One of the workers from the Sanor well was at the Subway in Westville and he said that they are done drilling the well. He didn't know for sure where the rig was headed next but he did say that it was within 10 miles of the Sanor well.
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Those 4200 gallon units are straight trucks-correct? I just figured with that kind of volume required, they would use semi tankers that are usually in the 7-9000 gallon range. The small tanks seem a less efficient way to move that much water. Are there some load limits on roads/bridges in the area that require the smaller tankers?
Finnbear,
Yes, the 4,600 gallon Water Trucks are "straight" trucks. Infinity finally got some of those 8,500 (+/-) gallon Tractor / Trailer types going, too.
Pads are being completed much faster than drilling & fracking is occuring. Not only are they short on Drilling Rigs it appears they are short on Water Trucks, too.
Anyone have an idea when the Sanor well will go into production?....
I believe it is in production now, that had put the pump jack on over a month ago. It has been pumping away and trucks seem to be hauling out around 2-3am, weather there hauling brine, or oil. IDK
Tacoma,
Is there a pipeline to take away the Natural Gas?
odnr website hasn't updated anything in weeks...still says completed and fraced, but not 'producing'...
Here are the current Google earth views, and an up close of the pump jack that's been running. Its hard to tell if they possible tapped in to a gas line up front by the clinton well? further east like 1/4 I know Columbia gas has a transmission line. I cant tell whats north of the pad and that's where they dug and brought a line upfront to that single white tank and in that area is fence off with multiple separators.
tacoma,
Does the need for a pump jack indicate that the amount of gas is low and the amount of oils / liquids is high? And possibly the pressure is low.
If there was a huge amount of gas, under high pressure then there would be no need for the pump jack, correct?
That's usually correct. The structure in Columbiana is thought to be evenly pressured and not over pressured. This sometimes means pump jacks are needed. It can also indicate that the frack did not produce the necessary fissures to pull the liquids through the rock, i.e. lower permeability. These wells are not all going to behave the same way. Some will be in better shape perm-wise than others.
Marcus,
What affects the pressure ???
1) Depth
2) Temperature
3) The total amount of gas actually created
4) The success of the fracking techique
5) Permiabilty and other geological issues
Will wells with Pump Jacks be less profitable since they will not have the millons of cubic feet of natural gas gushing out daily?
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