Solinst Wireline Suspension Cable Assemblies
Features
- Inexpensive method of deployment
- Can be easily locked when used with well caps
- Stainless steel cable approximately 1/16" diameter
Image | Part# | Product Description | Price | Stock | Order | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 102401 | Wireline suspension cable assembly, 50' | $27.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks | ||
![]() | 102402 | Wireline suspension cable assembly, 100' | $42.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks | ||
![]() | 102403 | Wireline suspension cable assembly, 200' | $73.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks | ||
![]() | 102404 | Wireline suspension cable assembly, 300' | $104.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks | ||
![]() | 102405 | Wireline suspension cable assembly, 500' | $166.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks |





Image | Part# | Product Description | Price | Stock | Order | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | 106191 | Spare wireline hooks, set of 2 | $11.00 | Usually ships in 1-2 weeks |

- (1) Wireline suspension cable assembly on spool
- (2) Wireline hooks
In The News
New map shows significant groundwater depletion in Central California
Groundwater level data collected by a Central California county shows significant drops during the past 12 years, according to a San Luis Obispo Tribune article. 
 Data shows that groundwater has dropped by a minimum of 70 feet from 1997 to 2009 in the Paso Robles area of Central California. 
 In the past four years the areas of most significant decline have expanded north and south. 
 Drought and agricultural withdrawals are the likely culprits for the groundwater decline. 
Some advocates are calling for more responsible water use by vineyards in the area, while farmers note that the recent drought did not help the situation.
Read MoreFawn River restoration redeems stream once muddied by dam release
In 1998, a rapid drawdown of a dam in Northeast Indiana sent 100,000 cubic yards of sediment oozing over a five-mile stretch of the Fawn River's pristine gravel stream bed. 
 
The release turned what was one of Indiana's few deep, swift, cobble-bottomed streams into a slow, wide, mud-clogged channel with eroding banks. Now, 15 years later, a set of restoration techniques has some segments of the muddied stream looking as clean as ever. 
 
"None of us really knew how successful we were going to be when we started, and we're pretty pleased with where we are at this point," said Neal Lewis, a trustee with the Fawn River Restoration and Conservation Trust , a non-profit group working to return the stream to pre-1998 conditions.
Read MoreCharles River Algal Blooms Stop Swimming and Launch a Floating Wetland
The Charles River used to be a swimming hotspot for Cambridge and Boston residents. 
 
 Decades of industrial pollution and nutrient runoff have degraded water quality and eliminated public swimming in the Lower Charles, but a movement is afoot to get Boston and Cambridge back in the water. One step toward the goal of a safely swimmable river—without the need to obtain a permit, as is now necessary—is detecting and managing the harmful algal blooms that appear on the river. 
 
 An experimental floating wetland and new research and analysis of water quality data that shows a possible effective detection system for algal blooms on the Charles River are two new steps toward the goal of safe, accessible swimming.
Read More