In directional drilling, nothing affects billing more directly than footage. Footage is the quantity the GC uses to calculate:
- Unit‑price pay
- Production expectations
- Schedule performance
- Change order justification
- Crew efficiency
- Equipment utilization
- Total invoice value
It is the number every other number depends on.
But here’s the part most contractors underestimate:
The GC is not paying you for the footage you drilled. They’re paying you for the footage you can prove.
There’s a difference.
You can drill 1,200 feet perfectly, hit every mark, and finish the job exactly as planned, but if your documentation is weak, the GC has leverage to reduce your quantities.
This is how it happens:
- They question the total.
- They ask how you measured it.
- They ask for shot‑by‑shot detail.
- They ask for entry and exit points.
- They ask for supporting notes.
- They ask for alignment with the daily report.
If you can’t produce that information, they don’t assume you’re wrong, they assume your number is unverified.
And unverified numbers get cut.
This is why proving bore footage is not a single measurement. It’s a documentation process that shows:
- What was drilled
- Where it was drilled
- How it was measured
- How the total was built
- How the data aligns across your logs and reports
When you can show all of that, your footage becomes defensible. When you can’t, your footage becomes negotiable.
And negotiated footage always goes down, never up.
What “Proving Bore Footage” Actually Means
Most contractors think proving footage means showing a total number.
It doesn’t.
A total number, by itself, is the weakest form of documentation you can present. It’s the equivalent of saying:
“Trust me.”
GCs don’t operate on trust. Auditors don’t operate on trust. Owners definitely don’t operate on trust.
They operate on verifiable records.
Proving bore footage means you can show, step‑by‑step, how the total was built. Not guessed. Not rounded. Not reconstructed later.
A proven footage total is a supported number, not a standalone number.
Here’s what that actually requires.
1. Shot‑by‑Shot Footage: The Foundation of Proof
Every bore is made up of individual shots. Each shot has:
- A start point
- An end point
- A measured length
- A drilling sequence
- Conditions encountered
- Time spent
If you can’t show the GC how the total was built shot by shot, they assume the total is an estimate.
A shot‑by‑shot breakdown turns your footage into a traceable quantity, not a lump sum.
This is the difference between:
“We drilled 1,200 feet.” and “Here are the four shots that make up the 1,200 feet, with exact measurements and notes.”
One is a claim. One is proof.
2. Entry and Exit Points: The Physical Evidence
Footage is not just a number. It’s a physical path in the ground.
To prove footage, you must show:
- Where the shot started
- Where the shot ended
- How those points were measured
- How they align with the plan
- How they align with the as‑built
Entry and exit points are the anchors that make your footage believable.
If the GC can’t see where the shot began and ended, they can’t verify the length — and they won’t pay for what they can’t verify.
3. Measured Totals: Not Rounded, Not Estimated
A proven total is:
- Measured
- Documented
- Repeatable
- Verifiable
A weak total is:
- Rounded
- Estimated
- Recalled from memory
- Written down later
GCs can spot rounded numbers instantly. Rounded numbers tell them:
- Rod count wasn’t tracked
- Actual length wasn’t recorded
- The log was filled out late
- The total may be inflated
A measured total is defensible. A rounded total is negotiable — and negotiated totals always go down.
4. Supporting Notes: The Context Behind the Numbers
Footage without context is incomplete.
Supporting notes explain:
- Why a shot took longer
- Why production slowed
- Why the path changed
- Why the total increased
- Why the bore deviated
- Why the crew paused
- Why the numbers look the way they do
These notes turn your footage from a number into a narrative, a documented sequence of events that shows the GC exactly what happened.
Without notes, the GC fills in the blanks. And they never fill them in your favor.
5. Alignment With Other Documents: The Consistency Test
A footage total is only as strong as the documents that support it.
To be considered proven, your footage must align with:
- The bore log
- The daily report
- The as‑built
- The inspector notes
- The schedule
- The production expectations
If any of these contradict your footage, the GC assumes your number is wrong, even if the drilling was perfect.
Consistency is what makes your footage believable.
Where Most Footage Disputes Come From
Footage disputes rarely come from the drilling itself. They come from the gap between what was done and what was recorded.
The GC isn’t questioning your ability to drill. They’re questioning your ability to prove what you drilled.
When footage gets challenged, it’s almost always because the documentation has holes and those holes give the GC room to reduce quantities.
Here’s where those holes come from.
1. Rounded Numbers: The Fastest Way to Lose Credibility
Rounded numbers tell the GC one thing:
“We didn’t measure this.”
When your bore log shows:
- 300 ft
- 250 ft
- 200 ft
- 100 ft
…they know those aren’t measured lengths. They’re estimates.
Rounded numbers signal:
- Rod count wasn’t tracked
- Actual length wasn’t recorded
- The log was filled out later
- The total may be inflated
Once the GC doubts your footage, they doubt your entire invoice.
Rounded numbers don’t just weaken your position, they destroy it.
2. Missing Shots: The Gaps That Kill Your Total
A bore log with missing shots is a bore log that cannot be defended.
Missing shots create:
- Unexplained footage
- Unverifiable totals
- Gaps in the sequence
- Doubt about accuracy
- Questions you can’t answer
If you drilled four shots but only logged three, the GC assumes:
- The missing shot was forgotten
- The footage was guessed
- The total is unreliable
Missing shots don’t just weaken your documentation — they invalidate it.
3. Combined Entries: The Shortcut That Backfires
Crews sometimes combine multiple shots into one entry because:
- The shots were short
- The day was busy
- The log was filled out late
- They “knew the total”
But combined entries eliminate:
- Traceability
- Shot‑level detail
- Entry/exit accuracy
- Condition tracking
- Delay documentation
A combined entry is impossible to defend because you can’t break it apart later.
If the GC questions one part of the total, you have no way to isolate it.
Combined entries save time in the field and cost money in billing.
4. No Measurement Method: The GC Assumes Guesswork
If you can’t show how footage was measured, the GC assumes it wasn’t.
A defensible measurement method includes:
- Rod count
- Rig display readings
- Entry/exit verification
- As‑built alignment
- Shot‑by‑shot totals
A weak method includes:
- Memory
- Estimation
- “We’ve done this enough to know”
- “The crew said it was about…”
Without a clear measurement method, the GC has every reason to reduce your footage.
