Problems Connected With The Recovery Of Petroleum From Unconsolidated Sands (c9a93095-9e12-4e1b-a1a5-14ce480d9d19)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William H. Kobbé
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
117 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1917

Abstract

THE CHAIRMAN (M. L. REQUA, San Francisco, Cal.).-We have had in California a great deal of trouble from the breaking. off and collapsing of well casings from shifting sand, and it is quite true with us as indicated in the paper, that no casing has been found sufficiently strong to withstand that. I know of wells in which casing that has not been in the hole over 2 or 3 days has collapsed and when that casing has, been pulled out it has been just as flat as your hand. I am also familiar with swelling bed rock in the gold drift mining ground of California. It does swell and keeps on swelling and never seems to stop. Just as long as tunnels are kept open in that kind of material there has to be a gang going through the tunnel constantly cutting out and easing up. They have put in timbers 24 in. in diameter in an effort to hold that kind of ground and it has always filled. The only way to succeed is to keep a gang of men busy all the time cutting out and easing down as it squeezes in. C. NARAMORE, Washington, D. C.-My experience has been very similar to yours in, the same field in the matter of breaking off of casing. I had charge of one well, in which I put in reënforced casing, anchored it in place and got 1 day's production, 150 bbl., out of it. The following morning my lease foreman telephoned that it had broken off. I thought at that time we would have more evidence, so I drove out to the well without ordering a new shoe joint. It had been customary to merely start from town with a new shoe joint, pull the pipe, take off the crooked bottom joint, start the casing back and sometimes never touch any iron (lost casing)- when redrilling the well. Where the flattened joints went
Citation

APA: William H. Kobbé  (1917)  Problems Connected With The Recovery Of Petroleum From Unconsolidated Sands (c9a93095-9e12-4e1b-a1a5-14ce480d9d19)

MLA: William H. Kobbé Problems Connected With The Recovery Of Petroleum From Unconsolidated Sands (c9a93095-9e12-4e1b-a1a5-14ce480d9d19). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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