Most people don't understand that any kind of a well is a lot more complicated than just a hole in the ground. Thank You for trying to help educate people. Best Wishes to You and Your Family Zach.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@micahsattler12684 ай бұрын
@@TheZachLife love the channel bro been following for years have a ? Do You think it’s still profitable for a company to drill a new well in your area and have good production or just second recovery
@cammos4 ай бұрын
Im a refinery man in Australia so these wells u guys have r new learning for me do u drill into pools of oil or is it all sitting in oilsands and cracks?
@richardlincoln84384 ай бұрын
@@cammos This whole discussion is too complicated to answer in a KZbin comment section. A simple truthful answer to your question is yes, all of the places you mentioned. Use a search engine and teach yourself.
@TwiztidPain3 ай бұрын
Love how you simplify it, I used to work offshore welding, and people don't understand the precautions they take nowadays.
@RobsWorldWV4 ай бұрын
I'm an owner/operator here in WV, that was the most concise and easy to understand explanation of borehole dynamics that I've seen on KZbin. Your videos go along to way toward building trust and understanding with folks that might otherwise demonize our industry,
@JS-oy6nn3 ай бұрын
Amen. 🙏🏻 Our industry is under fire for sure. I’m a union WV pipeline welder and have been trying to survive this downturn.
@bradr214215 күн бұрын
This guys excellent teacher. He loves his work you can tell. Cant get him out of the field. Nice video myman. Oil man.
@elcheapo53024 ай бұрын
Fascinating. There's way more to oil wells than I had imagined. Such an underrated channel!
@MacNur-tu3cq4 ай бұрын
Ya it really is kickass channel. Glad I stumbled upon it. Zach is definitely a handy fella
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@seeriktusАй бұрын
Honestly most of your videos are worthy of being shown in a school class
@horatioyen256Ай бұрын
Seeing the number of layers of consecutive failures that have to occur for migration or ground water contamination makes me feel better about injection wells
@winterhorse2903 ай бұрын
Very good explanation of a well. I was in the oil field for 50 years. THANK YOU
@mikeburgess73314 ай бұрын
I didn't realize that oil wells were so complicated! Thanks for the great explanation, Zach.
@desertriderukverun10024 ай бұрын
And these are the most basic wells. If you really want your mind blown look into directional drilling, extra long reach wells, gas lift, downhole pumps and miscible injection.
@clarkbourgeois76614 ай бұрын
Yep. Then remember that a gallon of gas costs less than a gallon of milk.
@winterhorse2903 ай бұрын
@@desertriderukverun1002 Gaslift had to be 90% of the wells In operating over my 50 years in the business
@jefferyyoung68364 ай бұрын
You may explain that the water you are injecting is the water that came out of the oil production wells. So in effect you are just putting it back into an oil production zone.
@peterhodgkins69854 ай бұрын
I worked on many gas turbine driven water flood units for injection wells (2nd stage recovery and beyond) both offshore and in the oil patches of 11 western states! These videos are fascinating to me... Thanks much for taking the time to do 'em!
@RMA_432_4 ай бұрын
I previously worked at a W-A-G CO2 injection asset that had Solar Turbines on the split case pumps for the water injection side of the system. Pretty neat.
@bigamish879Ай бұрын
I love your videos, I was a wireline technician for hunting for a short while. I got to build bond tools and run logs, but I never really understood what was below! Thank you so much for this great explanation!
@restaurantattheendofthegalaxyАй бұрын
Learning about how oil wells work and how they are serviced has been an amazing learning experience! I spent my career in IT and all of this is new information is new and interesting! Great stuff Zach!
