 Greetings, everyone. Just waiting for a few more names to come in. Nick Giuseppe. Ron. Nira Lenny. Danny, thanks for coming. Matt. I might make a start here. Enough participants there. So thanks, everyone, for taking the time to join us in this webinar looking at a quick overview of the new Solence 105 well casing and depth indicator. Go through here. The objective, I suppose, on this one just quickly, I guess, we'll be putting forward in the future quite a few short presentations, I guess, on some new instrumentation and trying to get our knowledge shared across from Haja Terra to anyone willing to participate into these little quick webinars. So thanks for joining on this one. You should see quite a few more coming through in the coming weeks. So I'll just give a quick brief on Solence for those who maybe aren't aware. But, you know, it's a very well-known brand here in Australia. They've been doing it for over 40 years in the water level and quality monitoring technology. So they've been at it a long time. The products offered, you guys must be, you know, well familiar with by now. But the water level meters, data loggers, groundwater samplers, all that sort of thing. In the future, there will be some more webinars that we'll put forward out for those things. And we've been exclusive distributors of Solence in Australia here for over 14 years now. So just the way this is going to go, I'll just give a bit of a breakdown on the team, the product presentation itself. And at the end, we have a bit of a Q&A. So as I mentioned, my name is Kyle. I'm the product sales manager here at Harjatera. And this has been organized also by our general manager, Michelle Canton, who's also here. So a bit of housekeeping initially. There's a Q&A box in the top toolbar, which I'll get you all together. Your questions in there. I'll run through many of those as I can at the end live whilst we're all here. But I'll also endeavor to answer all in some capacity offline as well if we don't get the time here. What I'll do is I'll run through the main features, I suppose, on the actual body of the meter itself. Talk a little bit about the taping and run through the all-important new probe head itself with the new dual-function magnetic indicator for the metal casing and the plunger for the bottom of the well to give us a depth indication. So a bit of history there from science. Actually in the past had done a well-casin detection meter before from 91 to 2008, but decided to go back to the drawing board with that one and now release the much more sleek and streamlined unit. So I'll just talk a bit about the main features on the body. So you may notice and you guys might already be familiar, but it's very similar to the 101s, the P7, P2 ranges. It's the red reel that we all know. So much the same as all the others, the battery draw, battery test button, the indicator lights, the actual speaker itself. On-off switch and they're all the same pieces there for that meter. The laser mark tape is again the conventional sort of dog bone PDF tape that we see on the majority of the other little meters. The replaceable tapes on these can be the same for the 101s, the 107s and it is as is the case with these new 105s. The tape is all the same. The tape seal plug also very similar to the 107 TLC meter, a bit of heat shrink there. So uniformity I suppose across a lot of them, but obviously the new unique feature is the dual function 105 probe. So in the middle there is the actual magnetic indicator, which will give you a reading of metal casing as we go down. The bore in the next slide is a little visual and video that will indicate that a bit better. And then on the end of the dual function probe is the actual plunger, which allows us to get a depth indicator of the total depth of the well once that compresses. So a little video there will indicate for us that so what you'll see is that with the light, you'll see here once it reaches the actual end of the casing depth that black line in between the probe is the zero point for that. And you'll get a fast sort of intermittent beep whilst it's within the metal casing. So you might see that light there have a quite a quick intermittent beep in between the metal casing and the actual bottom of the well. You will not get an indication until the well depth plunger reaches the bottom there. And you'll notice that the lights actually are slower intermittent light. So that's the way you distinguish between the two and how that functionality works there. So the accuracies within this unit is about point two foot full scales that are quite still about five to six centimeters. So again, relatively accurate there in terms of giving some indications of where the metal casing starts and ends and also your total depth of your well. The indicator is designed initially to be with the two inch bores. I am getting some more clarification from so on as to what its maximum capacity in terms of diameter of well could be. I've already had that question asked by a couple of people who've already seen this unit as to how wide of a diameter can I use that for. I'm just getting some more clarification on that. Some troubleshooting with these units much the same with the 101P7s. If you're getting a continuously sounding instrument, it's generally might be an indication that there's water within the probe. If I just go back one here and within the probe itself, the plunger, the dual function plunger unit is fully unscrewable. So you can unscrew that bottom section there with the orange circle. You can unscrew the middle section there with a little hole in the middle. You can also unscrew the top area there. And that allows for easy sort of cleaning with a soft cloth and some DI water in the squirt bottle or something just to make sure that that's nice and clean. The battery drawer itself is also another one that I'll just quickly touch on in terms of some troubleshooting. What people will do, not just with this, with the well casing indicator but also with all the other 101P7s is that if you have a continuously sounding light, the battery case can be taken out and left for a minute or two rather than putting the battery directly back in. That allows the unit to have enough time to draw the voltage out of it and effectively restart. So that's just another way to try the troubleshooting there when you have a continuously functioning light. So look, the well casing indicator there is pretty straight in terms of the similar design from