5. No Supporting Notes:The Missing Context That Creates Doubt
Footage without notes is incomplete.
Notes explain:
- Why a shot took longer
- Why production slowed
- Why the path changed
- Why the total increased
- Why the bore deviated
- Why the numbers look the way they do
Without notes, the GC fills in the blanks and they never fill them in your favor.
A number without context is a number that gets challenged.
6. End‑of‑Day Logging: The Silent Killer of Accuracy
When footage is logged at the end of the day:
- Rod counts get forgotten
- Conditions get blurred
- Problems get minimized
- Times get estimated
- Sequence gets mixed up
GCs can spot end‑of‑day logs instantly. They read like summaries, not evidence.
Real‑time logging is the only way to produce defensible footage.
7. Inconsistency Between Documents: The GC Assumes Error
If your bore log says:
- 742 ft drilled
…but your daily report says:
- 800 ft drilled
…the GC doesn’t assume the daily report is wrong. They assume your documentation is wrong.
Inconsistency creates doubt. Doubt creates reductions.
Method 1: Shot‑by‑Shot Bore Log Tracking
Shot‑by‑shot tracking is the core of proving bore footage. If you get this part right, every other method becomes supporting evidence. If you get this part wrong, every other method becomes irrelevant.
Most contractors lose footage disputes because they try to defend a total instead of defending the components that make up the total.
A total is easy to challenge. A shot‑by‑shot breakdown is almost impossible to challenge.
Here’s what shot‑by‑shot tracking actually requires and why it’s the strongest form of proof you can produce.
1. Each Shot Must Stand on Its Own
A shot is not just a segment of drilling. It is a measurable unit of work with:
- A defined start point
- A defined end point
- A measurable length
- A drilling sequence
- Conditions encountered
- Time spent
- Notes explaining what happened
Each shot is its own “mini‑job.”
If the GC questions your total footage, you don’t defend the total — you defend the shot they’re questioning.
This is why shot‑by‑shot tracking is so powerful: it breaks the job into pieces the GC can verify individually.
2. Every Shot Needs Exact Entry and Exit Points
Entry and exit points are the physical anchors of your footage.
For each shot, you must document:
- Where the drill head entered
- Where the drill head exited
- How those points were measured
- How they align with the plan
- How they align with the as‑built
These points eliminate guesswork.
If the GC can see the start and end of each shot, they can’t argue the length.
If you can’t show the start and end, they can argue everything.
3. Actual Length: Not Rounded, Not Estimated
Every shot must have an actual measured length, not:
- “About 300 ft”
- “Roughly 250 ft”
- “Close to 200 ft”
Those are estimates. Estimates get cut.
Measured lengths come from:
- Rod count
- Rig display readings
- Verification at exit
- As‑built alignment
A shot with a measured length is defensible. A shot with a rounded length is negotiable.
And negotiated lengths always shrink.
4. Shot‑Level Notes: The Context Behind the Numbers
A shot is not just a number. It’s a sequence of events.
Your notes must show:
- Where production slowed
- Why production slowed
- What conditions were encountered
- What adjustments were made
- What delays occurred
- What decisions were made
- What impacted the footage
These notes turn your footage into a story the GC can follow.
Without notes, the GC fills in the blanks — and they never fill them in your favor.
5. Shot‑Level Time Tracking: The Timeline That Proves Accuracy
Time matters because:
- Time explains production
- Time explains delays
- Time explains efficiency
- Time explains cost
For each shot, you need:
- Start time
- End time
- Time spent drilling
- Time lost to conditions
- Time lost to delays
This timeline is what ties your footage to your labor and equipment hours.
If the timeline is clear, your hours are justified. If the timeline is vague, your hours are questioned.
6. Shot‑by‑Shot Tracking Makes Your Total Unbreakable
Here’s the real power of this method:
If the GC challenges your total footage, you don’t defend the total, you defend the shot they’re questioning.
Example:
GC:
“We don’t think you drilled 1,200 feet.”
You:
“Which shot do you want to review?”
Shot 1: 287 ft — here’s the entry, exit, and rod count
Shot 2: 162 ft — here’s the measurement and notes
Shot 3: 310 ft — here’s the conditions and timestamps
Shot 4: 441 ft — here’s the as‑built alignment
Now the GC has to challenge four separate pieces of evidence, not one number.
They won’t.
Method 2: Drill Rig Measurement
The drill rig is the first source of truth for footage. It’s the only tool on the job that tracks rod advancement in real time, and it gives you a running total as the bore progresses.
But here’s the part most crews miss:
Rig footage is only reliable when it’s captured correctly and supported by the bore log.
If you rely on the rig alone, without documenting how that footage was built, the GC will treat it as an estimate, not a measurement.
This section breaks down exactly how rig measurement works, how to use it properly, and how to avoid the mistakes that weaken your footage.
1. The Rig Tracks Rod Advancement: Not “Footage” in the Billing Sense
The rig doesn’t know:
- Where the shot started
- Where the shot ended
- Whether you backed up
- Whether you reamed
- Whether you repositioned
- Whether you drilled off‑line
- Whether you drilled a correction loop
The rig only knows:
“How much rod has gone into the ground.”
That’s it.
This is why rig footage must be paired with:
- Entry/exit points
- Shot boundaries
- Notes
- Conditions
- Daily reports
The rig gives you the raw number. Your documentation gives that number meaning.
2. Rig Footage Must Be Captured at the Right Moments
The biggest mistake crews make is looking at the rig total after the shot is done or worse, at the end of the day.
Rig footage must be captured:
- At the start of each shot
- At the end of each shot
- Before any repositioning
- Before any correction drilling
- Before any reaming passes
- Before any backtracking
If you don’t capture these moments, the rig total becomes contaminated by:
- Steering corrections
- Backing out
- Re-drilling
- Repositioning
- Reaming passes
And once the number is contaminated, you can’t clean it up later.
3. Rod Count Is the Most Reliable Part of Rig Measurement
Every rod has a known length.
If you track:
- Rods pushed
- Rods pulled
- Partial rods
- Rod changes
- Rod swaps
…you can calculate exact footage even if the rig display fails.
Rod count is:
- Simple
- Verifiable
- Repeatable
- Impossible to argue
If the GC challenges your footage, rod count is the cleanest, most defensible measurement you can present.
4. Rig Measurement Must Be Written Into the Bore Log Immediately
Rig footage is only accurate in the moment.
