Wapiti wrote:Actually, don't trouble yourself mate. I'm not playing anymore tit-for-tat online disagreements anymore.
No such thing as "disagreements" from me Mate,,,,,
Was just pointing out a maybe "generalized",, highlight of getting old.
Wapiti wrote:Actually, don't trouble yourself mate. I'm not playing anymore tit-for-tat online disagreements anymore.









Die Judicii wrote:Just look on Ebay, and search for “car dolly”. I know full well that a lot of ebay products are not of the highest quality,, but i bought these for a once off use, but they wouldn’t do the job and certainly didn’t perform to the stated specs.
If interested look 2/3rds of the way down Page 3 of the Sellers,,,for the seller "Ozlearningshop" and read my feedback to them.







perentie wrote:We have mates that live past us up in the rugged country of Black Snake. Its always been a bit of a no go zone but I thought the gangs had left. The other week back, my mate who is in our shooting club said there was definately full auto fire going on further up the mountain. So they are still amongst us..







Wapiti wrote:I saw it all the time with the Santos gas fields. The gas sits on the top of the underground water, on the light spots. So that's where they drill the gas wells. The gas and water is separated in "separators", basically pressure tanks with screens that cause the water to fall back down and be removed and reused, and the gas comes out the top dry enough to pipe to the compressor stations.
In our area, the water flows in underground rock cracks and eventually forms caves and tunnels. These cracks aren't at any specific depth, they are where the rock cracks were. It's solid basalt until the drill head breaks through, no sand or clay here.
In fact if the diviner / driller is a 100mm off, he can drill right past a high-pressure flow and never break into it. Here, there is no big fields of water that anyone can hit, like in the "Great Artesian Basin" for example.
In fact our biggest flowing bore is in the house yard, it's measured at 40,000 lts/hr and is in a quartz cave at around 100m down. But the house is in a valley...
That's the bore where all the quartz chips from the last few feet before hitting the huge cave are full of gold.
In our area, nobody had ever hit water before, and all wells were unusable. Yes people hit water, but it was never enough to pump. That's because the diviners were farmers with bits of wire instead of blokes with actual skills that use the willow, wire find waters but also find wet gravel, iron deposits and other wasted useless deposits.
That's why we were criticised by all the neighbours, as "money wasters" who thought they knew better.
The same neighbours who suddenly scrambled to become our best mates and begged to know who we had used to score the liquid gold. As usual, we are the canaries in the coal mine.
Strangely, I don't know why, but all the main flows are south to north, with only small linking bypasses between them, if that.
The flow volume and direction is measured when we determine the best pump to use, for the demand we need.

bigrich wrote:that's awesome you've found much needed water . when on high country properties i've occasionally found "wet patches" of ground in unlikely places , up on ridges and hills , sometimes 100's of meters above creek levels . up on mount makenzie out back of tenterfield , on a high hill on a texas property . that property up the road from you that i go on has a dam where the water level never goes down , even in drought . i don't think the owners realize that about that particular dam . i did tell them though . great to hear you've been successful in getting your bores and tanks set up and going , against the staus qou of local "wisdom"cheers



