Wow, @coachgeo...if you really want it you can make it happen. 2-300 gallons isn't much, even if you have to haul it in on bike, ATV or mule. You can put 10 gallons on your back in a bag and hike it 20 times. You can put 50 gallons in a $10 recycled barrel and drive it in with a buddy's truck or Subaru. Build a scrap wood cart and hitch it to a mule. It's doable if you really want it.
Where in OK are you? Im in north TX and will have to drill my own well. NO money and no water to assist with the drilling process with in miles of my land. Need more detail on what tip of the ramming pipe looks like, etc. What do you think about putting a weight on top of pipe to assist in the ramming ?
@coachgeo I'm in NW Arkansas just across the border from OK. WFA is located in San Angelo, TX though. You'll need at least 150-200 gals. of water to drill this way, so you'd have to haul it in. Go the the Water for All website to get more details about the drilling process and equipment. Adding weight is not necessary usually, although the steel pipe at the bottom can be lengthened if necessary. The process can be motorized.
@approtechie grrrrrrrr can't win for loosing... I got no way to haul water out there. Im amazed at all the methods of drilling for a water well where you need water to make it work. If I had water... I wouldn't need a well.
@coachgeo I hear you! It's like priming the pump before you can get any water out. At least once you've done it you don't have to do it again. You might look at pounding a well - very slow and doesn't like rocks, but no water required. Google it and see what you might come up with.
@approtechie .... pounding a well or similar is what i think I will have to do. Thought at the moment is to do this just to get to a water table.. then use this as the water source for digging a deeper well using one of the other sources near by. use some of the junk pulled up from new well then then fill the first one with?
En realidad, no es mi equipo, es de Terry Waller de WFA Intl. quien nos dio entrenamiento en el uso de su método. Pero le puede afirmar que sí, puede pasar por grava pequeña, y hasta por zonas de roca como esquisto que no es tan dura. ¡Terry ha perforado hasta una profundidad de más de 100 metros en Bolivia!
Wow, @coachgeo...if you really want it you can make it happen. 2-300 gallons isn't much, even if you have to haul it in on bike, ATV or mule. You can put 10 gallons on your back in a bag and hike it 20 times. You can put 50 gallons in a $10 recycled barrel and drive it in with a buddy's truck or Subaru. Build a scrap wood cart and hitch it to a mule. It's doable if you really want it.
urbanpatchwork 6 months ago
@urbanpatchwork nice attitude, I am appalled at his "its too hard, im giving up" attitude
chunkyfecalbreakfast 4 months ago
Comment removed
urbanpatchwork 6 months ago
I believe they've gone over 200' deep in soil that's easy to drill.
approtechie 7 months ago
@approtechie drop pole drilling is dry but
datzfast 1 month ago
how deep can you go with this method?
thepropertystore1 7 months ago
Where in OK are you? Im in north TX and will have to drill my own well. NO money and no water to assist with the drilling process with in miles of my land. Need more detail on what tip of the ramming pipe looks like, etc. What do you think about putting a weight on top of pipe to assist in the ramming ?
coachgeo 1 year ago
@coachgeo I'm in NW Arkansas just across the border from OK. WFA is located in San Angelo, TX though. You'll need at least 150-200 gals. of water to drill this way, so you'd have to haul it in. Go the the Water for All website to get more details about the drilling process and equipment. Adding weight is not necessary usually, although the steel pipe at the bottom can be lengthened if necessary. The process can be motorized.
approtechie 1 year ago
@approtechie grrrrrrrr can't win for loosing... I got no way to haul water out there. Im amazed at all the methods of drilling for a water well where you need water to make it work. If I had water... I wouldn't need a well.
coachgeo 1 year ago
@coachgeo I hear you! It's like priming the pump before you can get any water out. At least once you've done it you don't have to do it again. You might look at pounding a well - very slow and doesn't like rocks, but no water required. Google it and see what you might come up with.
approtechie 1 year ago
@approtechie .... pounding a well or similar is what i think I will have to do. Thought at the moment is to do this just to get to a water table.. then use this as the water source for digging a deeper well using one of the other sources near by. use some of the junk pulled up from new well then then fill the first one with?
coachgeo 1 year ago
@coachgeo Well, pipe it in from the city.
billwho62 2 months ago
White pants, didn't think this through too well did y'all.
Blackoutx86 1 year ago
Hi, Great video. Thanks.
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eddieconnors 1 year ago
Me gusta su equipo de perforacion, ya que no requiere de una bomba de lodo.
Pero en el caso de encontrarse con grava (4 - 5 mm de diametro) el equipo sigue siendo eficiente, o solo este equipo es para zonas de tierra.
gfervi 2 years ago
En realidad, no es mi equipo, es de Terry Waller de WFA Intl. quien nos dio entrenamiento en el uso de su método. Pero le puede afirmar que sí, puede pasar por grava pequeña, y hasta por zonas de roca como esquisto que no es tan dura. ¡Terry ha perforado hasta una profundidad de más de 100 metros en Bolivia!
approtechie 2 years ago