@skeeterskoville92264 ай бұрын
Greetings, Zach! All the way from the east Texas oil fields of Kilgore
@dustinclark9634 ай бұрын
Best oil field production channel in my humble opinion
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@johnkufeldt35644 ай бұрын
Hey Zach from Calgary, Canada. Just wanted to thank you (again) for the education (on water injection this time). I always look forward to yor vids because I get the knowledge of many generations in plain english from a guy who doesn't act like a know it all and is never afraid to admit he doesn't know everything and you have dirty hands so I know that you always speak from your own experience. Plus I get a good laugh from all your T-shirts. Cheers Zach and all the best from a northern neighbor.
@Harold-si7eh4 ай бұрын
In the Old days they were Flag gauges that needed a pre-selected pressure to support the flag,Red,Yellow,Green in the Horizontal position,when pressure drops the Flag drops to a 45 degree and if drops more it will be Vertical And Can be seen by long range binoculars!!! Times change Yet Old ways still work!!! 45 years ago things were different before I became a truck Driver,ALL I Remember that worked the fields are long gone but not forgotten!!!❤
@jamesbarber38544 ай бұрын
There were 31,000 wells drilled in the East Texas field. A lot of wells had no plugs over the woodbine P&A. The Wilcox formation is a treatable fresh water zone and there wasn't enough surface pipe run in the 1930s. Injection causes bottom hole pressure. Age deteriorates steel casing. The freshwater wells have H2s in the water now. As for Gunsight wells. Cable tool wells made leases look like pin cushions. I drilled a few wells with rotary in the early 80s with intentions of injection. Water started coming up all over the lease. Freshwater contamination is starting to be a big problem. You're in an isolated area and don't have to deal with it. The fresh water sand on your log reminds me of the Trinity water sand. We used to get makeup water from the Trinity water sand for water flooding. Wish you well on the casing leak. It is ruff trying to get 50 to 60 year old injection wells to pass. Especially where the pipe runs through shallow Coal or wet shale.
@DillonFreasierB4 ай бұрын
Hey Zack. I’ve been a big fan for a while. I’m from Shackelford county, and have admired the oil operators that I’ve wirelined for for years. Many are dying off and not many of these oil men I know are our age. I’ve kicked around the idea of operating my own stuff for a while and really find your content worth more than gold. For now I run a wireline truck for Flying A out of Abilene. If you ever need wireline services give me a shout. I’d love to pick your brain as well. Keep up the great work, your content is truly one of a kind!
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks. Are you cased? Or open hole logging?
@DillonFreasierB4 ай бұрын
@@TheZachLife we do cased, CBL, gamma logs, back off, cutting, plugging, perf and all that stuff. Basically all cased services with e-line.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
@@DillonFreasierB 10-4
@MrBarbuster4 ай бұрын
got a cousin who had a service company in abilene. did rat hole drilling
@advancednutritioninc9084 ай бұрын
Excellent Job!! You handled a pretty complicated situation (injection well components) and explained how each part fits in the scheme. I learned a lot of new stuff about injection wells. I understand hydraulics so that helped. Love the safety layers built into the system!!
@heyitsjel4 ай бұрын
This is a great video for giving an overview of how injection and production wells are constructed and operate on a fundamental level. What I will say, is that O&G injection and production wells *can* cause seismic activity - but it's usually wells that are *significantly* deeper than the ones you're operating, and usually with much higher production/injection rates (ie. tens of thousands of bbl/day).
@ahmeds73454 ай бұрын
Worked on swd (salt water disposal) wells in iraq and north Africa, the highest we went with pressure is almost 5000 psi. Great vid 👌
@drewmurray25834 ай бұрын
You are the king of vehicle maintenance if you are still running a ford 5.4 3v in 2024....
