Y level The
Y level or
wye level is the oldest and bulkiest of the older style optical instruments. A low-powered telescope is placed in a pair of clamp mounts, and the instrument then leveled using a
spirit level, which is mounted parallel to the main telescope.
Dumpy level The term
dumpy level (also '''builder's level''') endures despite the evolution in design. They can be manual or automatic, the latter being much quicker to set up.
Tilting level A
tilting level is a variant which has a precision vertical adjustment screw which tilts both the telescope and the high accuracy bubble level attached to it to make them level. This reduces the complete reliance on the levelling accuracy of the instruments' bottom mount, and the "split bubble" display gives additional assurance that the telescope is level whilst taking the sight. This allows faster operation as the bottom mount need not be truly level, though it will introduce a slight error as the vertical axis of the mount is not completely coincident with the telescope centre. The split bubble works by displaying half of both ends of the bubble side by side in the telescope, and when the curved ends are aligned it is level.
Automatic level An
automatic level,
self-levelling level, or '''builder's auto level''' includes an internal compensator mechanism (a swinging
prism) that, when set close to level, automatically removes any remaining variation. This reduces the need to set the instrument base truly level, as with a dumpy level. Self-levelling instruments are the preferred instrument on building sites, construction, and during surveying due to ease of use and rapid setup time. The world's first automatic level was introduced on 8 March 1950. It was produced by the German company
Zeiss-Opton in
Oberkochen. Main components of an automatic level include a
tribrach – a lower, fixed, triangular or circular element containing three sockets for adjusting screws (or wedge rings), attached to the tripod with a heart screw – and an
alidade – a movable (rotatable) part. In automatic levels, the
spirit level is most often replaced by a pendulum-based opto-mechanical device called a compensator.
Digital electronic level A
digital electronic level is also set level on a tripod and reads a
bar-coded staff using electronic laser methods. The height of the staff where the level beam crosses the staff is shown on a digital display. This type of level removes interpolation of graduation by a person, thus removing a source of error and increasing accuracy. During night time, the dumpy level is used in conjunction with an auto cross laser for accurate scale readings.
Transit level A
transit level also has the ability to measure both the
altitude and
azimuth of a target object with respect to a reference in the horizontal plane. The instrument is rotated to sight the target, and the vertical and horizontal angles are read off calibrated scales ==In popular culture==