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Hi all!
I'm facing a fair easy to understand challenge, but not so easy to solve ..
I've been looking all day for an efficient way to digitize and create center-line alignments that follows near-perfectly 70km of gravel road from high resolution georeferenced imagery.
The deal is that I need those alignments to remain easily editable (I love been able to grip-edit), in case I need to modify some portions of those alignments in the future.
- I first tried to digitize the center-line with Cogo Points, and use best-fit alignement from 100 CoGo Points - it keeps crashing, doesn't work.
- I then tried to digitize the center-line with Spline (which followed the center-line near-perfectly) and convert them to polyline (either arc OR line, because having both is impossible).
- If the spline is converted to arc only, the resulting alignment is following perfectly the center-line (beautiful), but since it's only composed of fixed curves and NO line at all, any edition of this resulting alignment will break the tangency of those arcs, making it a nightmare to edit, but so far, this is the best compromise I found (following perfectly the center-line, quick to digitize, but not easy to edit).
- If the spline is converted to line only, when I create the alignment I choose to insert arc with a radius for tangency, but I then need to manually grip-edit each curved to match the center-line, again - not very efficient.
- I also used the best-fit alignment from polyline - it's good, but not good enough, since I need to re-edit each alignment manually, insert new PI and new curves, try to fit them all - again, not very efficient.
- I also tried to digitize the center-line by creating a Feature Line with line and arc, which takes too much time, but even that, the resulting alignment is not easily editable.
By easily editable, I mean this : a surveyor calls you up, the existing road has shifted by a couple of meters or even completely evolved to a new path, and you need to modify those alignments, but your corridor and profiles are already created. Having the ability to grip-edit the alignement has helped me in the past.
For your information, profiles and corridors will then be created for all those alignments - if the created alignement is slightly off the center-line, the corridor won't match the LiDAR surface data greatly impacting the resulting quantities (see sketch goal attached). This is for a wind-farm project. Maybe this is overkill, maybe not.
Please, do you have any ideas?
Solved! Go to Solution.