0

I have a quite big amount of georeferenced .tif with their .tfw in one folder. The orignal CRS is Gauss-Krueger, and now I want to reproject them to UTM. My approach so far is to use gdalwarp:

"C:\Program Files\QGIS 3.14\bin\gdalwarp.exe" -s_srs EPSG:31467 -t_srs EPSG:3044 -multi -co TFW=TRUE -wo NUM_THREADS=ALL_CPUS "%mypath_import%!infile!" "%mypath_rasterUTM%!outfile!"

Ergo, I get a lot of new TIFFs and the process needs a lot of time. Is there a way to just reproject the .tfw into UTM coordinates? I think it's quite a waste of processing power/disk space to create a whole new TIFF!

Vince
  • 20,017
  • 15
  • 45
  • 64
sn1ks
  • 2,982
  • 12
  • 28
  • 1
    Well, in theory, you could do that, but it would completely destroy your data. Done correctly, reprojection is supposed to use a great deal of processing power and disk space. – Vince Jul 22 '20 at 14:29
  • 1
    if you compress the output it will take up less space - or may be you could get by with VRTs which are much smaller? – Ian Turton Jul 22 '20 at 15:01
  • LZW compress > https://gis.stackexchange.com/questions/1104/should-gdal-be-set-to-produce-geotiff-files-with-compression-which-algorithm-sh – Mapperz Jul 23 '20 at 04:03

0 Answers0