Stake road – Spectra Precision FAST Survey Reference Manual User Manual

Page 279

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routine designed to adapt to customers who have built their cross section processing systems around the Geodimeter

raw file format.

Stake Road

Stake Road

is one of four major commands used in highway work. This command is designed to stakeout specific

stations and offsets along a centerline. For example, if your goal is to stakeout the break points at station 87+80 on a

given road centerline, you would use Stake Road. Stake Road, therefore, is used primarily to lay out road surfaces for

construction. Stake Road is typically used to set cut and fill stakes or “blue tops” at specific stations and offsets. The

elevation used to determine the cut or fill at each offset is derived from either design files (the template interacting with

the profile and centerline) or from cross sections or from sections that are “cut” from alignments. At any specific

station, you will be guided to the desired offset and will get a cut or fill. By contrast, if the goal were to simply set

random cut and fill stakes along an alignment, at no particular station or offset, then the command Elevation Difference

would be used. If the goal is to stake out the “catch” in cut and fill, where cut slopes and fill slopes meet existing

ground, then Stake Slope would be used. However, you can also Slope Stake within Stake Road. The fourth, major

highway-oriented feature is Store Sections, which is used to gather “as-built” information on a road. In this command,

you take cross sections of data points along the road, at random or specific stations. In summary, Stake Slope starts the

cut and fill work, Stake Road directs the precise roadbed work and fine grading, Elevation Difference acts as a quick

grade check, and Store Sections produces the final confirmation of the as-built road for payment and certification. It is

highly recommended for all road stakeout that you set on "Use CL for Reference Object" within Configure, View Point

tab.

Defining the Road

The first dialog that comes up when you select Stake Road is where you define the road by selecting one of the

following options.

Design Files:

In FAST Survey, design files include templates, centerline, profile and optionally, superelevation and

template transition files. If you wish to “clear” a file such as a superelevation file, just click it and choose Cancel.

The definitions for each of these files is covered in their own sections of this manual. Design files are recommended

for subdivision streets, access roads and simpler highway designs.

Section Files:

Sections are made up of simple offsets and elevations that can have descriptions such as “EOP”,

“DL” or “SH” and must be accompanied by a horizontal alignment file (centerline). Every cross section is a

“snapshot” of the template at a given station. FAST Survey supports using multiple surfaces simultaneously in

Stake Road by using multiple section files or by extracting the section for each surface when all surfaces are within

a single file. Each surface can exist on its own layer with its own color for easy identification while in the Stake

Road dialog. For complex designs, with non-conforming intersections, transition lanes, special ditches, etc., it is

recommended to use cross section data if available.

Cut Section from Alignments:

Provides the ability to extract cross sections directly from 3D polylines that exist

within FAST Survey. The first thing you need to define is the horizontal and vertical alignment files. These form

the basis for cutting the sections and determining left and right offsets from the horizontal alignment or centerline.

The centerline-defining screen is similar to the screens found in Stakeout Line and other commands.

This just starts the process. With both horizontal and vertical alignments defined, click OK. You will then be

asked to define a template point alignment (TPA) file. In this process, you must either pick or identify by

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