A surveyor measures a distance between two points on a map of representative fraction of 1:100 is 60 m. But later he found that he used a wrong representative fraction of 1:50. What is the correct distance between the two points?

Discussion - MCQs on Surveying – Representative Fraction

A surveyor measures a distance between two points on a map of representative fraction of 1:100 is 60 m. But later he found that he used a wrong representative fraction of 1:50. What is the correct distance between the two points?

A. 30
B. 45
C. 90
D. 120
Correct Answer: (D) 120 m

📝 Detailed Explanation: Correcting Measurements with Wrong Scales

This problem deals with a common error in surveying where a measurement is calculated using an incorrect scale or Representative Fraction (R.F.). Understanding the relationship between map distance, ground distance, and R.F. is key to solving it.

Principle 1: Understanding Representative Fraction (R.F.)

The R.F. is the ratio of the distance on the map to the corresponding distance on the ground. It's a unitless fraction.

R.F. = Distance on Map / Distance on Ground

For example, an R.F. of 1:100 means 1 unit on the map represents 100 units on the ground (e.g., 1 cm = 100 cm, or 1 m = 100 m).

Principle 2: The Constant Factor - Actual Map Distance

The most important concept here is that the physical distance measured on the paper map is a fixed value. The error is not in the physical measurement on the paper, but in the *calculation* that converted it to a ground distance. Our goal is to find this fixed map distance and then re-calculate the ground distance with the correct scale.

⚙️ Solution Method 1: The Step-by-Step Approach

This method involves finding the actual distance on the map first and then using the correct scale to find the true ground distance.

  • Step 1: Find the actual distance measured on the map.
  • We use the incorrect information to work backward. The surveyor used the wrong R.F. (1:50) to get a ground distance of 60 m.

    Map Distance = Ground Distance × R.F.
    Map Distance = 60 m × (1/50) = 1.2 m

    This means the actual physical line drawn between the two points on the map sheet was 1.2 meters long.

  • Step 2: Calculate the correct ground distance using the correct R.F.
  • Now, we use this actual map distance (1.2 m) with the R.F. that *should* have been used (1:100).

    Correct Ground Distance = Map Distance / R.F.
    Correct Ground Distance = 1.2 m / (1/100)
    Correct Ground Distance = 1.2 m × 100 = 120 m

⚙️ Solution Method 2: The Proportionality Formula

A quicker way to solve this is by using a direct relationship. Since the map distance is constant, we can set up a proportion.

Correct Ground Length × Correct R.F. = Incorrect Ground Length × Incorrect R.F.

Let 'C' be the Correct Ground Length.

C × (1/100) = 60 m × (1/50)
C / 100 = 60 / 50
C = (60 / 50) × 100
C = 1.2 × 100
C = 120 m

Logical Check: Understanding the Scales

A scale of 1:50 is a larger scale than 1:100 (it shows features as twice as large). Because the surveyor used a larger scale than intended, the initial calculation of 60 m was an underestimate. The correct answer must be larger than 60 m, which makes 120 m the logical choice.

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