If you wait until:
- Lunch
- End of day
- When filling out paperwork
- When the PM asks
- When billing starts
…you’ve already lost accuracy.
Real‑time rig readings must be logged:
- Shot by shot
- With timestamps
- With notes
- With conditions
- With entry/exit points
This is what turns rig footage into evidence, not a memory.
5. Rig Measurement Alone Is Not Enough: It Must Align With the Log
GCs don’t accept rig totals by themselves.
They check:
- Does the rig total match the bore log?
- Does the bore log match the daily report?
- Do the shot lengths add up to the total?
- Do the entry/exit points make sense?
- Do the notes explain the timeline?
If the rig total is 1,200 ft but your shot breakdown only adds up to 1,040 ft, the GC assumes:
- The rig total is inflated
- The log is incomplete
- The documentation is unreliable
Rig measurement is a component, not the whole system.
6. Rig Measurement Strengthens Your Case When Used Correctly
When rig footage is:
- Captured at the right moments
- Logged shot by shot
- Supported by rod count
- Paired with entry/exit points
- Aligned with the daily report
- Explained with notes
…it becomes extremely difficult for the GC to challenge your footage.
You’re not presenting a number, you’re presenting a measurement method.
GCs don’t argue with methods. They argue with totals.
7. What Rig Measurement Cannot Do
This is where crews get burned.
The rig cannot:
- Prove where the bore went
- Prove the path taken
- Prove the entry/exit points
- Prove the shot boundaries
- Prove conditions
- Prove delays
- Prove production issues
The rig only proves rod advancement.
Method 3: As‑Built Verification
As‑builts are not your primary measurement tool. They are your verification tool, the document that confirms your bore log and rig measurements are accurate.
Most contractors misunderstand this. They try to use the as‑built as the source of footage, when in reality, the as‑built is the cross‑check that makes your footage defensible.
Here’s how as‑builts actually fit into proving bore footage and how to use them correctly so they strengthen your documentation instead of exposing gaps.
1. As‑Builts Confirm the Physical Path, Not the Exact Footage
An as‑built shows:
- The entry point
- The exit point
- The route taken
- The depth profile
- The horizontal alignment
- The vertical alignment
- The installed product location
What it does not show:
- Rod count
- Rig footage
- Corrections drilled
- Backtracking
- Steering loops
- Re-drills
- Reaming passes
This is why as‑builts cannot be your primary measurement. They don’t capture the work, they capture the result.
But they are extremely valuable for proving that your footage is reasonable, consistent, and physically accurate.
2. As‑Builts Validate Entry and Exit Points
Entry and exit points are the anchors of your footage.
If your bore log says:
- Shot 3: 310 ft
- Entry at Station 12+40
- Exit at Station 15+50
…the as‑built should show the same start and end.
If it does, your footage is validated.
If it doesn’t, the GC will question:
- Your measurement
- Your shot boundaries
- Your documentation
- Your total footage
As‑builts eliminate this doubt by confirming the physical endpoints of each shot.
3. As‑Builts Confirm the Route Taken: Which Supports Your Total
A straight 300‑ft shot and a curved 300‑ft shot are not the same length.
Curves add distance.
Depth changes add distance.
Steering corrections add distance.
The as‑built shows:
- Horizontal curvature
- Vertical curvature
- Depth changes
- Alignment adjustments
This allows you to show the GC:
“Here is the path we drilled, this path supports the footage we logged.”
When the path matches the footage, the GC has no angle to challenge your total.
4. As‑Builts Support Your Notes About Conditions
If your bore log says:
- “Hard transition at 110 ft”
- “Steering corrections required around gas service”
- “Depth increased to maintain clearance”
…the as‑built should show:
- A depth change
- A deviation
- A curve
- A clearance adjustment
This is where the GC sees that your notes weren’t excuses, they were documentation of real events.
When your notes match the as‑built, your footage becomes even more defensible.
5. As‑Builts Strengthen Your Case When the GC Questions Your Total
If the GC says:
“We don’t think this shot was 310 feet.”
You can respond with:
- The bore log
- The rig measurement
- The rod count
- The entry/exit points
- The as‑built path
Now they’re not arguing with a number, they’re arguing with a measured path.
GCs don’t win that argument.
6. As‑Builts Expose Weak Documentation: Which Is Why You Must Get the Log Right
If your bore log is weak:
- Rounded numbers
- Missing shots
- No notes
- No timestamps
- No entry/exit points
…the as‑built will expose those gaps instantly.
The as‑built is a truth document. It shows what actually happened underground.
If your documentation doesn’t match reality, the GC will use the as‑built against you.
This is why the bore log must be accurate before the as‑built is ever created.
7. As‑Builts Are the Final Layer of Proof: Not the First
Your footage proof stack should look like this:
1. Shot‑by‑shot bore log → Primary evidence → Shows how the footage was built
2. Rig measurement + rod count → Technical measurement → Shows the footage in real time
3. As‑built verification → Physical confirmation → Shows the path matches the footage
When all three align, your footage becomes unbreakable.
Method 4: Daily Report Alignment
Daily reports are not “extra paperwork.” They are the second half of your footage proof.
A bore log shows what you drilled. A daily report shows what happened on the job while you drilled it.
When the two documents match, your footage becomes extremely difficult to challenge. When they don’t match, the GC has immediate leverage to reduce your quantities.
This section breaks down exactly how daily reports support your footage — and how misalignment creates doubt that costs you money.
1. Daily Reports Must Match the Bore Log: Line for Line
The GC will compare:
- Total footage
- Shot count
- Production for the day
- Delays
- Conditions
- Crew hours
- Equipment hours
- Timeline
If your bore log says:
- 742 ft drilled
…but your daily report says:
- 800 ft installed
You’ve just created a contradiction.
The GC doesn’t assume the daily report is wrong. They assume your documentation is unreliable.
Once they doubt your documentation, they doubt your footage. Once they doubt your footage, they reduce your quantities.
Alignment is not optional, it’s mandatory.
2. Daily Reports Provide the Operational Context Behind Your Footage
Your bore log might show:
- Shot 2: 162 ft
- Production slowed at 10:14 AM
- Delay from 11:03–11:28 AM
The daily report must show:
- Weather conditions
- Inspector arrival/departure
- Utility conflicts
- Traffic control delays
- Equipment issues
- Crew activities
- Conversations with GC
This is what ties your footage to the real events of the day.
