I have been facing the same problem for some time, and in my case it happened to be an issue with the 10.1 version. Solved after installing Service Pack 1.
Hi all,
It's been awhile since I have tried to do this analysis. I have a call into ESRI for help, but in the meantime I followed the steps below to get Steve's workflow above to work in 10.3.1. After doing these things, I still wasn't able to get anything other than the isotropic spiderwebs:
1) modified Nico's ToblerAway table to include these field names: VRMA and VF from left to right. I thought it looked like the concentric spiderweb wasn't reading the table, so made that change.
2) set DEM as the surface raster
3) set the maximum raster processing to 500,000 (area is large, from Huari to Moquegua for Andeanists)
4) saved my output anisohrs to the default .gdb where it wanted to go rather than putting in a new location
Also, make sure you've installed the background geoprocessor after you installed ArcMap. I encountered problems with all kinds of heavy-duty raster analysis before adding that step to my installs. Also, reading and writing to different locations (not both networked locations) helps me generally run processes faster. This isn't as big of a deal in ArcGIS Pro, since the database was built in a different way.
I was able to generate the anisotropic layer with Nico's Tobler-derived table and then used that layer to run cost paths back in desktop.
Good luck!
Hi All,
I am definitely no expert in ArcMap and could really use some help.
I have been working on calculating the cost to travel from raw material toolstone sources in Interior, Alaska using Tobler's Hiking Function. I followed Kaitlin Yanchar's tutorial: ArcGIS Tutorial: Tobler’s Hiking Function (Anisotropic Distance) | Kaitlin Yanchar, MA, RPA in a version of ArcMap 10. I used a 100m resolution DEM, 32 bit floating point raster. I clipped the DEM to only include the analysis extent which is about a 46,000 square mile area, and then followed the steps of the tutorial. Slope is the only friction surface I used. The cost raster and resulting values of the cost raster appear to be anisotropic and correct in relation to one another, but I am having a problem similar to Mathew Schmidtlein. My values are not underestimated, they seem to be significantly overestimated, such that the time it would take to travel several hundred miles, when the cost is converted from minutes to years, would take several years. I followed the tutorial twice and came up with the same values. There is steep terrain in the area, but I looked at the slope values and there are none that are over 70 degrees, so I don't think ArcMap is getting hung up on terrain that may be impossible to traverse. Does anyone have any ideas why I may be getting such huge cost values? Is it possible that the values of the cost raster are not in minutes?
Thank you for your help,
Brooks
Hi,
Don't have much to add.
I seem to have the same problem only with ArcMap 10.5
Did anyone find a solution?
Thanks