Refraction field how-to
Equipment needed in the field:
- field notebook
- map
- refraction recording unit
- 2 12-channel cables
- 24 geophones
- deep-cycle 12 volt battery (charged)
- grounding cable and stake
- power cable
- sledgehammer with trigger
- trigger cable extender
- measuring tape
- compass
- GPS or equivalent
- spare 1.4 Mb (high density) floppy disks
General instructions:
- Determine the location of your profile(s), laying out in such a manner that
expected refractions can be observed
- Place the recording unit, battery, grounding cable and stake at the center
of the spread
- Roll out the geophone cables from the middle towards the ends, placing takeouts
at desired distances (uaully measured with a tape).
- Locate the ends of your refraction spread with GPS or other suitable method.
Also make a sketch map of the layout.
- Install geophones at measured locations (red clip to red/orange takeout,
black clip to black takeout on black cable, orange to black and black to orange
on the orange cable).
- Connect cables in this order:
- grounding cable to stake and recorder
- geophone cables to recorder
- power cable to battery
- power cable to recorder
- Remove LCD screen/keypad and make sure it is connected to the recorder
- Turn on power to the recorder.
- Turn on the noise monitor to check for bad channels. (some gain adjustment
might be needed--pushing up and down arrows on keypad will adjust). (Consult
summary manual handed out in class)
- Walk the line to verify where channels 1, 12, 13, 24 are. Mark these in
the field notes along with location information, if necessary.
- Choose first shot point. Connect trigger to recorder, using extension cord
if needed. Best if upward motion is smooth and slow (to avoid triggering on
the upward swing and also to minimize the pre-event noise).
- View traces; save if good, delete is bad. Usually the first time through
you have to adjust trace amplitudes--choose trace size and then auto adjust.
From there, you can hand tune individual traces by choosing trace size and
individual. If noise has a particular frequency content, consider turning
on a filter to isolate the signal from the noise. Repeat 9-11 as necessary
to stack up good energy.
- Once a happy stack is made, print it out (usually you want to adjust the
time scale to be expanded) and save to a floppy (you can only use numbers
in the file name).
Please send mail if
you encounter any problems or have suggestions.
GEOL4714/5715 home | C.
H. Jones | CIRES
| Dept. of Geological
Sciences | Univ. of Colorado
at Boulder
Last modified at Tuesday, September 12, 2000 9:43 AM
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