If the bore log shows a slowdown but the daily report says “normal production,” the GC assumes:
- The slowdown didn’t happen
- The footage is inflated
- The delay is unverified
Daily reports validate the story your bore log is telling.
3. Daily Reports Confirm the Timeline: Which Protects Your Hours
Footage and hours are always reviewed together.
If your bore log shows:
- 742 ft drilled
- 10 hours on site
…but your daily report shows:
- 742 ft drilled
- 6 hours of productive time
- 4 hours of delays
…your hours are justified.
If the daily report doesn’t show the delays, the GC assumes:
- Your hours are inflated
- Your production was slow
- Your footage is questionable
Daily reports protect your labor and equipment hours by explaining the timeline behind the footage.
4. Daily Reports Capture Events That Don’t Belong in the Bore Log
A bore log is technical. A daily report is operational.
The daily report captures:
- Late locates
- Missing inspectors
- Access issues
- Traffic control delays
- Material shortages
- Customer conversations
- Safety meetings
- Crew changes
- Equipment swaps
These events affect:
- Production
- Schedule
- Footage
- Billing
But they do not belong in the bore log.
The daily report fills in the gaps the bore log cannot cover.
5. Daily Reports Protect You When the GC’s Notes Are Incomplete
GC inspectors often keep their own notes, but:
- They miss things
- They arrive late
- They leave early
- They don’t see every shot
- They don’t track footage
- They don’t track delays
- They don’t track conditions
When your bore log and daily report match each other and the GC’s notes don’t, your documentation becomes the authoritative record.
Two aligned documents beat one incomplete document every time.
6. Daily Reports Make Your Footage Look Intentional, Not Accidental
A bore log by itself can look like:
- A form
- A habit
- A requirement
- A task
But when paired with a daily report, it looks like:
- A controlled documentation system
- A consistent workflow
- A deliberate method of tracking production
- A professional standard
GCs trust systems. They question isolated documents.
Daily reports turn your bore log into part of a system — and systems are hard to challenge.
7. Daily Report Alignment Is One of the Strongest Forms of Footage Proof
When the GC reviews your footage, they’re looking for:
- Consistency
- Traceability
- Verification
- Alignment
If your bore log says:
- 742 ft drilled
- 3 shots completed
- Delay from 11:03–11:28
- Hard transition at 110 ft
…and your daily report says:
- 742 ft installed
- 3 shots completed
- Inspector delay at 11:00
- Hard ground conditions
Your documentation is airtight.
The GC has no angle to challenge your footage.
Why Single Numbers Fail
A single footage total, by itself, is the weakest form of documentation you can present in a billing dispute.
It doesn’t matter if the number is accurate. It doesn’t matter if the crew drilled it. It doesn’t matter if everyone on site knows it’s correct.
If you can’t show how the number was built, the GC treats it as an estimate.
And estimates get cut.
Here’s exactly why single numbers fail — and why totals without structure give the GC all the leverage.
1. A Single Number Has No Origin: It’s Just a Claim
When you say:
“We drilled 1,200 feet.”
The GC immediately asks:
- From where to where?
- How many shots?
- How long was each shot?
- How was it measured?
- What conditions affected it?
- What delays occurred?
- What documentation supports it?
A single number answers none of these questions.
It’s a claim, not a record.
GCs don’t pay claims. They pay proven quantities.
2. A Single Number Cannot Be Verified
A total like “1,200 ft” has no internal structure.
There’s nothing to check.
There’s nothing to compare.
There’s nothing to validate.
The GC can’t:
- Trace it
- Break it down
- Match it to the daily report
- Match it to the as‑built
- Match it to the inspector notes
- Match it to the timeline
A number that cannot be verified is a number that can be reduced.
3. A Single Number Fails the Consistency Test
GCs look for alignment across documents.
If your bore log says:
- 1,200 ft drilled
…but your daily report says:
- 1,140 ft installed
…and your as‑built shows:
- 1,180 ft path
…and your notes don’t explain the difference…
Your number collapses.
A single number cannot survive inconsistency because it has no supporting structure.
4. A Single Number Cannot Explain Production
Footage is not just distance, it’s production.
If you drilled 1,200 ft in a day, the GC wants to know:
- How many shots?
- How long each shot took?
- What slowed production?
- What conditions were encountered?
- What delays occurred?
- What decisions were made?
A single number cannot explain:
- Why the day took 10 hours
- Why the crew slowed down
- Why the bore deviated
- Why the path changed
- Why the timeline looks the way it does
Without explanation, the GC assumes inefficiency.
5. A Single Number Cannot Be Defended When Challenged
If the GC says:
“We don’t think you drilled 1,200 feet.”
And all you have is:
“That’s what the crew recorded.”
You’ve already lost.
But if you have:
- Shot 1: 287 ft
- Shot 2: 162 ft
- Shot 3: 310 ft
- Shot 4: 441 ft
…with:
- Entry/exit points
- Rig readings
- Rod count
- Notes
- Conditions
- Delays
- Daily report alignment
- As‑built confirmation
Now the GC has to challenge four separate pieces of evidence, not one number.
They won’t. Because they can’t.
6. A Single Number Looks Like It Was Written After the Fact
GCs can spot “end‑of‑day totals” instantly.
They look like:
- Rounded numbers
- Clean totals
- No shot boundaries
- No timestamps
- No notes
- No conditions
- No delays
- No sequence
These totals scream:
“We filled this out later.”
And once the GC believes the documentation was created after the work, they assume:
- The number is unreliable
- The number may be inflated
- The number cannot be trusted
A single number looks like a guess, even when it isn’t.
7. A Single Number Gives the GC All the Leverage
When you present a single number, the GC can:
- Reduce it
- Question it
- Delay it
- Challenge it
- Compare it to their expectations
- Compare it to their inspector’s notes
- Compare it to the schedule
- Compare it to the as‑built
You have no defense because you have no structure.
A single number is easy to attack. A shot‑by‑shot breakdown is hard to attack.
GCs always attack the easy target.
The Role of Conditions in Proving Footage
Most contractors treat conditions as “extra notes.” GCs treat conditions as the explanation behind your footage.
