Service iv.
Downhole video so you can see what’s actually happening in your well — casing condition, water level, screen integrity. Worth doing before you spend money guessing at the problem.
The work itself
A video inspection drops a high-resolution camera down your well casing on a cable, and records the entire run from the wellhead down to the bottom. You see what we see — the inside of the casing, any cracks or perforation problems, the water level, the screen, anything sitting at the bottom that shouldn’t be there. It’s the difference between guessing what’s wrong and knowing.
We recommend a video inspection in three situations: when an old well has dropped production and you’re trying to decide whether deepening is worth it (the camera will show if there’s an actual screen problem versus an aquifer issue); when water quality suddenly changes (the camera can show contamination paths through cracked casing); and before you buy a property with an existing well (best $400 you’ll spend on due diligence). Camera footage stays with you on a USB drive so you have a record.
Scope of work
When you need it
Get a video inspection: before you spend significant money on a guess-based repair; when you’re buying a property and want to know what you’re inheriting; when an existing well has changed behavior (production drop, water quality change, sediment, etc.) and you want to know why before deciding next steps.
Other services
Water Well Drilling · Pump Service, Sales, Repair & Installation · Pressure Tanks