@jakebreak89174 ай бұрын
Excellent video Zach! I’ve been working in the OH, WV, PA Gasfield for 10yrs now. I haul Condensate off the Wells now. I started out as a Trash Man switching Roll-Off Boxes on Drilling and Fracking Sites 10yrs ago! Then I hauled Drill Cuttings, Water, and Finally got my Hazmat and enjoy the Tanker Life! Around here Driver’s make more than the Mechanics. Otherwise I’d be wrenching. Keep posting awesome informative videos! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🛢️🛢️🛢️🛢️💰💰💰💰
@DaveGreeneramblingcarpenter4 ай бұрын
I do find this fascinating and brilliantly explained by you,, I do find myself amazed that somehow somewhere back in time, people somehow figured this stuff out, and the huge advances across the world because of oil and the internal combustion engine,, 👏👏🇮🇪
@oilfinder4 ай бұрын
Hey Zachlife, thank you for explaining injection wells, you did a great job ! This is a tough subject to educate the public on, but you did good ! Thank you.
@needsaride151264 ай бұрын
There are several instances where I live of flow migration from one well to another. Especially when hundreds to thousands of wells from the early 1900's being drilled then abandonded when they played out. Several farms that had good water were definitely contaminated by fracking. It may not happen a lot where you live but in Pennsylvania it happens quite often.
@timthetiny75384 ай бұрын
Unlikely. They weren't fracking wells in the early 1900s for one thing. For another, the horsepower doesn't exist for fractures to propagate for miles uphole from the target formation. For another, the Indians up there used to put wool and skins in the creeks because oil would naturally migrate up the faults and into the creek water and they would collect it for medicinal purposes. Oil has been in the groundwater there for about 100 times longer than humanity has existed. The water in pennsylvania has never been free of oil for the entire history of humanity.
@needsaride151264 ай бұрын
@@timthetiny7538 No there weren't fracking them they were blasting them with nitro. We had a well on my relatives farm and another uncle had three on his farm. My point was the new wells fracked today can and do migrate pressure to old conventional wells. They also definitely do migrate from one frac to another. Just ask the people in Washington and Westmoreland Counties. Someone i know works the fracs, hauls the water and does the mud jobs. So I disagree with your opinion.
@timthetiny75384 ай бұрын
@needsaride15126 yeah you know someone who hauls water. I frac wells. My opinion outranks his. And yours.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Flow migration through a formation is how oil wells work but migration from a lower to higher formation is what's uncommon. Likely the problem you describe is not from a frac job but from an injection well that has a high than designed formation pressure/injection volume. Content in next video.
@piquat14 ай бұрын
Really interesting. Really like the explanation of the layers of everything underground and how you might be looking for a spot just a few feet thick. Cool stuff. Thanks.
@OBD014 ай бұрын
Very well done! you explained things in a concise, simple way. Thank you for bringing us into TheZachLife, it is quite a ride
@MLou8124 ай бұрын
Never knew it was this complicated. Thanks for explaining.
@dennisl80764 ай бұрын
Thannks Zach, very informative!
@TechOne76714 ай бұрын
Zach, that was a great video and explanation. Is an electrician I like your channel for the electrical side of things but watch all your videos as I find the wells interesting. Your knowledge across wells, geology, mechanics and electrical/electronic is superb. When I seen you with the pencil and paper I thought this will be good and you didn’t disappoint. If I didn’t stay on the other side of the world I’d enjoy a few pints with ya. All the best to you.
@flyboy68764 ай бұрын
Oh by the way it is fun listening to a layman talking about a well, your good I enjoy hearing you
@joemiller11584 ай бұрын
Thanks Zach for explaining it to us !!
@MikeF11894 ай бұрын
Thank you for teaching us your trade.
@teddysmith4574 ай бұрын
Thank you for your explanation of everything Zach. I just got a little bit smarter about stuff.😊
@AGFL834 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your knowledge in an easy to understand format.
@entropyachieved7504 ай бұрын
Really interesting. Love this kind of content
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks
@papaburf72753 ай бұрын
Excellent video!
@duotronic64514 ай бұрын
Fascinating. Thanks for explaining in such detail. Especially the annulus. ❤❤❤
@RIGeek.4 ай бұрын
Awesome shirt for the video topic. Greetings from RI.
