Troubleshooting RTK accuracy - common causes of 10-20cm offsets
Had a call from a newer surveyor this week who was getting consistent 10-20cm offsets between his RTK positions and known control points. Helped him troubleshoot it and figured the checklist we went through might help others.
If your RTK coordinates are consistently off by 10-20cm (not random scatter, but a systematic shift), here are the most common culprits in order of likelihood:
1. Antenna height error. This is the number one cause. Make sure you're measuring to the correct reference point on your antenna (ARP vs L1 phase center) and that your software is applying the right offset. Different receivers measure from different points.
2. Datum/realization mismatch. Your base and rover need to be on the same datum realization. NAD83(2011) and NAD83(CORS96) can differ by several centimeters. Check your NTRIP mount point metadata.
3. Geoid model. If your horizontal is fine but vertical is off, you probably have the wrong geoid model selected or none at all. GEOID18 is current for CONUS. Make sure its actually applied, not just selected in the menu.
4. Base coordinate error. If you set up your own base, did you use a long enough observation? A 15-minute OPUS solution can easily be off by 5-10cm. Do at least 2 hours for reliable results, 4+ hours is better.
5. Stale corrections. Check the age of your corrections. If its consistently above 5 seconds, your corrections are lagging and accuracy degrades. This usually means your internet connection is too slow or intermittent.
Most of the time its #1 or #2. Always check the simple stuff first.