The Run Canada Committee
Road Race Course Measurement Procedures

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APPENDIX C

Example of Course Measurement

Setting Up the Calibration Course

It is 7:15 AM on 7 October 1982 in Elysium, OH. You arrive at your pre-selected site for the calibration course on Fargo Road with your two trusty helpers, Ralph Doe and Susan Marker. This section of Fargo Road is straight and level, recently paved, with no cross-traffic and little traffic of any kind. You have checked your equipment list and everything is accounted for.

You have decided to set up a one kilometer (1000 meter) calibration course since the race course will be 10 kilometers. You couldn't find a metric tape in your local hardware store so you are using a 100 foot tape instead. Since a kilometer is 3280.84 feet, you will be laying out 32 and a fraction lengths of the 100 foot tape.

[Note: You probably can find a metric tape by checking stores that sell to the surveying profession, or companies that sell equipment for track meets, educational supply houses, or by visiting any hardware store.]

Locate the start. There is a storm drain just south of the intersection of Fargo Road with Turtle Road. This will make a nice permanent reference. You drive a PK nail into the pavement, 18 inches west of the east edge of Fargo Road and exactly 2.0 feet south of the south edge of the storm drain located in front of 2317 Fargo Road. This wi11 be the permanent northern endpoint of your calibration course (point A).

You lay the thermometer on the pavement, standing so that you shade the thermometer. After three minutes, the temperature seems to have stopped changing. It reads 53 °F. Susan records the start time and temperature.

Ralph holds the 100 ft mark of the tape over the PK nail at point A. You grab the "Zero" end and extend the tape (southward) while walking it out to its full extension of 100 feet. You are using the Zero end because that is the end with a ring to which you can attach a spring balance. You and Ralph jiggle the tape as needed until it lies straight and flat, and you check that your end is still 18 inches from the curb. Then you start pulling on the spring balance until it reaches 50 newtons (5 kilograms-force, or 11 pounds-force), moving the tape slowly forward.

In the meantime, Susan tears off a piece of masking tape (which she has already pre-numbered with numeral "1") from her roll, and sticks it on the roadway at your end of the tape. When you have the tape steadily under tension and Ralph signals that his end is over the mark, Susan puts a thin black mark on the masking tape alongside the Zero mark of the measuring tape.

You continue in this manner until you have marked 32 one hundred foot sections. At this point, you mark an 80 foot section. The procedure is exactly as before except that Ralph uses the 80 foot mark instead of the 100 foot mark on the tape. You still pull the spring balance with 50 newtons (not 40). The marked point (which we'll call "B") is now 3280 feet south of point A. It isn't necessary to get exactly 3280.84 feet at this step since a final adjustment will be made later. Susan enters 32 tape lengths × 100 feet each, with a "partial" tape length of 80 feet.

You now start measuring back (northward) from point B, in 100 foot lengths, using new pieces of masking tape which will each be intermediate to the previous marks. You use a red pen this time, to clearly distinguish these marks from the old ones. Note that you had to turn the tape around at point B since only the Zero end has a ring where you can attach the spring balance.

As before, you lay out 32 full 100 foot tape lengths. However, you measure the last interval to the PK nail at point A. This is found to be 79 feet 8 3/4 inches. Thus, according to your second measurement, the distance between the permanently marked point A and your temporary point B is 3 1/4 inches short of 3280 feet. The second measurement is 3279 feet 8 3/4 inches or 3279.73 feet in decimal form.

You repeat the temperature reading as before and find it to be 59 °F. Susan records this datum.

You now calculate the temperature-corrected average measured distance between points A and B, as instructed in the Steel Taping Data Sheet. The corrected measurement is 3279.61 feet. Since your desired calibration course length is one kilometer or 3280.84 feet, you must now lengthen the tentative course by 1.23 feet or 1 ft 2 3/4 inches. You do this by moving point B to a point 1 ft 2 3/4 inches further south. Using the tape measure once more, you find that the corrected point B is 17 ft 4 1/4 inches north of the north edge of the manhole in the center of the intersection of Fargo Road and Parrot Lane.

You are now almost finished. But, before permanently marking point B, you check to make sure you haven't missed a whole tape length somehow. You take your bicycle off of the rack and ride it around for a few minutes to warm up the tires. You place the bicycle's front axle over the north endpoint and record a count of 12546. You then ride southward one 100 foot tape length (being careful to use a 100 ft interval rather than the 80 ft interval!), and stop with the front axle over the mark. You record a count of 12833. The difference, corresponding to one tape length, is 287 counts.

You now return to the northern endpoint (point A) and, pointing the bike southward again, note a counter reading of 13217 with the front axle over the mark. You ride the bicycle over the full calibration course, stopping with the front axle over the corrected southern endpoint. You record a count of 22622. The difference is 9405 counts. Dividing the full course count of 9405 by the 100 ft count of 287 yields a course length of 32.77 tape lengths which, for such a rough check, is in excellent agreement with the intended course length of 32.8084 tape lengths.

Finally, you put a PK nail at the corrected endpoint (point B) of your one kilometer course. You thank Ralph and Susan and head home to fill out the forms necessary to obtain certification of your new calibration course.

[Map of Fargo Rd Calibration Course]


[Steel Taping Data Sheet - Fargo Rd Kilometer]


[Application for Cal Course Certification - Fargo Rd Kilometer]


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Appendix C - Example - Calibrating the Bicycle

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Appendix B - Course Layout

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Updated: 15-01-2009