@michaelmcclure86734 ай бұрын
Zack back 20 years ago I worked for a small company that pimped us out to Schlumberger. Been on some fracking jobs with 10 or more units screaming. 😊
@DetroitDiesel6714 ай бұрын
I was working down in Long Beach Harbor near the oil refineries, and there was a bank of 5 or 6 HUGE Waukesha natural gas powered V-16 engines running ... I asked someone what they were for, as they were obviously not generating electricity, and he said "they're pumping sea water into the ground to push oil toward the well pumps, and to keep sink holes from forming due to the oil being taken out." I never knew such a thing existed... fascinating.
@horatioyen256Ай бұрын
Interesting
@markmonroe73304 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation, Thank you. This one was especially good.
@MarkRose13374 ай бұрын
Another informative video. Thank you, Zach!
@morgansword4 ай бұрын
Everything makes a lot more sense when explained. That wall of rock is as solid as the rock of gibraltar. I would not want salt on the surface of my property and I do not even have a lawn. I live on a gravel pit place of ground, and also every piece of ground near me is muskeg. Eighty acres of gravel in the middle of muskeg. Land here has value if you can build on it, and since muskeg is just another word for vegetation floating on water... its a serious thing. Now not all of this valley is muskeg, far be it for its the garden center of alaska here in wasilla. I do know tho since this weather has changed so much, its a lot colder, a lot more rain and winter is as cold as a mother in laws kiss. Waiting for the next one Zach
@tomasnielsen51324 ай бұрын
I really liked this video! Please do more of the oil drilling and maintenance and explain why and what it is for like in this video. Did you not buy a drill rig? Keep it up!
@davidj46624 ай бұрын
Really interesting. Thanks.
@ratmadness48584 ай бұрын
I ran a search around the Nevada nuclear testing area. Hundreds of atomic bomb tests registered lower on the earthquake scale than the larger earthquakes in Texas.
@brianmoore54984 ай бұрын
quite interesting. i think i got most of that. thank you
@davemachoukas61754 ай бұрын
Thank you. Good explanation.
@clydeacor19114 ай бұрын
I built 2 disposal wells in Montana for a guy, one was a 3500 bpd the other was a 7000 bpd and both ran between 1500 and 2500 psi we had to run fiberglass pipe due to the high pressures. The only problem either well had as far as any environmental issue was the operating managers wouldn't keep a close eye on the tank levels during a flow back and would overflow the tanks onto the ground and of course it was all oil that ended up on the ground every time. You'd think that they'd learn their lesson after the 1st time but i lost count on how many cleanups i had to do.
@mcd50824 ай бұрын
Excellent video Zach!
@caseymitchell54774 ай бұрын
The disposal wells that are causing issues, are taking 10s of thousands of barrels a day of fluid, with the deep ones, down in the Ellenbuger, causing the earthquakes. This is due to the water lubricating the deep basement faults nearby. The RRC recently killed the deep disposal wells in the earquake action areas, which brought on shallow disposal wells. They are starting to have issues with that in the Permian, because of the volumes involved. Some of the old legacy verticals that have been plugged, are starting to fail from the significant increase in pore pressure. This isnt an issue you will find up here though, no one is moving the insane volumes of water up here.
@heyitsjel4 ай бұрын
This pretty much sums it up; both O&G production and injection wells affect sub-surface stress regimes, and therefore fault activation/s.
@googacct4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. It was very informative and I understand more about how injection wells work. However as someone who lives in Oklahoma and went through that period of time when we were having more earthquakes than California, I do have to disagres with you on the point that injection wells can't cause earthquakes. After the Oklahoma Corporation Commission started shutting down injection wells in the areas that earthquakes were occurring, the earthquake problem went away. That does not mean I think all injections wells are bad. However it seems to me there are some areas that are more geologically sensitive than others when it comes to injecting fluids back into the ground.
@AIM54A4 ай бұрын
Great video. When you look at the depth of an earthquake and then you look at the depth of the wells you quickly realize how stupid the argument is that they're in any way tied together. My understanding is you often have oil fields in areas that are geologically active. So yes you have earthquakes near oil wells. Probably the best injection well video I've seen on youtube.
