Jump to content
  • Welcome!

    Register and log in easily with Twitter or Google accounts!

    Or simply create a new Huddle account. 

    Members receive fewer ads , access our dark theme, and the ability to join the discussion!

     

Question for the Oil Rig Folks


Mother Grabber

Recommended Posts

I am writing a training course about monitoring streaming data.  Our example is an oil rig with the data points (including one line of data):

ResourceID,Date,Time,HZ,Displace,Flow,SedimentPPM,PressureLbs,ChlorinePPM
COHUTTA,3/10/14,1:01,10.27,1.73,881,1.56,85,1.94

My question is about use cases around the things in the data set:

What do these different data points mean? I assume flow is measuring flow rate of oil, or that Chlorine is measuring the amount of chlorine in the water coolant system, but I can't say for certain.

What will you do with these data points, what are the business uses of this data, what is interesting about this data?

Which data points will be used to send up a warning, and what will fail based on the data points?

The course is end to end, from define the data set/design the data pipeline, to build a visualization dashboard and monitor the data in real time, and we need to make sure our story is accurate.

Thanks very much!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's not an oil rig. This looks like its from coil tubing.

Let's rearrange this for easier reading:

Quote

 

ResourceID: COHUTTA

Date: 3/10/14

Time: 1:01

HZ: 10.27

Displace: 1.73

Flow: 881

SedimentPPM: 1.56

PressureLbs: 85

ChlorinePPM: 1.94

 

Resource ID is going to be the well name. It's not a name from any area I work in but normally it's a name followed by numbers. Like Riteaway 32J-403 each company has their own meaning for the numbers I know in this one the J is a layer of oil in the Niobrara. Without knowing the context the Hz could mean a lot of things. It could be the reflection seismology or the souring of the reservoir. Displace makes it look like its a water-drive reservoir. Oil floats on water, use the water to push oil to the well bore. Flow is going to be how much oil/water/kcl is going in this case it'll be 881 barrels per hour or 616 gallons per minute. Because it's a coil tubing rig it's recirculating with very little being wasted. Sediment parts per million is something the crew's on the ground find helpful if it gets too high sand will blow out their choke and the pressure from the well could cause serious problems. Pressure pounds is easy basically psi now I'm not sure if that's real number, 850, or 8500. Very rarely does anything go about 12,000 psi. Chlorine parts per million is just how much chlorine is flowing through that mixture of water, sand, and oil. 

loadBinary.gif

 

Need anymore "stories" just give me a yell. I'll look up more information to be prepared.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Jangler said:

it's fracking up the Earth.

 

I don't necessarily believe that, just going with the pun flow.

It is fracturing rock to leave hairline cracks held open by grains of sand. The real issue, the one that we're trying to get a head of before Colorado or the Feds smack our hands, is treating wastewater to be reused. It's about $2 a barrel to treat which is a small price to pay to keep people from getting pissed over earthquakes. The quakes come from sending the wastewater deep underground.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...
On 6/14/2016 at 9:09 PM, Mother Grabber said:

let it flow...at a rate of 950 barrels/hr

Maybe after they drill or dissolve the last plug. But it only keeps that rate for 2-3 days then it settles. Unless someone fracs too close to your well and all hell breaks loose.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • PMH4OWPW7JD2TDGWZKTOYL2T3E.jpg

  • Topics

  • Posts

    • I have been on the Bech bandwagon since well before the SR Bowl.  Hoping that he would stay a hidden gem and we'd be smart enough to grab him late.  I just don't think Morgan cares as much about WR as we do
    • No one had posted in a month.  I don't think any of us were watching
    • Here is how this draft could get mind-blowingly complicated--Interesting comment about Jags floating the Jeanty idea to lure Chicago into a trade.  I have to think Ben Johnson is going to duplicate in many ways the success he had in Detroit, and I have to think their free agency was following the blueprint Carolina designed last year (one that the Saints designed before them with Brees) and they upgraded all of their interior linemen.  RT in Chicago is set; Johnson loves RT Darnell Wright.  However, at LT, Braxton Jones is coming off a December injury and is considered to be in a competition for the position this year by at least a few fans on the Bears Wire.  His PFF score, however, was solid, posting an 80+ score in pass protection and 70+ score in run blocking.  He is in his prime.  However, in some of their fan mocks, the Bears are taking a LT.  I thought they needed an Edge to play 4-3 strong side across from Sweat, but they signed Odeyingbo to a pretty big contract in March. For the Bears, in my view, it comes down to TE or Running Back. Kmet is their #1 TE and he had 474 yards in that role, which was 25th in the NFL last season for TEs.  Adding Warren would help upgrade the TE spot and give them the ability to add around an estimated 80 yards of production per game.  The Bears have D'Andre Swift at RB, but could use a RB to pair with him for a desired 2 RB attack.  So if I am Da Bears, I stay at 10 and take Warren.  If the Jags want to move on from Etienne, then they will take Jeanty. I think, if I were the Jags (with 10 picks this year) I would take Mason Graham and not try to get an 11th pick.  It is a need position, and it seems to me the only reason they are toying with the idea of moving on from Etienne is because Jeanty is on the board.  That, to me, would be a luxury pick. New GM, I think he does not get cute--they take Graham if they stay at 5.  I might say the Jags' biggest need is Corner.  #5 is too rich for Will Johnson, but remember, they have 10 picks.  could they move up with Cleveland and take Hunter, giving them a CB and WR threat?  To me, with the draft capital they have, that is the move they should make.  Cleveland then could move back to #5.  Remember, Nick Chubb is an aging (29) free agent coming off an injury--so he is gone.  With an additional second rounder, the Browns move back and take Jeanty to give Flacco a running game. The Jags pick is very interesting, but I would not be surprised to see them move up. 
×
×
  • Create New...