How about a plot plan with a piece of property. Take all the info given in degrees, minutes and seconds. Derive all the corner angles, then all the diagonal measurements from the values attained from the lengths of the sides and the angles derived from the coordinates given. The property is a rhombus. A rectangle or square would be to easy. Then are the property measurements given as though the property is dead flat or are the measurements representative of any slope?
It's been more than 20 years since I studied trig so might be missing something. Are you sure that it can be used to solve question 2? I thought that trig only works for right angled triangles.
@@bigbosssauce7 . Thanks. In the last 10 months I have relearnt the laws of sin and law of cosine, which can be used to check the answer to question 2, as I study to become a surveyor. This vid makes perfect sense 10 months later 🙂
nice video
Great job Windy. You make sense out of this
Great ,, thank for tutorial,, Thanks
Good job ma"am
A correct distance of 1000m was measured with a 25m chain which was actually 24.9m long.calculate the chain distance?
How about a plot plan with a piece of property. Take all the info given in degrees, minutes and seconds. Derive all the corner angles, then all the diagonal measurements from the values attained from the lengths of the sides and the angles derived from the coordinates given. The property is a rhombus. A rectangle or square would be to easy. Then are the property measurements given as though the property is dead flat or are the measurements representative of any slope?
Where they use ft or inch? Why you don't use meter or centimeter?
It's been more than 20 years since I studied trig so might be missing something. Are you sure that it can be used to solve question 2? I thought that trig only works for right angled triangles.
The law of sines can be used for any triangle, but the six functions don't work for non-right triangles because only right triangles have a hypotenuse
@@bigbosssauce7 . Thanks. In the last 10 months I have relearnt the laws of sin and law of cosine, which can be used to check the answer to question 2, as I study to become a surveyor. This vid makes perfect sense 10 months later 🙂
@@MrPhantomPete I'm in the process of working toward licensure as a surveyor too. Good luck to you!
I learned it in high school as Sex on Holidays Can Achieve Happy Times Over All
omg, they're using non-metric units