Ghiribizzo posted a photo:
The Galaxy II jack-up rig settles evenly in the water after a nail-biting time at an odd inclination whilst the legs were raised slowly until it floated.
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Ghiribizzo posted a photo:
The Galaxy II jack-up rig settles evenly in the water after a nail-biting time at an odd inclination whilst the legs were raised slowly until it floated.
Dave Triomphe posted a photo:
It was a 6.5 hour drive from our previous job to this one. Since we’d left Edmonton the morning before I’d slept about 2 hours (now some 30 hours prior) and at this point things had already started going bad. When I get to a well site I need to go find the geologists trailer and get a bunch of data off of him. The first problem is he was missing in action. I knocked on a few wrong doors, woke up a few angry people at 4:00 am but eventually found the guy and go figure, he barely speaks english. He tells me a bunch of the data I need to know, only to find out at the end of the job after I’d printed everything out and sent it in that it was wrong. Normal wells are drilled straight up and down and this one was at a 45* angle meaning I had twice the work that needed to get done and every half an hour the geologist would come into my truck "Can I have my prints?" with my reply "My tools aren’t at surface yet, I havn’t finished logging let alone all the processing required. I’ll get them too you as quick as I can". Let’s just say by the end of the job I was a little less than friendly each time he came into my truck. The worst part of the entire job was a deviation survey that I had to enter into my computer at the beginning of the job that the geologist gave me had 1 line of bad data in it making half of my prints wrong and he was blaming it all on me. It took the next 4 days to reprocess all the data the way they wanted it and so far goes down as the worst job I’ve ever been on.
thebigmonkey posted a photo:
John Watts-Robertson posted a photo:
Statue of an american WWII oil worker at the former Eakring, Nottinghamshire site.
Work has begun at the old site by EGDON RESOURCES to determine if there are sufficient oil reserves to justify a major drilling programme. The UK’s first commercial oil well was drilled at Eakring,(between Newark and Ollerton), in 1939 and fuel from Dukes Wood powered tanks taking part in the WWII D-Day landings. The site produced 47 million barrels of oil until 1964 and was instrumental in the discovery of oil and gas in the North Sea-trained crew from Eakring transferred to the rigs at sea. The exploration will take place to a depth of around 800 metres. Photo © 2010, John Robertson, www.jr-photos.com 20-01-2010…Photo WORLD COPYRIGHT© John Robertson 2010, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.John Robertson- Telephone 07850 931219 or e-mail john@jr-photos.comNo useage without permission.COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT WILL RESULT IN LEGAL ACTION.Un-watermarked high res file can be purchased via www.jr-photos.com</a</a
foraje puturi posted a photo:
Instalatie de foraj orizontal subtraversare cu diametru mare 400 pana la 800 mm. Mai multe pe www.ondrill.ro.
cell_therapy posted a photo:
I personally like this picture, but I hated the amount of black smoke their operation was causing.
Salim Al-Harthy posted a photo:
Drilling Rig In Hotta
One of the many Drilling rigs in Saudi Arabia. This was taken in Hotta, 300KM from Riyadh. Saudi Arabia is the biggest oil producing country. This particular rig is the heavy type capable of drilling very deep for the more challenging oil or gas discoveries
tudedude posted a photo:
foraje posterous
foraje mare adancime.
Sape de foraj
Procese pentru stoparea forajelor la Rosia Montana si
Bucium
STUDII DE TEREN NECESARE PROIECTĂRII DEPOZITELOR DE
DEŞEURI MENAJERE
taxe_urbanism.pdf (obiect application/pdf).
Taxa pentru eliberarea autorizaţiei de foraje sau excavări