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Units for Surface Volume tool

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04-09-2014 10:52 AM
MitchellAllen
Emerging Contributor
I am uploading total station data that is taken in US Survey Feet.  When I upload the XYZ data I'm putting the points in Projected Coordinate Systems > State Plane > NAD 1983 (CORS96) StatePlane Arkansas South FIPS 0302 (US Feet).  After I create my TIN and run the Surface Volume tool is that number automatically in cubic feet?  Would anyone suggest doing this a different way?  Thanks for all of your help!

Mitchell
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5 Replies
GerryGabrisch
Frequent Contributor
Yes, unless you changed the default z factor parameter to something other than 1.
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AustinMilt
Deactivated User

Gerry, could you expand on this a bit. If you changed the z-factor, will the output units be in the z units rather than the xy units? The tool documentation is ambiguous, but led me to believe the volume would always be in the xy units (the only evidence is the statement "This is typically used to convert Z linear units to match XY linear units.").

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DarrenWiens2
MVP Honored Contributor

You would change the z-factor if your XY coordinates are in different units than the Z. For example, if your data is in a horizontal projection using feet and the vertical datum is in meters. The tool would interpret a 1 x 1 x 1 cube as 1 cubic feet, when it should actually be 1' x 1' x 1m or 1' x 1' x 1' * 3.28084 (the z-factor). I assume you would input 3.28084, although it may be 1/3.28084. Luckily, I work in Canada, where the only unit is meter (or metre!).

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AustinMilt
Deactivated User

Thanks for your prompt reply Darren. I understand when to change the z-factor, but my question is about what a change in the z-factor does to the output volume units. In my case, I'm working with a DEM that has units of m x m x cm (the standard format for NED DEMs), so I think I specify a z-factor of 0.01 m/cm (though now your answer confuses me about the appropriate value). Assuming that's all correct, my question is: Is the output volume measure in units of cubic meters, or cubic centimeters? I had assumed it would be cubic meters, but the values seem way too large to be correct, and dividing by 1e6 cm3/m3 seems to make them more reasonable.

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GerryGabrisch
Frequent Contributor

The output values will be in unit of measure of the projected data.  If your raster is using UTM zone X, the volumes are areas output by the tool will be in (assumed)  m^3 or m^2.  Failure to convert the cm z values to meters will result in calculation errors.

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