Footage doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s shaped by:
- The ground you drilled through
- The depth you maintained
- The utilities you avoided
- The corrections you made
- The steering challenges you encountered
- The transitions you hit
- The problems you solved
If your footage looks different than expected, longer, shorter, slower, faster, conditions are what explain why.
Without conditions, your footage looks random. With conditions, your footage looks logical, traceable, and defensible.
Here’s exactly how conditions support your footage and why they must be documented shot by shot.
1. Conditions Explain Production: Which Protects Your Hours
If a 300‑ft shot took longer than the GC expected, they want to know:
- Why did production slow?
- What changed underground?
- What forced the crew to adjust?
- What caused the delay?
If your bore log says:
- “Hardpan at 110 ft — slowed penetration rate”
- “Lost returns — paused to regain flow”
- “Cobbles — required steering corrections”
…your production makes sense.
If your bore log says nothing, the GC assumes:
- The crew was slow
- The footage is inflated
- The hours are padded
Conditions protect your time, which protects your money.
2. Conditions Explain Path Changes: Which Protects Your Footage
Footage increases when:
- You steer around a utility
- You adjust depth
- You correct alignment
- You avoid an obstruction
- You follow a revised path
If your footage is longer than the plan, the GC wants to know why.
Conditions provide the answer.
Example:
Without conditions: “Shot ended up 40 ft longer.”
GC response: “Why? Reduce it.”
With conditions: “Shifted alignment 6 ft right to avoid unmarked gas service at 142 ft. Added curvature increased total length by 38 ft.”
GC response: “Understood.”
Conditions turn a questionable number into a justified number.
3. Conditions Explain Deviations: Which Protects Your As‑Built
As‑builts often show:
- Curves
- Depth changes
- Horizontal shifts
- Vertical adjustments
If your bore log doesn’t document the conditions that caused those deviations, the GC assumes:
- Poor drilling
- Poor planning
- Poor documentation
But if your bore log shows:
- “Soft pocket — dropped depth to maintain cover”
- “Rock seam — adjusted alignment to maintain clearance”
- “Unmarked duct — shifted path to avoid conflict”
…the as‑built deviations make sense.
Conditions connect the physical path to the documented footage.
4. Conditions Explain Delays: Which Protects Your Timeline
Delays are not just time issues, they affect footage.
Examples:
- Lost returns slow drilling
- Hard transitions require tool changes
- Cobbles force steering corrections
- Wet clay causes sloughing
- Sand pockets collapse the hole
- Rock seams require slower advancement
If your bore log shows:
- “Delay: 11:03–11:28 — lost returns, regained flow”
…and your daily report shows:
- “Lost returns — 25‑minute delay”
…and your footage shows:
- “Shot 2: 162 ft — slower production due to returns loss”
Your timeline, footage, and conditions all align.
This is what makes your documentation bulletproof.
5. Conditions Explain Why Your Footage Is Real: Not Inflated
GCs assume inflated footage when they see:
- Longer‑than‑expected totals
- Slower‑than‑expected production
- Deviations from the plan
- Higher‑than‑expected hours
Conditions eliminate that assumption.
They show:
- The ground dictated the pace
- The utilities dictated the path
- The transitions dictated the adjustments
- The environment dictated the timeline
Conditions prove your footage wasn’t inflated — it was earned.
6. Conditions Must Be Logged in Real Time, Not Reconstructed Later
Conditions change fast.
If you wait until the end of the day:
- You forget the exact location
- You forget the exact impact
- You forget the exact sequence
- You forget the exact timing
- You forget the exact severity
GCs can spot “after‑the‑fact” condition notes instantly.
Real‑time condition notes:
- Match the footage
- Match the timeline
- Match the as‑built
- Match the daily report
This is what makes them credible.
7. Conditions Turn Your Footage Into a Story the GC Can Follow
A bore log without conditions is just numbers.
A bore log with conditions is a narrative:
- “We hit this.”
- “It caused this.”
- “We adjusted like this.”
- “It added this much time.”
- “It changed the footage like this.”
GCs don’t argue with a story that matches:
- The as‑built
- The daily report
- The timeline
- The production
- The footage
Conditions make your footage make sense
What Happens When You Cannot Prove Footage
When you can’t prove your footage, the GC doesn’t argue with you. They don’t debate you. They don’t try to understand your side.
They simply take control of the number.
And once they take control of the number, they take control of the money.
Here’s exactly what happens, step by step, when your footage is unproven.
1. The GC Immediately Assumes the Number Is Inflated
GCs don’t assume missing documentation is an honest mistake. They assume:
- The number is rounded
- The number is estimated
- The number is padded
- The number is unsupported
- The number is unreliable
They don’t need proof you’re wrong. They only need proof you can’t prove you’re right.
Unproven footage is treated as inflated footage.
And inflated footage gets cut.
2. The GC Reduces the Quantity to the Lowest Defensible Number
If you can’t defend your number, the GC defaults to:
- Their inspector’s notes
- Their expectations
- Their plan sheets
- Their as‑built
- Their assumptions
- Their “standard production rates”
They choose the number that benefits them, not you.
Examples:
Your total: 1,200 ft GC’s inspector wrote: 1,050 ft GC pays: 1,050 ft
Your total: 742 ft Daily report says: 700 ft GC pays: 700 ft
Your total: 310 ft As‑built shows: 280 ft GC pays: 280 ft
When you can’t prove your number, the GC uses the lowest number available.
3. The GC Delays Payment While They “Review Documentation”
This is the GC’s favorite move.
When your footage is unproven, they say:
- “We’re reviewing quantities.”
- “We need more detail.”
- “We need clarification.”
- “We need to compare with our notes.”
- “We’ll get back to you.”
This delay is not accidental. It’s leverage.
Delays:
- Push your cash flow out
- Slow your billing cycle
- Increase your carrying cost
- Put pressure on your PM
- Put pressure on your owner
- Put pressure on your crew
The GC knows this. They use it.
Unproven footage gives them the opening.
4. The GC Questions Your Hours, Not Just Your Footage
Footage and hours are tied together.
If your footage is questionable, the GC assumes:
- Your hours are inflated
- Your production was slow
- Your delays were unnecessary
- Your timeline is unreliable
Now you’re not just defending footage, you’re defending:
- Labor hours
- Equipment hours
- Standby time
- Delay time
- Production rate
One weak number infects the entire invoice.
