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002 2D Orthophoto Instructions - v002

This document provides instructions for planning drone flight missions to acquire aerial images for mapping and digital orthophoto processing. It recommends a front overlap of 80% and side overlap of 75% between images. GCPs should be used for survey-grade accuracy when processing the orthophoto. The instructions also provide tips for starting missions from high points to ensure sufficient overlap, and capturing additional overhead images of tall buildings from a higher altitude.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
85 views2 pages

002 2D Orthophoto Instructions - v002

This document provides instructions for planning drone flight missions to acquire aerial images for mapping and digital orthophoto processing. It recommends a front overlap of 80% and side overlap of 75% between images. GCPs should be used for survey-grade accuracy when processing the orthophoto. The instructions also provide tips for starting missions from high points to ensure sufficient overlap, and capturing additional overhead images of tall buildings from a higher altitude.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Mapping and Aerial Image Processing Software

Flight preparation – How to plan your flight mission for best Digital
Orthophoto
Detailed instruction for optimum image acquisition.
To achieve great results make sure you start with the correct settings right at the beginning. Higher
overlap means more images and more images means longer processing time. The minimum overlap
between images is 65% (front and side overlap). However in some cases (wide-angle cameras, high
vegetation, uneven terrain, etc) it is safer to increase these values to 80%.
Below are instructions on how to best prepare and set up your flight mission to get the best possible
orthophoto with minimum processing time. In case you would like to calculate volumes, as well,
additional side images will have to be captured – see the instructions for Volume calculations.

 Standard settings for any drone, any camera:


o Camera angle nadir direction (vertically downward) - 90° angle
o Flying height from 40 - 150 m AGL (above ground level) - Usually 80 m
o Front Overlap (overlap in the flying way) 80%, Side overlap 75%.
Most drones automatically geotag the images based on drone GPS (usual accuracy 1,5 m) and you
can orientate the model in 3Dsurvey based on that telemetry data. If you would like to achieve
survey-grade accuracy (up to 4 cm), don’t forget to set up GCPs before the flight and measure them
with survey-grade RTK GNSS. In case you have a drone with RTK GPS with 1 cm accuracy you can use
that data to orientate the model accurately without employing any GCPs.
Note: We always recommend using GCPs if the type of terrain allows for the placement. 3Dsurvey
supports all combinations of geo-referencing data, including or excluding GPS inputs in the
processing stage is also supported. Check the instructions hot set them correctly: GCP Setup
 Tips and Tricks:
1. Start your mission from the highest point in relation to the terrain you are about to map.
Most drones (DJI Phantom 4, Yuneec, DJI drones) fly missions in a single plane and don’t
automatically adjust their flying height to the terrain characteristics. This can result in an
insufficient image overlap (less then 60%) when capturing higher terrain points, high
buildings, high trees, etc. in case you start the mission from lower positions.
a. Best practice:

Drone mission

80m 65m
80% overlap 70% overlap
95m
90% overlap
b. Wrong starting point:
Drone mission
45m
50% overlap
80m
80% overlap

2. Lower flying height with better ground pixel resolution (GSD) does not always mean better
results. In areas with high density of buildings, flying too low can result in the following:
a. High buildings will not be ortho-projected in the digital orthophoto.

40 m AGL – Phantom 4 PRO 80 m AGL – Phantom 4 PRO

b. Image stitching can be less than perfect if they are directly over a building.

To eliminate the over-the-building image stitching we advise you to have the whole building on
a single image. First, perform your mission at 80 m AGL, then manually trigger a few nadir
images from a higher AGL (120 m above the object, for example) to get the whole object in
one image.
That enables you to recalculate the area with - or/and around - the building (See tutorial
http://www.3dsurvey.si/tutorials/digital-orthophoto-recalculation for guidance).

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