
Why Your GPS Shot Is Never Exactly Right: Understanding RTK Error
Anyone who has set up an RTK receiver on a known point and watched the coordinate display has noticed something that can feel unsettling at

Anyone who has set up an RTK receiver on a known point and watched the coordinate display has noticed something that can feel unsettling at

Before GPS existed, before total stations had onboard computers, and before RTK receivers could locate a point to the centimetre in seconds, the theodolite was

Every time a Canadian land surveyor drives a stake into frozen ground or a civil engineer signs off on a subdivision boundary, there’s an invisible

The same GPS signal that tells your phone you’re standing outside a coffee shop is capable, with the right technology, of telling a land surveyor

Before a single stake goes in the ground or a machine moves a cubic metre of earth, someone has already mapped every slope, boundary, and

Before a single stake goes in the ground on a Canadian land development project, dozens of decisions have already been made, about zoning, servicing, environmental

Canada manages more than 347 million hectares of forest land, the third largest forest area in the world. Yet the precision required to manage it

A subdivision gets built on the wrong lot. A highway alignment drifts two metres off centerline. A boundary dispute ends up in court. These are

Every coordinate you collect starts with a satellite signal traveling 20,000 kilometers through the atmosphere to reach your receiver. That signal gets delayed by water