Downhole Video

Snapshot of a 150 mm diameter bore with 4 mm aperture longitudinal slots.  This bore was pumping excessive sand and destroying pumps.  A calliper was also run in the bore and a sleeving program designed at a significantly lower cost than redrilling.
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Snapshot from a 200 mm diameter bore showing the PVC to stainless steel screen adaptor. Footage like this can be used to verify bore construction details and integrity.  This is not only a useful QA tool but can removes liability from contractors and supervisors form any damage caused by subsequent pump installation or other activities.
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(10000kB ie 6min @ 28.8k/sec)

 

This Snapshot of 50-mm monitoring bore shows a lost bailer.  The ability to operate in small diameter bores enables audits of monitoring bores to verify slotted intervals and bore integrity. Items lost in bores can become contamination sources as they breakdown over time.  Blockages can also influence affect what the sample interval of the aquifer is sampled which, which may lead to and spurious monitoring influence results.

This unit is tailored to be portable so that the operator can fly to site and operate it from a general-purpose vehicle. This is proving useful in remote locations such as aboriginal communities and sensitive or difficult access locations. 

Snapshots are excellent in reports, as they are easily printable and are memory efficient for database storage or e-mail.  The images displayed here show our company logo but your logo or a project identifier can easily be incorporated into both video and still images.

Our fees for the unit depend on the its use and location. Fees for local bores start from as little as $395 per half day or $750 per day.