[Proj] Re: Transverse Mercator algorithm with good accuracy/speedtrade-off?
Gerald I. Evenden
geraldi.evenden at gmail.com
Sat May 24 10:49:16 PDT 2008
On Saturday 24 May 2008 1:14 pm, you wrote:
> It's not purely an "academic" horse if you practice in the oil patch.
> Reservoir engineers want a system recognizable to them and don't really
> care about practical geodetic applications, ... just solutions to their own
> problems and UTM is the way they want to go.
I do not think of UTM as simply a "practical geodetic application" especially
since it was championed by the military as a mechanism to standardize mapping
and help artillery FOs in their job. Indeed, if we are to champion practical
application we should educate the oil patch industry to find better
solutions.
A practical problem with UTM and its longitude limit is that if one proceeds
too far to the west the grid system goes negative---a fatal situation for
those who can't handle signed numbers. If you change the X offset to
compensate please be careful to NOT use the term UTM as the name of the new
system(s).
> You're not going to succeed in educating the entire world's Oil Patch
> industry.
It is a noble undertaking to educate the ignorant.
> There are practical applications to this even if a classical cartographer
> is ignorant of the reasons.
Please explain and justify. I do not understand the use of the
term "classical." I am just discussing practical, reasonable and proper
usage.
> The horse ain't dead, just maybe the jockey.
:-)
> Cliff Mugnier
As an aside: I was never able to get Dozier's procedure to properly function
in the nearly +/-90 longitude situation and communications with Dozier seemed
to indicate that his interest in the problem had waned.
> ________________________________
>
> From: proj-bounces at lists.maptools.org on behalf of Gerald I. Evenden
> Sent: Sat 24-May-08 09:39
> To: PROJ.4 and general Projections Discussions
> Subject: Re: [Proj] Re: Transverse Mercator algorithm with good
> accuracy/speedtrade-off?
>
>
>
> Ahhh! Sigh, Deja vu all over again. I thought we beat this dead horse
> and Dosier several years ago.
>
> It seems worthless to expand the longitudinal accuracy of the projection as
> long as the scale error and usefulness also goes to hell at the same time.
> The useful range for the tmerc is in the immediate vicinity of the central
> meridian so why bother worrying about extending computational accuracy in
> the longitudinal direction?
>
> Enough is enough. Please.
...
--
The whole religious complexion of the modern world is due
to the absence from Jerusalem of a lunatic asylum.
-- Havelock Ellis (1859-1939) British psychologist
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