Opened 3 years ago
Closed 3 years ago
#22402 closed defect (fixed)
Texas Orthophoto (2015) no longer loads all tiles
| Reported by: | Owned by: | team | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Priority: | normal | Milestone: | |
| Component: | External imagery source | Version: | latest |
| Keywords: | texas orthophoto | Cc: | 25or6to4 |
Description
Version: 18543 and earlier versions.
Texas Orthophoto (2015) used to load high resolution tiles and was one of the most valuable layers for seeing underneath foliage. It has not worked properly in about 2 weeks. JOSM loads a very coarse tile (about 10-20 m resolution) then the higher-resolution ones (1 m resolution or better) never load. Maybe the issue is the source, but it is interesting that the low-res tiles do load every time.
An area that can be tested is 31.8371,-95.6460.
Attachments (3)
Change History (7)
by , 3 years ago
| Attachment: | josm-lowres-screenshot.jpg added |
|---|
comment:1 by , 3 years ago
| Cc: | added |
|---|---|
| Component: | Core imagery → External imagery source |
I don't know what is going on there, but it isn't going to be a JOSM specific problem. I'm cc'ing 25or6to4 since they were the last person to touch the URL bits that might know what is going on.
comment:2 by , 3 years ago
I just checked it over, and it does look like it's a source data issue with TNRIS, specific to that dataset. They have statewide sets from 2008 and 2009, and those datasets load correctly, so the error is specific to this 2015 dataset. I'll keep checking on it.
comment:3 by , 3 years ago
Ok, I was in contact with TNRIS. I sent them a couple screenshots of the faulty data. They have rebuilt that entire database. It looks to be working from my end, both in JOSM and ArcGIS Pro. Give it a try, and I think we'll be able to close this ticket. See attachments before and after.
comment:4 by , 3 years ago
| Resolution: | → fixed |
|---|---|
| Status: | new → closed |
I'm going to go ahead and close this, since it sounds like TNRIS has fixed the problem.
@25or6to4: Thank you for reaching out to TNRIS.



Screenshot of the low-res Texas Orthophoto (2015) layer.