Diamondback water well drill rig: "More than lives up to its billing"
August 4, 2020
For Moore, the main attraction was the rig’s water well drilling capabilities at its affordable price-point. Residential wells drilled with down-the-hole (DTH) tools in the area’s Columbia Basalt formation account for 95 percent of M-K calls.
The Diamondback feed travels at 200 feet (60 m) per minute, about 40 feet (12.2 m) per minute faster than a TH60. The DB40 has double the travel rate of their previous rig, Moore said.
In June 2018, M-K was finishing its 13th well, not long after delivery and commissioning. They drilled into the formation with a 6-inch, down-the-hole hammer, and 6-inch, DTH carbide button bit after passing through 10 feet of fine clay topsoil.
Moore found the aquifer at 635 feet. He enlarged the hole with a hole opener to set 3 feet of 8-inch-diameter conductor. He cased the well to 100 feet, a state requirement, with 6 ⅝ inch-diameter, ¼ inch-wall, steel casing in an 8-inch hole drilled with an 8-inch tricone. He continued the well’s 6-inch hole to a total depth of 660 feet, producing at least 20 GPM. “This is a good well. We usually shoot for 15 or better up here,” he said. “We’ve already been to 1,100 feet with this rig, and I know we can go even deeper,” Moore said.
Cutting samples had come up soft in a couple places. Moore made the call to line this hole with 4 ½-inch PVC to prevent any sloughing, perforating the bottom 40 feet.
The rate at which M-K trips out with the Diamondback keeps M-K’s helper Coe busy. They used the rig’s heavy-duty, 18,000-pound winch to pull up the pipe. The DB series offers 18,000- and 30,000-pound winch options for the deep hole version. With the Diamondback driller’s controls, Moore is able to both extend the table fork into place holding the pipe downhole as well as control the hydraulic break out wrench. Once the pipe is broken loose, the helper swings in the optional pipe spinner to hydraulically spin off the pipe in a matter of seconds, saving both time and effort on each joint. Nearly 700 feet of pipe was racked in record time for M-K. Moore pulled out the conductor and sealed the top 20 feet of casing with bentonite clay.
"The Epiroc DB40 has more than lived up to its billing."
The Diamondback has helped M-K drilling keep up with their busy schedule. “We’re swamped right now. We have plenty of work”, Moore says. The Diamondback has now helped M-K drilling complete 60 wells. Moore is pleased with its performance stating, “It has more than lived up to its billing.”