@whitesapphire58654 ай бұрын
I was thinking about that too. If we consider that earthquake epicentres are generally measured at several miles deep, and then these well barely touch a couple of thousand feet, it's a bit like blaming a guy two miles away for rattling your windows with his loud stereo, even though you could never even hear it, much less feels it. If that makes any sense?
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@caseymitchell54774 ай бұрын
Disposal wells can most definitely interact with deep basement faults, below the Ellenburger
@bro.weaver12824 ай бұрын
well there is that one spot in Oklahoma that earthquakes and fracking are all in the same spot....
@clydeacor19114 ай бұрын
Montana, and Wyoming close to Yellowstone perhaps?? 🤔
@fredblogsmac.56974 ай бұрын
i love this channel keep the oil rolling
@alexb.13204 ай бұрын
Another great video Zach, you make a great teacher.
@bannedfromtheshow81884 ай бұрын
Not only informative, but your presentation makes it very interesting.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@dereklee89344 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video, been a while since I've operated and sure makes me miss it. I operated heavy oil water flood, as well as ASP heavy oil flood and did well servicing for a long time, thinking its time to go back. Id love to but and operate my own wells, but seems like a lot more red tape to do so in Canada
@reg20224 ай бұрын
Very interesting content. Thanks
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Thanks.
@OziBlokeTimG23 күн бұрын
You lost me, but you seem to know what your talking about. Love your channel... 😅
@Jody-kt9ev4 ай бұрын
As we have a salt water injection well on our property in Oklahoma, I knew in general how they worked. But this is a great video about the details. The well on our property has not given any trouble except for a couple of above ground leaks. However, in the field that these oil wells are in, there have been cases of groundwater systems getting salt water in them. This has happened a very few times over the last 50 years, so it is not related to today's politics. As the wells in the area of this field have had several different small operators, I am not sure how well they were monitored. The fresh water level around our area is 250 feet or so. I know this as the water well we had when I was young was similar to a small oil well it had a kind of pump jack, tubing, casing, and wooden rods(with metal ends) I helped my dad pull the well by hand to replace the one way valve a few times and we knew how deep it was by the number of rods and their length. It is my understanding that the oil producing depth is around the wells on our property is 4000 to 8000 feet down. One thing that you have not shown yet is the storage tanks for the salt water. The tanks on our property has a small dam around them to contain leaks. A much larger pond was also dug nearby. Possibly the next injection well video will discuss this. One last thing, as the oil field our property is in was discovered 90 years ago, there are areas where things will not grow due to salt water spills decades ago. And the area gets above 30 inches of rain per year. It is definitely a good thing for the environment to put the water back in the ground.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
I did a video a few weeks ago talking about the injection system on the new lease that had the water tank in it. Thanks.
@Jody-kt9ev4 ай бұрын
@@TheZachLife Yes, I know. I just re-watched parts of it. There is no dike around the tank as with the tanks on our property. The material the tanks looks the same as yours, non-metallic. They are larger than the one in your video. It would seem to be common sense to build a small dike around the tanks to contain leakage if it occurs. I do not know about the salt water and other waste that comes up with oil in your wells, but the waste that is generated in the field around our land is pretty nasty. It contains a lot of Hydrogen Sulfide, stinking to high heaven.
@raykaufman71564 ай бұрын
At first, I thought those were Daleks on your shirt! Oh well, still a funny shirt...lol Oh yeah, cool tech video. 😎
@pat36a3 ай бұрын
I've never thought to blame the well it's self. You inject water underpressure to displace the oil trapped in the sands . I believe that act of displacement is what causes the issues elsewhere.
@rocksandoil22414 ай бұрын
Good clear explanation of a well.
@jonnojamwood4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the knowledge brother. Cheers mate👍
@davidfrost8014 ай бұрын
Enjoy your content.