5. The GC Questions Your Entire Documentation System
When footage is unproven, the GC starts looking at everything else:
- Daily reports
- Bore logs
- Notes
- Timestamps
- Conditions
- Inspector sign‑offs
- As‑builts
- Crew consistency
If one part of your documentation is weak, they assume the rest is weak.
This is how a small gap becomes a full audit.
6. The GC Takes Control of the Narrative
When you can’t prove your footage, the GC rewrites the story:
- “They drilled less than they claimed.”
- “Their logs don’t match.”
- “Their numbers aren’t reliable.”
- “Their documentation is inconsistent.”
- “We need to adjust their quantities.”
You lose control of:
- The footage
- The timeline
- The production story
- The delay justification
- The invoice value
Once the GC controls the narrative, you’re negotiating from behind.
And contractors who negotiate from behind always lose money.
7. You Lose Leverage and Leverage Is Everything
When your footage is unproven, you lose:
- The ability to defend your invoice
- The ability to justify your hours
- The ability to justify your delays
- The ability to justify your production
- The ability to push back
- The ability to demand payment
- The ability to close the job cleanly
You become reactive instead of proactive.
The GC dictates the terms. You accept them.
Not because you’re wrong — but because you can’t prove you’re right.
8. The GC Reduces Your Pay and You Have No Defense
This is the final outcome.
When you cannot prove your footage:
- Quantities get reduced
- Hours get questioned
- Delays get denied
- Change orders get rejected
- Payments get delayed
- Retainage gets held
- Closeout gets dragged out
You lose money you already earned.
Not because the work wasn’t done. Not because the footage wasn’t drilled. Not because the crew didn’t perform.
You lose because the documentation wasn’t strong enough to defend the work.
How to Build Proof Into the Process
Most contractors try to “prove” footage after the job is done.
That’s the mistake.
By the time billing starts, the GC already has:
- Their inspector’s notes
- Their expectations
- Their as‑built
- Their assumptions
- Their production standards
If your documentation isn’t airtight, you’re not proving anything, you’re defending yourself.
And defense is always weaker than preparation.
The only way to win footage disputes consistently is to build proof into the process, not into the argument.
Here’s exactly how that works.
1. Log Every Shot Immediately, Not Later
Real‑time logging is the single most important habit in HDD documentation.
When you log a shot immediately:
- The footage is exact
- The rod count is accurate
- The conditions are fresh
- The delays are precise
- The notes are real
- The timeline is correct
- The sequence is intact
When you log a shot later:
- Footage gets rounded
- Rod counts get forgotten
- Conditions get blurred
- Delays get estimated
- Notes get vague
- Sequence gets mixed up
GCs can spot “end‑of‑day logs” instantly.
Real‑time logging is what turns your bore log into evidence, not a reconstruction.
2. Record Exact Footage, Never Round, Never Estimate
Exact footage is:
- Measured
- Repeatable
- Verifiable
- Defensible
Rounded footage is:
- Estimated
- Questionable
- Suspicious
- Vulnerable
If your bore log shows:
- 300 ft
- 250 ft
- 200 ft
…the GC knows those are guesses.
If your bore log shows:
- 287 ft
- 162 ft
- 310 ft
…the GC knows those are measurements.
Exact numbers build credibility. Rounded numbers destroy it.
3. Define Shot Boundaries Clearly, Start and End Must Be Obvious
Every shot must have:
- A clear start point
- A clear end point
- A timestamp
- A rig reading
- A rod count
- Notes explaining the sequence
Shot boundaries are what allow you to defend your footage piece by piece.
If the GC questions your total, you don’t defend the total, you defend the shot they’re questioning.
Shot boundaries turn your footage into a structure the GC can verify.
4. Keep Daily Reports Aligned, No Contradictions, No Gaps
Your bore log and daily report must match:
- Footage
- Shot count
- Production
- Delays
- Conditions
- Timeline
If the bore log says:
- 742 ft drilled
…and the daily report says:
- 800 ft installed
…your documentation collapses.
Alignment is what makes your system look controlled, consistent, and credible.
Misalignment is what gives the GC leverage.
5. Capture Notes That Explain Conditions, Not Just “Hard Ground”
Weak notes:
- “Hard ground”
- “Slow drilling”
- “Bad conditions”
Strong notes:
- “Transition from clay to cobble at 110 ft — reduced penetration rate”
- “Lost returns at 11:03 — regained flow at 11:28”
- “Shifted alignment 6 ft right to avoid unmarked gas service”
Weak notes look like excuses. Strong notes look like documentation.
Notes are what turn your footage into a story the GC can follow.
6. Use the Rig as a Measurement Tool, Not a Memory Aid
The rig gives you:
- Real‑time footage
- Rod advancement
- Running totals
But only if you capture the readings:
- At the start of each shot
- At the end of each shot
- Before corrections
- Before reaming
- Before backing out
If you wait until the end of the day, the rig total is contaminated.
Rig measurement must be part of the process — not part of the memory.
7. Build Documentation as You Drill, Not After You Drill
This is the mindset shift most contractors never make.
You don’t “fill out paperwork.” You build evidence.
You don’t “track footage.” You prove footage.
You don’t “write notes.” You document conditions.
You don’t “complete logs.” You protect your invoice.
When documentation becomes part of the drilling process — not an afterthought — your footage becomes unbreakable.
8. Remove Every Gap the GC Could Exploit
GCs look for:
- Missing shots
- Rounded numbers
- Vague notes
- Inconsistent totals
- Unexplained delays
- Unclear boundaries
- End‑of‑day entries
Every gap is leverage.
Every gap is a reason to reduce your footage.
Every gap is a reason to delay your payment.
Building proof into the process eliminates the gaps before the GC ever sees them.
Where Most Crews Go Wrong
Most crews don’t lose footage disputes because they drilled poorly. They lose because they documented poorly.
The drilling is almost never the problem. The documentation discipline is.
Here’s exactly where crews go wrong, the real, on‑the‑ground behaviors that create the gaps GCs exploit.
1. They Rely on Memory Instead of Measurement
This is the #1 failure.
Crews think they’ll remember:
- Rod count
- Conditions
- Delays
- Start times
- End times
- Corrections
- Transitions
- Production slowdowns
But memory is not documentation.
Memory:
- Rounds numbers
- Blurs details
- Mixes sequences
- Forgets conditions
- Misses timestamps
- Fills in blanks
- Creates inconsistencies
GCs can spot “memory‑based logs” instantly.
