Ground Penetration Radar means it works like a Radar - not as a metal-detector!
Real GPR works from ca. 10 MHz (large antennas, deep, low resolution) to 1,5 GHz (small antennas, shallow, high resolution).
It really measures the timing, shape, amplitude, energy, phase etc. of the transmitted wave which gets "reflected" if the ground or soil etc. changes.
Usually 2 dimensional slices of the ground get created (but those are combinable to 3D pictures):
The persons stands with the device at one place and receives a single depth-analysis of the penetrating spot up to 30 meters if he uses 10 MHz
and if the ground is OK for this - with higher frequencies and easier usable devices (small antennas) the depth is 5 meters to only ca. 50cm.
Next he moves on in a straight row or circle shaped form to other nearby spots and measures the ground there.
The final result is like a track with shown depth-anomaly values.
If the person walks close this track and creates more such nearby tracks he will get a 3D visualization of the ground if the software can render it.
Many times the graphic becames a better recognition-design with different colors for special high and special low "frequency-activity" spots.
I wonder what's needed to create such a "echo-timing-meter" much easier and just for around 1000 bucks compared with the real expensive stuff.
Almost anybody has a bluetooth smartphone or laptop anyway so all what is needed is the transmitter, the "receiving-timer" and
the analog-digital converter inclusive the smartphone or laptop software that records and shows the incoming signals on the screen.
Real GPR works from ca. 10 MHz (large antennas, deep, low resolution) to 1,5 GHz (small antennas, shallow, high resolution).
It really measures the timing, shape, amplitude, energy, phase etc. of the transmitted wave which gets "reflected" if the ground or soil etc. changes.
Usually 2 dimensional slices of the ground get created (but those are combinable to 3D pictures):
The persons stands with the device at one place and receives a single depth-analysis of the penetrating spot up to 30 meters if he uses 10 MHz
and if the ground is OK for this - with higher frequencies and easier usable devices (small antennas) the depth is 5 meters to only ca. 50cm.
Next he moves on in a straight row or circle shaped form to other nearby spots and measures the ground there.
The final result is like a track with shown depth-anomaly values.
If the person walks close this track and creates more such nearby tracks he will get a 3D visualization of the ground if the software can render it.
Many times the graphic becames a better recognition-design with different colors for special high and special low "frequency-activity" spots.
I wonder what's needed to create such a "echo-timing-meter" much easier and just for around 1000 bucks compared with the real expensive stuff.
Almost anybody has a bluetooth smartphone or laptop anyway so all what is needed is the transmitter, the "receiving-timer" and
the analog-digital converter inclusive the smartphone or laptop software that records and shows the incoming signals on the screen.
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