the top of a 101 metre and this dual function there of the plunger and the metallic indicator there. So look, that's pretty much an outline of the new unit. If there's any forms of questions or something, I'll just allow a bit of time in the Q&A there to send through some questions that you might have, whether I can answer them straight away, I will do so. And also, if not, that'll just give us some more material to go back to silenced and be able to get back to you as soon as we can. So I just got a message from Yikki, price range. Oh, Yikki with the price range. Similar sort of pricing I suppose to, would you compare it to like the TLC metre? You will have a bit, you know, it's a bit more pricey than your average 101p7. But yeah, similar sort of pricing to like the TLC man. But of course, just give me a call if you need a particular length and a price. Happy to provide that to you. Does the unit give standing water level reading or just casing and depth? Yeah, it actually just gives your casing and depth then. There isn't a standing water level reading there because, yeah, the only way that the depth indicator there works is just by that plunger system. So it fully compresses. That's the only way you're going to get a measure of the water. So not until it hits the bottom of the well where you see a reading for water level. So if your well casing is metal at the top, you'll just have it in fast, intermittent beeping straight away. So a bit hard to distinguish between having, you know, a metal casing and then when you hit the standing water level. So probably the reason for that. Does it work in PVC or GRE casing? I'm not too sure on that. I know that it's mainly designed just for metal casing. So some clarification on where is its threshold in terms of the GRE casing or something. I will endeavor to ask them. I do know that this has also been seen to pick up on some abnormalities down the bore, which people have been looking for that in terms of metal abnormalities within a PVC casing that has the views that functionality. So I'll just get some more clarification on that then. So we'll note that down. So Giuseppe's just asked this question, is the vice cable determining pollutants in the water? No, Giuseppe. The probe is simply only a metal casing indicator for groundwater bores or groundwater development. So in terms of pollutants, there's some other products which I can talk to you about. So that we'll be happy to do so. Will the unit be for purchase or will it be available for rent? We're looking at that, Ben, to get a few units in and just determine, I suppose, it's such a new product. There only being a couple of months old that we were just gauging and going to do a few of these webinars and that sort of thing, get a feel from clients to see whether this might be something of interest to them. So the fact that we've had quite a few participants come on to this webinar now is a really good indicator, I suppose, that there is some heightened interest in this unit. So I would 100% envisage that we will be looking to get some products or some of these real, sorry, into our rental fleet, for sure. So at this very second, just available for purchase, but I would say that within the coming weeks to months, we will have these units available for rent. So Tim's just asked, what's the maximum depth range as a way to the probe? Yeah Tim, so the maximum depth range on it, you can have a 600 metre cable in terms of the cabling. Maximum submergence rating for the probe, they say is rated to 500 metres. So you can get, yeah, 600 metres of cable and the probe is rated to 500 metres. The weight of the probe, I don't know off the top of my head. I know the diameter of the probe, but the weight, I'll just double check that for you Tim and get that through to you. So we'll just leave it a couple more minutes to answer any more questions that you guys may have. But I'm just writing down Tim's. He's quite responsive, I've noted Tim, in terms of that plunger. It doesn't take a lot of, it doesn't take a lot to compress it. More so than if it was hitting, you know, your standing water level, but less so that you have to have some, you know, give it a bit of velocity to hit the bottom of the well in order to decompress that plunger. Thanks for coming mate. Induction principles, Tim, I'm not familiar with the case and collar locator, but it's a magnetic indicator as depicted on that black metal on the end of the probe. So a good way of testing the probe prior to you going in is literally it'll react to any sort of form of metal parallel to that black line in the middle of the probe there. So I'll take a look at the case and collar locator and see what there's similarities there. Does it work in PVC casing? Yeah, look, as I said before, Dan, I've had it, a guy use it within a PVC casing to detect some form abnormalities that he thought there was some form of metal down within the PVC casing. And that's, that was okay for him in terms of full functionality within the PVC casing to be an indicator for it, if that's what you're meaning. I don't think so, but I can get some more clarification from Scott and Sonlitz. Yes, I have seen that they've been chucked in PVC casings in order to locate some jagged abnormalities of metal or screens as well. That's also been a function for them. I guess you just won't hear anything for a long period of time if you're chucking it down to PVC casing without any metal in there. Might be tricky. There you go. 280 grams is the probe weight, Tim. Thanks, Michelle. Well, if there's no more questions or anything, you might leave it there for that presentation. So, look if you have any interest at or anything here. We've got another question. No, that's it. If you have any other questions that come through, just please feel free to contact either myself or Michelle who sent those zoom invitations out to you and it'll eventually get back to me. Happy to answer any normal questions from these and we really appreciate you guys taking the time to be here for this series and just keep an eye out I suppose on your email chains because we'll be continuously coming out with some more little quick webinars like this on some new products coming out, existing products and that of the like. So, thanks again everybody for your time and hope you guys are doing okay if you're in Melbourne for the lockdown but everywhere else I hope things are ticking along exceptionally well for all of you. So, thanks again and been great.