FEATURES

Life is better in color

The editor in LAS Explorer colorizes the various elements of an LAS file differently. You'll see LAS files in a new light - and never want to go back to seeing them in black and white again.

Formatting

LAS files are text files. So they're easy to read, right? Except that nothing lines up. And the curves are numbered wrong. Now you can format any LAS file with one keystroke (two, if you want to number the curves).

Validation & repair

Someone gave you an LAS file. Is it valid? Find out if it matches the standard 100%. Or maybe you just want to know if there is a data issue that will cause a problem when you go to use this file in another program. LAS Explorer will help you detect and fix errors.

Export data

Maybe you don't need to open the LAS file in another program. You just need to get the data out and into Microsoft Excel. Fast. And with dates formatted as dates, and nulls as blank cells. Done!

Latitude & Longitude

Edit and validate those latitude and longitude coordinates. Reverse geocode to get some more info. Now plot the well on Google Maps. Or Bing, if you prefer.

Multiple LAS files

You have a folder full of LAS files. What is in all of them? This is a killer feature, and why "Explorer" is in the product name. It's an interface just like Windows File Explorer - except just like the editor, it knows all about LAS files.

Plots and grid view

Need a quick "visual" of your data? LAS Explorer has a “Quick Plots” feature to help with that. Or click on another tab, and see the file data in an Excel-like grid.

Curves and Data

Although LAS Explorer is best seen as an "upstream" tool for working with LAS files, sometimes you just need to do some simple cleanup or conversions. You may be able to just do these in LAS Explorer, saving you time having to jump to another tool once you've validated and eyeballed your file. Move curves around, convert units, change the NULL value, and resample.

Time based files

LAS Explorer has complete support for files keyed on time rather than depth. Time values must be in ISO 8601 format. If your file doesn't do that, no problem. Just run the date/time repair wizard, and you can fix it up in no time. Then run Quick Plots to see the data plotted on time.