readings into a notebook and also sketch the passage detail into the notebook as well. This si far more tedious and as a result, surveying complex caves takes many, many trips...
One you have the data then many hours are taken, transcribing the data into a surveying package on a pc, then plotting a centre line and quite often, sketching the passage detail by hand, coppied from the notes. This is incredibly labour intensive with lots of room for errors.
The posh laser scanners are very expensive and only capture a small part of passage at a time, you have to relocate the scanner along the passage/chamber until you think it has captured most data. It then requires many hours of post production on a very powerful pc to render it as a cave passage. It is cost prohibitive, pc intensive, labour intensive and is much more work than either the electronic or paper survey techniques. Rest assured though that people are working to develope something cheap and easy to use but the technology is still way beyond the cost or skill levels of most cavers...
[quote="LesW" post=11808]Currently people are working on a variant of DistoX that works with a newer Disto and uses available components, however, so far they have yet to perfect it...[/quote]
I'll await the results of this with interest. Any links I can look at?
http://paperless.bheeb.ch/
By way of reply to both Les and New S.
I am most impressed by the form of surveying used on the Nottingham Cave Program. See....
http://nottinghamcavessurvey.org.uk/
This is an extensive system of caves and also an extensive web site. The equipment used here was expensive, but I guess they got some funding to help. It may well be that we can get the equipment for short periods to try it out at least.
I feel that an equally versatile method could be achieved using a sequence of well taken still photographs, operated by a program similar to Google Street View. This would allow you to move forwards and backwards through a cave system, and also make route choices. See...
http://ogof.net
Beware, this gets addictive!
Also this...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wdy6eQYcCiM
much cruder and less interactive.
This next link shows a simpler laser scan system that runs as a continuous video but the raw data could be displayed in other ways.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HdgliagAds
I think this was done by a single laser beam (like in the distoX) that revolves as it progresses along the mine tunnel, and this provides a string of data distances calibrated with the distance travelled and the angle of rotation. This is a simple data set as two of the three vectors are relatively constant. The form of scanner used in the Nottingham Cave Survey produces a vast amount of data.
I also like this method...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DUEAz_naHHg
Looks simple, and may be very suitable for caves.
In researching this subject I have found many more links on You Tube and on different forums dealing with surveying buildings and working with lasers.
I do feel that the next immediate step for us is to get Tims kit working and collect some good data for an easy cave system such as Poachers main passage, or Belgrave top level. We then need to put into practice all that we were taught on the survey weekend. I suggest we make a set of four posts with round headded screws on to be used as a jig for calibrating the DistoX as this is a very long task and has to be done each time the Disto is turned off. Then on a weekend in the Spring next year, when all the players are available, we should tryout the laser machine.
[quote="JohnNicholson" post=11813]
This next link shows a simpler laser scan system that runs as a continuous video but the raw data could be displayed in other ways.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8HdgliagAds
I think this was done by a single laser beam (like in the distoX) that revolves as it progresses along the mine tunnel, and this provides a string of data distances calibrated with the distance travelled and the angle of rotation. This is a simple data set as two of the three vectors are relatively constant. The form of scanner used in the Nottingham Cave Survey produces a vast amount of data.
[/quote]
John,
the laser scan used a system of points, called a "point cloud".
The laser scanner is located at a point in th epassage and left to scan, this can take a long time (in a passage like that, perhaps 40 minutes). It is then moved along the passage so that it can still see some of the original points that were scanned, and set to scan again (another 40 minutes?) progression is in short steps like this until it has accumulated massive numbers of "points".
The scans are downloaded to a powerful PC with some very expensive software on it and this is set to try and identify the points that are common in each individual scan. If it is succesful then it will "stitch" the scans together. More likely is that a person will need to intervene on locating common points as software is not that good at spotting the same points from different angles. This process can take many days. One it is complete the finished image is rendered into a movie, again this requires powerful processing and still takes the computer many hours. The final result is very pleasing though.
The scanners are very expensive and not really suited to hostile underground.
The guy that knows about all this stuff in the UK is Kevin Dixon. He has scanned lots of stuff, including Gaping Gill, Titan and The Frozen Deep. He has also scanned the largest chamber in the world, Sarawak Chamber and the largest cave passage in the world, Deer Cave. This stuff is still way beyond the budgets of most cavers and the software is many, many thousands of pounds. It is still very labour intensive and processor intensive. It will be a long time before anything is developed by cavers to produce comparable scans on as budget. Kevin "borrowed" a scanner from Lecia to scan in Mulu (Sarawak Chamber and Deer Cave) but it was only a loan as the scanner was valued at something like a quarter of a million quids...
http://www.mulucaves.org/wordpress/articles/measuring-sarawak-chamber
http://cave-registry.org.uk/images/stories/TFD.mp4
http://www.scribd.com/doc/51213138/Kevin-Dixon-Laser-Scanning
We saw that 3D film on the survey course, but the figues quoted were not as high as you suggest. My feeling is that this is the current top of the range 3D lasers, and the cost will come down as more people use it. It happens that UCET may have a way to borrow this kit (or similar) over weekends. I am not suggesting that we abandon the DistoX, but rather give it a jolly good go, whilst keeping an eye on other opportunities as they come along.
Do you know how we can contact Kevin Dixon?
Kevin Dixon is "KDXN" on ukcaving.com so you can send him a personal message there
I also have an email address for him but am not posting it on a public forum.
John, you would do well to come to the cave technology symposium next year, it is in Wales as well (albeit a tad south of you...). There will almost certainly be talks on the latest technological developements with surveying (although not totally guaranteed if nothing new is about)
BCRA Cave Technology Symposium 2013. Weekend 20-21 April 2013, South Wales
http://bcra.org.uk/index.html#techsym
[quote="NewStuff" post=11811][quote="LesW" post=11808]Currently people are working on a variant of DistoX that works with a newer Disto and uses available components, however, so far they have yet to perfect it...[/quote]
I'll await the results of this with interest. Any links I can look at?[/quote]
No, they were working on a software & hardware to fit a newer Leica model but by the time they had got even a fraction of the way there leica had once again updated their model, software etc.
I think the truth is, at present there are 'enough' Distox's around to satisfy the people (amateur volunteers) who are doing the development - in short the demand probably isn't big enough.
I got a second hand Leica Disto A3 on ebay about two years ago and also managed to buy the last ever board Beat Heeb (yes, he's foreign!) ever made , again about 2 years ago.
Since then Kevin Dixon managed to source components to make about another 100 DistoX1 boards - exact copies of the Beat Heeb Boards.
Beat Heeb meanwhile was looking at development of a new board and software for the Leica DXT (the newer and water proof version of the A3) but while i believe it did get of the ground for a trial run, it hasn't been completed yet.
google DistoX and you'll get loads of info. :-)
Heres a paper by Beat (2009) which explains what a Disto X is
http://paperless.bheeb.ch/download/DistoX.pdf
and theres more info on his website http://paperless.bheeb.ch