@kennardjohnson78754 ай бұрын
Back in the day when I was running frac pumps,when in the dinosaur in Utah I would set max pressure kickout at 5,000 pounds but would kick pump off before reaching that so you didn't have to reset,but when pressure starts dropping back in gear and going to full throttle and banging gears and you are blowing and going in 10 seconds and I would be rocking until the equipment was flushed. Rig down and off to the next one.
@MrBIG4DАй бұрын
I'm in Oklahoma. A few years ago, we were having 3,4, or 5 "earthquakes" per day for about a 9-10 month period. Some of them were strong enough to do some damage to houses and buildings. Most of them were just a loud "boom" with a bump that you could feel in the ground. I felt a few that would shake the floor. Anyhow, they shut down several of the large injection wells around the area and 99% of the "earthquakes" stopped. Now, is that just a coincident? I think it is possible for injection wells to cause small earthquakes.
@DivergentDroid3 ай бұрын
I was still confused on why you would use this so I looked them up. They inject saltwater into the ground for the purpose of "enhanced oil recovery from the reservoir". There are also Disposal Wells used to dispose of unwanted saltwater according to the RRC of Texas.
@mreducto24 ай бұрын
No idea how this video popped up for me; extremely informative - never knew how that all worked. Leave geology and seismology to the scientists, though.
@hellcamino20214 ай бұрын
Just passing through, Kansas oilfield checking in!
@whereswardlaw4 ай бұрын
Nice overview... Now you need to upgrade those annulus gauges to Wi-Fi versions, set up a meshtastic long range radio communication network, tie in your MQQT broker and send that pressure reading directly to your desktop... No more driving out to the site in the summer heat 😂... Looking forward to more scada stuff..
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Hahaha thanks.
@broglet20034 ай бұрын
Really interesting, thanks.
@chuckh.22274 ай бұрын
Very interesting!
@barfy47514 ай бұрын
How do you clear out the cement from the bottom each time you plug
@andrewsmart29494 ай бұрын
yeah thats all fine for you in a low pressure area you work in,but there have been disasters in fracking deep high pressure gas wells,and in western australia they tried to frack a gas well with 3 million litres of diesel oil and only managed to recover 1 million litres and that plume is now polluting a national park
@bradleyholewinski56354 ай бұрын
Thanks Zach
@Live.Vibe.Lasers4 ай бұрын
do you have any tips for finding a 2000' deep well in Pennsylvania drilled circa 1920? USGS resource reports reference it and some 1970s underground coal mine maps show a well that can't be accounted for by water wells on the property but its not precise in its location. Historical imagery imagery (aircraft) shows nothing remarkable in the 40's where the map shows. I suspect it was cut off below plowing depth sometime around then.
@imchris50004 ай бұрын
what if you used pressure transducers to shut down the well when pressure is detected it would protect from failures spreading
@robertchall85764 ай бұрын
I have been on 42 years of drilling wells but don't know a hole bunch on the production side.
@PaulHigginbothamSr4 ай бұрын
Never once has he seen communication between zones. To me that is very interesting that absolutely no fluid moves through the shale of a few feet thick for miles. Seems like it would because one would think it is jumbled up underground but it certainly IS NOT. What this means to me is the reason for the oil in the first place. Any kind of leak between zones means that in geological time, or millions of years it would have all leaked out and made a Labrea tar pit on the surface. Because if you let oil communicate it moves up to the surface and over geological time would certainly turn into tar since all the volatiles in it would seep out. I have heard of this in California or in the middle east having oil seeps. Ancient peoples used this stuff for boats and other things. We use cubic kilometers of oil every year worldwide, and a cubic kilometer is a whole bunch of oil.