They look like summaries, not evidence.
2. They Fill Out Logs at the End of the Day
End‑of‑day logging is the silent killer of accuracy.
When logs are filled out later:
- Footage gets rounded
- Rod counts get guessed
- Conditions get generalized
- Delays get shortened
- Notes get vague
- Timestamps get invented
- Sequence gets scrambled
The GC doesn’t need to prove the log is wrong. They only need to prove it wasn’t filled out in real time.
Once they believe that, your footage is exposed.
3. They Treat the Bore Log as “Paperwork,” Not Evidence
When the bore log is treated like a form:
- Entries get rushed
- Notes get skipped
- Details get ignored
- Shots get combined
- Numbers get rounded
- Times get estimated
But the bore log is not a form. It’s the primary evidence that protects your invoice.
Crews who understand this document differently produce logs that are:
- Detailed
- Accurate
- Traceable
- Defensible
Crews who treat it like paperwork produce logs that get challenged.
4. They Combine Shots to Save Time
This is one of the most damaging habits.
When crews combine shots:
- You lose entry/exit points
- You lose shot boundaries
- You lose condition changes
- You lose delay locations
- You lose production detail
- You lose traceability
A combined entry cannot be defended.
If the GC questions one part of the total, you have no way to isolate it.
Combined shots save minutes in the field and cost thousands in billing.
5. They Don’t Capture Rig Readings at the Right Moments
Crews often check the rig:
- After the shot
- After corrections
- After reaming
- After backing out
- After repositioning
By then, the number is contaminated.
Rig readings must be captured:
- At the start of the shot
- At the end of the shot
- Before corrections
- Before reaming
- Before backing out
If you miss these moments, you lose the ability to prove the footage cleanly.
6. They Don’t Document Conditions in Real Time
Crews often write:
- “Hard ground”
- “Slow drilling”
- “Bad conditions”
These notes are useless.
Real condition notes must include:
- Location
- Impact
- Duration
- Adjustment
- Result
Example of a weak note: “Hard ground.”
Example of a strong note: “Transition from clay to cobble at 110 ft, slowed penetration rate and required steering corrections.”
Weak notes look like excuses. Strong notes look like evidence.
7. They Don’t Align the Bore Log With the Daily Report
This is where most disputes start.
If the bore log says:
- 742 ft drilled
…but the daily report says:
- 800 ft installed
…the GC assumes:
- Your documentation is inconsistent
- Your footage is unreliable
- Your hours are questionable
Crews often fill out these documents separately, without cross‑checking.
That’s how contradictions happen.
And contradictions are the GC’s favorite leverage point.
8. They Don’t Understand That DocumentationIs Production
Crews think:
- Drilling is production
- Logging is paperwork
But in HDD, documentation is part of production.
If you drill perfectly but document poorly, the GC will reduce your footage.
If you drill average but document perfectly, the GC will pay your footage.
Documentation is not optional. It’s not secondary. It’s not “extra.”
It’s the difference between:
- Getting paid
- Getting reduced
- Getting delayed
- Getting audited
Crews who understand this win disputes. Crews who don’t lose them.
Avoid the Mistakes
Most footage disputes don’t come from the drilling. They come from avoidable documentation failures, the same failures that show up on job after job, crew after crew, company after company.
These mistakes aren’t random. They’re predictable. They’re repeatable. And they’re expensive.
Every time a GC reduces your footage, delays your payment, or questions your hours, it’s almost always tied back to one of a handful of operational breakdowns.
Here’s what those breakdowns look like in the real world and why you need to eliminate them before they cost you money.
1. Rounding Footage Instead of Measuring It
Rounded numbers tell the GC:
- “We didn’t track this.”
- “We filled this out later.”
- “We estimated.”
Rounded numbers are the fastest way to lose credibility and lose footage.
2. Missing Shots That Break the Sequence
A missing shot is a missing piece of evidence.
When a shot is missing:
- The total becomes questionable
- The timeline becomes unclear
- The path becomes untraceable
- The GC gains leverage
One missing shot can invalidate an entire day’s footage.
3. Combining Shots to Save Time
Combined shots destroy:
- Entry/exit accuracy
- Condition tracking
- Delay documentation
- Shot‑level verification
A combined entry cannot be defended. Period.
4. Logging at the End of the Day Instead of in Real Time
End‑of‑day logs create:
- Rounded numbers
- Vague notes
- Missing timestamps
- Incorrect sequences
- Inconsistent totals
GCs can spot these logs instantly and they use them against you.
5. Weak Notes That Don’t Explain Anything
Notes like:
- “Hard ground”
- “Slow drilling”
- “Bad conditions”
…are useless.
They don’t explain:
- Why production slowed
- Why the path changed
- Why the footage increased
- Why the timeline shifted
Weak notes make your footage look random. Strong notes make your footage look justified.
6. Daily Reports That Don’t Match the Bore Log
This is the GC’s favorite leverage point.
If the bore log says:
- 742 ft
…and the daily report says:
- 800 ft
…the GC assumes:
- Your documentation is unreliable
- Your footage is inflated
- Your hours are questionable
Inconsistency is the #1 reason quantities get reduced.
7. Treating Documentation as “Paperwork” Instead of Evidence
When crews treat the bore log like a form:
- Entries get rushed
- Details get skipped
- Notes get ignored
- Accuracy drops
- Gaps appear
But the bore log isn’t paperwork. It’s proof.
It’s the document that protects your invoice.
Use Logs to Defend Billing
Most contractors think bore logs are for tracking production. They are, but that’s only half the story.
The real purpose of a bore log is defense.
A bore log is the document that protects your invoice when the GC:
- Questions your footage
- Challenges your hours
- Pushes back on delays
- Compares your totals to their inspector’s notes
- Claims your numbers don’t match the as‑built
- Tries to reduce your quantities
When a GC disputes your billing, they’re not attacking your drilling. They’re attacking your documentation.
And the bore log is the first line of defense.
Here’s exactly how a strong bore log protects your billing and why it’s the most important document you produce on a directional drilling job.
1. Bore Logs Turn Your Footage Into Evidence
A total like “1,200 ft drilled” is a claim. A bore log turns that claim into:
- Shot‑by‑shot entries
- Exact measurements
- Entry/exit points
- Rig readings
- Rod counts
- Notes
- Conditions
- Timestamps
Now your footage isn’t a number, it’s a documented sequence of events.
