Measurement:Elevation: Difference between revisions
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'''elevation''' is the canonical, machine readable identifier, and the canonical unit is '''m''', as specified at [[Measurement:Unit_Identifiers|Unit Identifiers]]. | |||
= Node Elevation Measurement = | = Node Elevation Measurement = | ||
Latest revision as of 19:50, 10 June 2026
elevation is the canonical, machine readable identifier, and the canonical unit is m, as specified at Unit Identifiers.
Node Elevation Measurement
AI-Generated Content Notice: The following content (full page) was generated using ChatGPT on 2026-06-10.
[Included in accordance with the AOWIS AI Usage Guide (REQ-AI-007, REQ-AI-008) and MAY require verification and/or post-editing.]
1. Context
In field deployments, it may appear convenient to use smartphone GPS readings to determine the elevation of pipe network nodes.
However, GPS-based altitude measurements are often insufficient for infrastructure-grade water systems due to:
- low vertical accuracy in consumer devices
- atmospheric variation
- inconsistent reference datums
- drift over time
As a result, relying solely on GPS elevation can lead to incorrect hydraulic modeling and unsafe system behavior.
2. Normative Requirement
All AOWIS-compliant systems:
- MUST NOT use uncalibrated consumer GPS altitude as the sole source of node elevation data for hydraulic or control decisions
- SHOULD use surveyed or externally validated elevation references where available
- MAY use GPS-derived elevation only as a temporary or fallback estimate, clearly marked as low-confidence
3. Measurement Model
Node elevation values MUST be represented as:
- a numeric value relative to a defined vertical datum
- associated metadata indicating source type
- optional uncertainty or confidence indicator
4. Reference Hierarchy
Preferred sources for node elevation:
1. Geodetic survey measurements 2. Local infrastructure engineering records 3. Differential GPS or RTK systems 4. Consumer GPS (fallback only)
5. Traceability
The restriction on GPS-only elevation sources exists to prevent:
- hydraulic miscalculations
- incorrect pressure modeling
- unsafe valve/pump control decisions