Home Magyarország
  Megoldások
Termékek
Támogatás - Szervíz
Magunkról
Kapcsolat   Magyarország
 
Megoldások  
 
Repüléstechnika (en)
 
 
Mezőgazdaság (en)
 
 
Erőforrások & Lehetőségek kezelése (en)
 
 
Autógyártás (en)
 
 
Építészet & Építőipar (en)
 
 
Kataszteri munkák (en)
 
 
Katasztrófa & Vészhelyzet Kezelés
 
 
Mérnöki munkák (en)
 
 
 Airports and Stadiums
 
 
 Bridges
 
 
 Harbours and Docks
 
 
 HDS Workflows
 
 
  AutoPLANT Retrofit Workflow
 
 
  Feature Code an Intersection Workflow
 
 
  Accurate As-built Workflow
 
 
 Hydroelectric Power Plant
 
 
 Large Building Construction
 
 
 Plants & Refineries
 
 
 Railways
 
 
 Roads
 
 
 Sewage collection
 
 
 Sites
 
 
 Tunnel surveys
 
 
 Water Supplies
 
 
Kriminalisztika & Közbiztonság (en)
 
 
Általános Ipar (en)
 
 
Bányászat & Kutatás (en)
 
 
Monitoring (en)
 
 
Más egyéb (en)
 

Feature Code an Intersection Workflow

Code an Intersection Perfectly... The First Time
Civil/Survey Question: How do I create a topographic map from point clouds?
Civil/Survey Workflow:

Surveyors are often asked to create maps of areas that may be hazardous to occupy, costly to re-visit, or simply a challenge to survey due to the site's detail and complexity. For these projects and others, laser scanning often provides a better way to capture the area. Leica Geosystems HDS LLC's latest software, it's easy to process laser scans into typical survey deliverables.

There are two popular ways to extract point and line data from a geo-referenced point cloud:
 
1. Utilize your favorite CAD application such as Autodesk Land Desktop, MicroStation InRoads or Bentley GEOPAK. Using Leica Geosystems HDS, Inc.'s CloudWorx software, the geo-referenced point cloud would be accessed and visualized right in your CAD environment. CAD operators can use all the familiar tools to create planimetric or topographic maps (including contours) by overlaying points, lines, and symbols directly on the point cloud features.
 
 
 
2. Extract features directly from point cloud using Cyclone software's Virtual Surveyor tool and then export these feature codes as a standard ASCII format into the surveying software of your choice. If you are using AutoCAD- or MicroStation-based platforms, the original raw point cloud can also be brought in (via CloudWorx) to verify the feature extractions and add detail to the existing topographic representation.