wells get poisoned by animals, underground leaks of metal etc-wells DO go dry & need RAIN -wells not excuse to keep cut forests in north amer-which causes droughts in africa etc-women of all sides unite for no war WOMENS NATION-
women of all sides unite for nowar WOMENS NATION- HIC INDIA 2005- recommended that religious excess lands be transferred to womens FARM collectives-to prevent drugs/alcohol-sex assauls/marital prostitution/rape of women/children/overpopulation/forced sex-pregnancies-4jobs,homes,MALNUTRITION/(deforestation thru bookmaking nowater)-give EQUALITY LANDS notcharities(profits for rich)-see iroquois birth control plants
haha i got to work at night the dayshift had the rig main line tangled on the spool and the water all frozen in the lines. the hotsy stopped and we had cold water needless to say by 5 am the 4 of us had the rig back spinnin and unthawed .
I am not sure why my drilling contractor did that. However, I do remember him hitting water at a shallower depth, where it ran clear for a while, then turned muddy. This forced us to drill deeper into gravel, and he didn't want to cut the casing prematurely in case we had to drill even deeper. By the way, we drilled through 60 feet of permafrost, then about 130 something feet of mud, then finally hit gravel at 226 feet, and drilled to a final depth of 238 feet.
o, ok, ive actually did that before, just not so high in the air. yea, we dont have to deal with the permafrost thankfully. but we do have some big sand hills, flint rock too. I couldnt imagine working in extremem cold, but i def do have to work in extreme heat. being in florida in all.
no chance u need to case the B.H through soft stuff and then use a down the hole hammer to break the rock even conventional drilling is hard to get past 100feet geobore s is quick but diamiter is a bit big if rock is deep in your area its possable you could drill shell and auger but for good water u want to get to at least the 3rd strike.but air rotary with a good tungsten carbite dth hammer is prob the most commonly used method
Charters
siwelniffirg 1 month ago
Water Crisis - A Solution.wmv
garyshouse305 3 months ago
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urbancityusa 5 months ago
wells get poisoned by animals, underground leaks of metal etc-wells DO go dry & need RAIN -wells not excuse to keep cut forests in north amer-which causes droughts in africa etc-women of all sides unite for no war WOMENS NATION-
lmollot 9 months ago
@lmollot tell us how you get watr in rural area? where oned by someone? thanks that would save us a hell of a money all over the world.
maxinpains 8 months ago
women of all sides unite for nowar WOMENS NATION- HIC INDIA 2005- recommended that religious excess lands be transferred to womens FARM collectives-to prevent drugs/alcohol-sex assauls/marital prostitution/rape of women/children/overpopulation/forced sex-pregnancies-4jobs,homes,MALNUTRITION/(deforestation thru bookmaking nowater)-give EQUALITY LANDS notcharities(profits for rich)-see iroquois birth control plants
lmollot 9 months ago
I always wondered how they did that
jtschid0910 2 years ago
haha i got to work at night the dayshift had the rig main line tangled on the spool and the water all frozen in the lines. the hotsy stopped and we had cold water needless to say by 5 am the 4 of us had the rig back spinnin and unthawed .
fourtwentyl8er 2 years ago
Where is this, and how much did it cost you?
dtmbcorp 2 years ago
Hey why were u airing it off from so high up the derrick? just wondering, im a driller in central florida.
pokahoe 3 years ago
I am not sure why my drilling contractor did that. However, I do remember him hitting water at a shallower depth, where it ran clear for a while, then turned muddy. This forced us to drill deeper into gravel, and he didn't want to cut the casing prematurely in case we had to drill even deeper. By the way, we drilled through 60 feet of permafrost, then about 130 something feet of mud, then finally hit gravel at 226 feet, and drilled to a final depth of 238 feet.
dawelch69 3 years ago
o, ok, ive actually did that before, just not so high in the air. yea, we dont have to deal with the permafrost thankfully. but we do have some big sand hills, flint rock too. I couldnt imagine working in extremem cold, but i def do have to work in extreme heat. being in florida in all.
pokahoe 3 years ago
@pokahoe
murtadashabo 1 year ago
no chance u need to case the B.H through soft stuff and then use a down the hole hammer to break the rock even conventional drilling is hard to get past 100feet geobore s is quick but diamiter is a bit big if rock is deep in your area its possable you could drill shell and auger but for good water u want to get to at least the 3rd strike.but air rotary with a good tungsten carbite dth hammer is prob the most commonly used method
puntosteve 3 years ago
Could something this long be dug by using hand methods?
Bigjohnnywad 4 years ago
That is something that I'd like to know. Because I want to hand drill a well in my backyard.
LeoBurns728 3 years ago