Economical Selection Of Sucker Rods - Reprinted From Transactions American Institute Of Mining And Metallurgical Engineers, Volume 114 (1936).

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Blaine B. Wescott C. Norman Bowers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
664 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1935

Abstract

MARKED improvement in the serviceability of sucker rods has been effected in the last two years, partly because of the insistent necessity for greater economy in the operating costs of crude oil production growing out of the general industrial depression and partly because many of the recently developed fields have imposed more severe operating conditions upon both surface and underground equipment. The latter is particularly true of Kansas, where practically all of the oil produced. is associated with damaging amounts of hydrogen sulfide brine and where the method of establishing potential production demands equipment capable of being operated at maximum capacity without interruptions. The decline of flush production in the Oklahoma City field created new problems in deep-well pumping on a scale heretofore unequaled and the increased proportion of water it has been necessary to produce in the fields of the Greater Seminole area presented conditions that were acutely in need of betterment. The problem in the latter fields was complicated by the shift towards sulfide characteristics, which accompanied water encroachment, and it is probably true that nowhere, at the present time, are pump¬ing conditions generally as severe as in this territory. The Mid-Continent district, therefore, has become the proving ground for the numerous materials that have been proposed for sucker-rod fabrication. The information that ultimately will be obtained from an unprecedented amount of field experimentation will pay ample dividends when the decline of East Texas increases the demand for the vast reserves of sour crude in West Texas. It is a rare occurrence in industry that the use of such a simple piece of equipment as a sucker rod presents so complicated a problem for solution. As proof of this, it is only necessary to consider the numerous types of sucker rods on .the market at the present time and contrast this condition with that of less than four years ago, when it was the common aim of manufacturers to develop a single sucker rod for all conditions of
Citation

APA: Blaine B. Wescott C. Norman Bowers  (1935)  Economical Selection Of Sucker Rods - Reprinted From Transactions American Institute Of Mining And Metallurgical Engineers, Volume 114 (1936).

MLA: Blaine B. Wescott C. Norman Bowers Economical Selection Of Sucker Rods - Reprinted From Transactions American Institute Of Mining And Metallurgical Engineers, Volume 114 (1936).. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1935.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account