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Intro: Using a clinometer to measure height

In this Instructable, I'll show you how to use a clinometer to measure the height of a tall object (for help constructing your own clinometer from basic classroom materials, click here ). What you will need; Clinometer Tape measure Paper Pen or pencil Assistant

Step 1: Pick a spot


Pick a spot to measure your object (I measured a telephone pole). You should be far enough away from your object that you can see the top of it, and you need to be on level ground with the base of the object. I like to set something down by my feet once I've picked my spot, so that I can easily come back to it.

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Step 2: Measure angle


Here's where we bust out our handy clinometer. Look through the straw of your clinometer at the top of the light pole (or whatever object you're measuring). The weighted string should hang down freely, crossing the protractor portion of the clinometer. Read the angle shown, and subtract from 90 to find your angle of vision from your eye to the top of the pole (it can be helpful here to have an assistant to read the measurement while you look through the straw). Record your results on your paper. From my spot, my clinometer (read by my assistant) showed 55. Subtracting from 90, that indicated that I looked at an angle of 35 to the top of the telephone pole.

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Step 3: Measure distance


Once you have your angle of vision, use your tape measure to find the distance from the spot you're standing to the base of the object you're measuring (an assistant comes in handy here, too). We must know how far away you are to accurately calculate the height. My spot was 15.6 meters from the base of the telephone pole I measured.

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Step 4: Find your eye-height


The last piece of data you need to calculate the height of your object is the height from the ground to your eye (your eye-height). Have your assistant help you measure this using your tape measure. My eye height was recorded for this example as 1.64 meters.

Step 5: Draw a picture


Time to move inside. In calculating the height of the object you just measured, I find it helpful to begin by drawing a picture and labeling it with all of the information I have.

Image Notes 1. Fill in the angle you measured on your clinometer here. 2. Fill in your eye height here.

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3. Fill in the distance from your spot to the base of the object you are measuring here.

Step 6: Model as a triangle


The next step is to simplify your drawing to model your system as a right triangle. Label your triangle with the angle you read on your clinometer as well as the distance you were standing from the object (we don't need the eye-height just yet).

Step 7: Solve for x


We can find x in this triangle (which represents the portion of the height from eye-level up) by using some basic trigonometry, specifically the tangent ratio of the triangle: tan(angle ) = x / distance Multiply by the distance on both sides and you get: x = tan(angle ) * distance Use a calculator to multiply these together and get a decimal value (be sure your calculator is in 'degrees' mode, rather than 'radians'!). In my example: tan(35 ) = x / 15.6 x = tan(35 ) * 15.6 x = 10.92 meters

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Step 8: Combine with eye height


To find the height of your object, bring this x value back to the original drawing. By labeling it, we can see that the height of the object, h, is equal to the x value we just found plus the eye-height we measured earlier: h = x + (eye-height ) In my example: h = 10.92m + 1.64m h = 12.56m There you have it! A few basic classroom materials and a little bit of trigonometry and you can measure the height of anything around you!

Related Instructables

Basic Clinometer From Classroom Materials by dmuldoonlla


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How to Make a Clinometer by anthonyy

Clinometer by breeabrown

Clinometer by arjaunmason

How to Make an Clinometer (measures incline) by jerricoleb

how to make a clinometer by gabegax

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