GCs don’t argue with sequences. They argue with totals.
2. Bore Logs Shut Down the GC’s Leverage
When the GC challenges your footage, they’re looking for:
- Gaps
- Rounding
- Missing shots
- Weak notes
- Inconsistent totals
- End‑of‑day entries
A strong bore log eliminates every one of those openings.
If the GC says:
“We don’t think this shot was 310 feet.”
You respond with:
- Entry point
- Exit point
- Rod count
- Rig reading
- Notes
- Conditions
- Timeline
- Daily report alignment
Now the GC has nothing to attack.
A strong bore log removes their leverage before they can use it.
3. Bore Logs Protect Your Hours by Explaining Production
GCs always compare:
- Footage
- Hours
- Production rate
If your footage is solid but your hours look high, the GC wants to know why.
Your bore log explains:
- Slowdowns
- Transitions
- Steering corrections
- Lost returns
- Hard ground
- Utility conflicts
- Delays
Without these notes, the GC assumes:
- Your crew was slow
- Your hours are inflated
- Your production was inefficient
With these notes, your hours are justified.
4. Bore Logs Protect You When the GC’s Inspector Misses Things
GC inspectors:
- Arrive late
- Leave early
- Miss shots
- Miss conditions
- Miss delays
- Miss transitions
- Miss corrections
Your bore log fills in the gaps.
When your documentation is complete and theirs isn’t, your documentation becomes the authoritative record.
GCs don’t argue with the more complete document.
5. Bore Logs Align With Daily Reports, Creating a Unified Defense
A bore log by itself is strong. A bore log that matches the daily report is unbreakable.
When both documents show:
- The same footage
- The same delays
- The same conditions
- The same timeline
- The same production
…the GC has no angle to challenge your billing.
Two aligned documents beat one inspector note every time.
6. Bore Logs Make Your Billing Look Professional, Not Opportunistic
GCs trust:
- Systems
- Processes
- Consistency
- Structure
A detailed bore log shows:
- You track production seriously
- You document in real time
- You measure accurately
- You understand billing
- You run a disciplined operation
GCs pay disciplined contractors faster, because disciplined contractors are harder to dispute.
7. Bore Logs Are the Backbone of Billing Dispute Defense
When a billing dispute happens, the GC will ask for:
- Bore logs
- Daily reports
- As‑builts
- Inspector notes
- Rig readings
- Rod counts
- Condition notes
The bore log is the document that ties all of these together.
It’s the centerpiece of your defense.
If the bore log is strong, everything else falls into place. If the bore log is weak, everything else collapses.
Tools That Strengthen Proof
Paper logs work, but only when the crew is disciplined, consistent, and trained to document in real time.
Most crews aren’t.
Not because they’re lazy. Because the job moves fast. Because drilling demands attention. Because conditions change constantly. Because the foreman is juggling ten things at once.
Paper logs depend on perfect human behavior. And perfect human behavior doesn’t exist on a drilling job.
That’s why digital tools matter.
Digital systems don’t replace the crew, they remove the failure points that cost contractors money.
Here’s exactly how the right tools strengthen your footage proof and eliminate the gaps GCs use to reduce your quantities.
1. Digital Bore Logs Remove Guesswork
Paper logs rely on:
- Memory
- Handwriting
- End‑of‑day entries
- Rounding
- Estimation
- Interpretation
Digital logs rely on:
- Real‑time inputs
- Structured fields
- Required entries
- Automatic timestamps
- Consistent formatting
- Instant validation
Digital logs don’t “forget” a shot. They don’t “round” numbers. They don’t “skip” notes.
They force accuracy.
2. Digital Tools Capture Rig Readings Automatically
One of the biggest weaknesses in HDD documentation is missing rig readings.
Digital systems can:
- Capture rig totals
- Track rod count
- Log footage automatically
- Timestamp each reading
- Sync readings to shots
This eliminates:
- Contaminated totals
- Missed readings
- End‑of‑day estimates
- “I think it was around…”
When rig data is captured automatically, your footage becomes mathematically defensible.
GCs don’t argue with math.
3. Digital Tools Align Bore Logs and Daily Reports Automatically
The #1 cause of footage disputes is inconsistency between:
- Bore logs
- Daily reports
- Inspector notes
- As‑builts
Digital systems eliminate this by:
- Linking the bore log to the daily report
- Pulling footage directly into the report
- Syncing conditions and delays
- Matching timestamps
- Preventing contradictory entries
When your documents match automatically, the GC loses their favorite leverage point.
4. Digital Tools Force Real‑Time Documentation
Paper logs allow:
- End‑of‑day entries
- Missing shots
- Vague notes
- Rounded numbers
Digital tools force:
- Real‑time entries
- Required fields
- Exact numbers
- Condition notes
- Timestamped events
Real‑time documentation is what makes your footage credible.
Digital tools make real‑time documentation unavoidable.
5. Digital Tools Create a Single Source of Truth
Without a system, you end up with:
- Paper logs
- Text messages
- Photos
- Emails
- Inspector notes
- Crew notes
- Daily reports
- As‑builts
All separate. All inconsistent. All vulnerable.
Digital systems consolidate everything into:
- One log
- One timeline
- One record
- One source of truth
When the GC asks for documentation, you don’t scramble. You show them the system.
Systems win disputes. Loose paperwork loses them.
6. Digital Tools Make Your Documentation Look Professional
GCs trust:
- Structure
- Consistency
- Organization
- Systems
- Repeatability
Digital tools make your documentation look:
- Controlled
- Standardized
- Professional
- Auditable
- Reliable
When your documentation looks professional, the GC assumes your numbers are professional.
That assumption alone protects your footage.
7. Boreva Connects All the Proof Into One Workflow
This is where you introduce the platform naturally and credibly.
Systems like Boreva connect:
- Bore logs
- Daily reports
- Rig readings
- Footage tracking
- Condition notes
- Delay logs
- As‑built alignment
- Crew timelines
Instead of scattered documents, you get:
- A unified record
- A traceable sequence
- A defensible timeline
- A complete story
When everything is connected, your footage becomes undeniable.
GCs don’t fight unified documentation. They fight gaps.
Boreva removes the gaps.

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