@heyitsjel4 ай бұрын
It's not that there's no communication - it's just that it's basically imperceivable to us on our time horizon as humans. Oil and gas *does* diffuse through shale... it's just an insanely slow process due the fact that most shales have a permeability in the nano-darcy range... ie. you'll have to wait tens of thousands to hundreds of thousand years to notice any appreciable movement. In comparison, most oil/gas sands have permeability in the darcy or millidarcy range... In layman's terms, permeability is the ability of a fluid to flow through a porous medium (like a sandstone rock formation). If you took something like a clean sand you might have a permeability of say 1 darcy... so for nanodarcy you're literally talking 1,000,000,000 less permeable (or that many times more resistant to flow). This is pretty much why we consider shales (and similar) to be impermeable.
@bro.weaver12824 ай бұрын
in the 1950´s my Great Grandmas Uncle had injection wells in his pasture with his horses, the hose leaked and the horse drank the water and died. He was into harness racings, when oil was struck back then, they would get into harness racing. Even build race tracks in the middle of the oilfield....big money.
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
This can be a problem. Live stock seems to be attracted to oil and water for some reason.
@MacNur-tu3cq4 ай бұрын
Sup zach. Hope all is still rockin and rollin. Cheers buddy
@danielamberthompson24344 ай бұрын
Man checkin in from alberta and you boys in txs are living in the wild west. I have seen shit like that in saskatchewan but alot of that old iron is being cleaned up.
@timthetiny75384 ай бұрын
If by the wild west you mean leading the world lol.
@carmon52294 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🤘🤘
@tonydiesel34444 ай бұрын
Miniature Refinery electrical powered units can be imported into the USA
@reeceedwards25094 ай бұрын
My previous oil co will not give me a release I ask the land man every year the well has been plugged and not offered a shut in lease why is that thanks Zack
@waggtech48834 ай бұрын
Grew up around a field that was developed in the boom of the teens or twenties. Across the road was an area they were flooding the perimeter to push oil to the center of the field. I say this because I don’t buy into the scare of water injection. It’s been done for years. I’d be curious to hear when your injection well was developed. In the 70’s when a few wells were developed they needed someplace to go with the water. My grandad, knowing the area well, took the producer to one of those old wells from the teens that played out and was capped leaving the casing in the hole. The well was revitalized for disposal and is still functional today… Was the chart the end result of “pinging” a well?
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Intersting. Ive got a couple of wells from the 20's. This one was probably drilled in the 70's.
@jamestregler15844 ай бұрын
We're all riding the tectonic plates baby 🐥 ! 😎
@Jejh4lom4 ай бұрын
Currently tri frac’n with big red, I live in the area Zach needing a water well drilled
@TVwatcher-ic3ne4 ай бұрын
How do you know when your cement - oh scuse me - “CEment” is at the level you want? By calculating volume beforehand? Some kind of depth probe? Thx
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Lol. There is a logging tool that can see where it is but it generally is just a column volume calculation.
@Texassince18364 ай бұрын
We frac 140 barrels per minute. An injection well at a couple hundred barrels a day is just a drop in the bucket
@MikeF11894 ай бұрын
Your video was a delightful surprise! I wasn't expecting to be so captivated by the content, but you managed to keep me engaged from start to finish. Your genuine and relatable approach makes the video so enjoyable to watch. I appreciate how you tackled the topic with a fresh perspective, shedding new light on familiar concepts. You've gained a new subscriber, and I'm excited to explore more of your content!
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Awesome. Thanks.
@marksweesy7824 ай бұрын
If you double the hole diameter does it double the production?
@szajsjem4 ай бұрын
Why not use stainless pipe so it wouldn't rust and fill the well above the packer with cement?
@BrokeMiner4 ай бұрын
Do they ever inject the water back into where the oil is to push or move more oil back out?
@TheZachLife4 ай бұрын
Yes absolutely.
@waggtech48834 ай бұрын
The most recent development is of CO2 injection. Besides water disposal, steam and polymer injection have also been used. I’d suppose you’d have to venture to somewhere like the Osage, Bakersfield or Permian to see co2 in action…