Trimble Juno GPS

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This section is still under construction! This article was last modified on 11/26/2013. If you have comments please use the Discussion page or contribute to the article!

This exercise is part of the QGIS Tutorial 2013/14.
In this exercise you'll get an introduction on how to handle a GPS receiver and how to process data in QGIS

During the practical exercise, we work with the GPS receiver Trimble Juno 3B by Trimble navigation. Of course, there are different GPS navigation devices on the market, supplied by several manufacturers, e.g. those listed on the wikipedia page.


Contents

Getting started with the GPS receiver

Startup and configuration

Figure A:Trimble Juno 3B setup menu
  1. Press the power button for a few seconds
  2. Open the windows menu (by selecting on screen or pushing the windows-button) and select TerraSync --> Professional Edition. You are redirected to the Status menu, with a compass rose displayed in the center of the screen. Wait for a few minutes, until you get a connection to at least three satellites, which are displayed by little symbols on the compass rose.
  3. Set the coordinate system and other parameters
    1. To set the coordinate system and other parameters, select the upper of the two pull down menus at the top left corner of the screen (right now, Status should be displayed here). Select Setup. Alternatively, you can select the wrench symbol to enter the setup menu (see figure A).
    2. Select the Coordinate system menu.
    3. Set all parameters to the desired configuration:
      1. For this exercise, you can select Germany under System, UTM Zone 32 as the Zone and WGS 1984 as the Datum. Leave all other configurations as they are.
      2. Confirm with Done.

Navigation

To find a specific spatial point:

  1. Set the target
    1. Select the upper pull-down menu, which now should display Status. Select Data, and select Existing file from the pulldown menu below.
    2. Select the device where the data is stored under Location. Some exemplary data is stored under Storage card. Select Tree waypoints from the displayed file list and click Open.
    3. Select the point you want to navigate to (e.g. Tree01.
    4. Click Options-->Set Nav Target and set the point you selected before.
  2. Set the background map
    1. Select Upper --> Map.
    2. Click Layers and check the Background and GNSS trail boxes. The background map should now be displayed.
    3. To zoom in to your location on the map, select Option --> Auto pan to GNSS position or Auto pan to selection for manual zooming.
    4. Your position and target appear as symbols? on the map.
  3. Navigation to the target:
    1. Select Upper --> Map to see the overview of your position and target.
    2. Select Upper --> Navigation.
    3. Follow the displayed compass and also check the Distance tab. Note that you need to move to get the compass working.
  4. To determin the precise position of ground control points (GCPs):
    1. After having set a target, select New and enter the name of the point (e.g. GCP01). Confirm by clicking Create.
    2. Select Point generic --> OK.
    3. Select Option --> Logging interval and set the interval to 1 second.
    4. Wait for an interval of 100 Blinks and press Done. Confirm with Yes and your point is saved.

Processing in QGIS

Figure C:: The QGIS 2.0 plugin manager
  1. Open QGIS.
  2. Select Plugin --> Manage and install plugins. Activate the GPS-Tool and eVIS plugins (you can find them by typing the plugin names into the Search bar) as in figure C.
  3. Click the GPS tools icon QGIS 2.0 GPSTools.png and select Load GPX File. If you already saved a GPX-file on you computer, browse to the file. If you want to download it from the receiver, connect it to the computer and select Download from GPS.
  4. Load a raster map, e.g. from the course data and locate it under the GPS points (see Exercise 01 on how to load layers). You can find an aerial photograph of the forestry faculty under geodata/raster/aerial/aerial_utm32_WGS84.tif.
  5. Open the attribute table of layer tree waypoint, waypoints by right-clicking the layer in the TOC and selecting Open Attribute Table.
  6. Click Toggle editing mode QGIS 2.0 Edit.png to edit or add information. For example, you can change a trees' name in the name column. To add a picture of the point: Type the paths to the pictures into the url column. To save the changes, click Toggle editing mode again and confirm with Save. You can also save while editing by clicking the Save QGIS 2.0 SaveEdit.png button (see figure D).
  7. To view the full information for a point, select Database --> eVis --> eVis Event Id Tool. Select the tree waypoints layer in the TOC and select a point. The eVis Event Browse opens (figure D). The image of the trees should be shown in the browser. If not, check the path to the file again. You can adjust the setting of relative and absolute paths in the Options tab. Here, you can select Path is relative, if you want to store relative paths. To display the direction from which the picture was taken, check the box Display compass bearing.
Figure D:: QGIS 2.0 with aerial photograph of the Göttingen University forest faculty and open attribute table of the trees GPX layer
Figure E:: QGIS 2.0 with eVis Event Browser
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