Don, Ed, 

As my field measuring season winds down, I plan to devote lots of time to the 
calibration issue, manufacture claims, field accuracy, etc. Of course, I'll be 
looking for input/advice from all of you as I go. The instrument accuracy and 
precision study could grow into a paper or at least an article in the ENTS 
Bulletin. 


Bob 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Don Bertolette" <[email protected]> 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Tuesday, December 8, 2009 5:09:40 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: Re: [ENTS] Finishing up in the Trees of Peace 


Ed- 
On just the equipment accuracy alone, I don't entirely agree...I think it would 
be appropriate to remove 'speculative' claims and replace them with replicable 
engineering level spec testing...eg, comparing laser rangefinders height 
measurements:1)across expected array of heights (15' to say 200') and 2)across 
those heights with an array of reflectance surfaces that can be anticipated in 
the range of surfaces encountered in the woods, especially including 
reflectors. 
This should be a professional peer reviewed journal level research paper. 


Then we could discuss the living 'breathing' nature of trees, and 'significant' 
digits, without so many unknowns. 


I do know that Bob has done some fairly extensive field studies on this, but 
stops short of being easily replicable. 


As it is now, our assumptions are not beyond question, which I assume is the 
desirable ENTS objective? 


Don 

Sent from Don's iPhone 3GS... 

On Dec 8, 2009, at 11:45 AM, "Edward Frank" < [email protected] > wrote: 






Don, 

The question here is the precision of the laser measurements, accuracy is 
something different. The lasers are much more precise than the manufacturers 
accuracy statements. The readings are repeatable to much less than 1/2 yard or 
1 yard. They are repeatable to at least a couple of tenths of a foot. The 
factory calibration and standard usage of the instruments results in the 
decrease in accuracy. If used properly - measuring at the so called click-over 
point the accuracy is the same as the precision. The reading are repeatable and 
accurate to a tenth of a foot or at worse a couple tenths of a foot. To get 
this degree of accuracy the instrument needs to be calibrated and measurements 
taken at a specific portion of the range - at the click-over point - otherwise 
the 1/2 yard is true. Also the error is not translatable directly into height 
errors. The amount of error in the length of a reading from laser errors is 
multiplied by the sin of the angle of measurement. Thus at 45 degrees the error 
in height from laser error is only 07x the laser error. So in usage the error 
in heights will range from around 1 foot with no corrections at all, at angles 
les than 60 degrees or so to less than a tenth of a foot if everything is done 
right. With multiple measurements the average, excluding outliers, represents 
the most probable height and is should most likely be expressed to the nearest 
1/10 of a foot. I would agree that expressing the 100th of a foot represent 
non-significant digits. Expressing heights to a tenth of a foot can be 
supported. 

Ed 

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Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org 
Send email to [email protected] 
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/entstrees?hl=en 
To unsubscribe send email to [email protected] 

-- 
Eastern Native Tree Society http://www.nativetreesociety.org 
Send email to [email protected] 
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/entstrees?hl=en 
To unsubscribe send email to [email protected]

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