Papers - Drilling Muds - Drilling Mud Practice in the Ventura Avenue Field (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. W. Hertal E. W. Edson
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
445 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

In some fields the problem of mud fluid is simple and easy of solution. But in the Ventura Avenue field the acquisition and disposal of good drilling mud is not the least of the problems that confront the operator. In fact, mud fluid in the Ventura Avenue field is a very important factor in the drilling of the wells. It is quite probable that many of the factors affecting mud in this field will not be found in most of the fields with which the reader is familiar. However, in the fields where the mud fluid causes no apparent problem it is probable that some of the points brought out in this paper could be used to economic advantage. In fields where caving and squeezing formations and high gas pressures are present, as in the Ventura Avenue field, it is believed that application of methods outlined will be of great assistance in drilling wells. On account of the sandy nature of the formation and the lack of suitable shale bodies in the strata drilled through in the Ventura Avenue field, the wells make practically no mud during drilling. It is necessary therefore to supply drilling mud to the wells that will carry the drill cuttings to the surface, and also will " wall up" the drill hole and prevent the sandy formations from caving. Mixing and Handling Mud Fluid The clay used to make the mud fluid is obtained from a shale stratum in the upper Pico (Plioccne) formation found about a mile on either side of the field. Since high gas pressures and caving formations were first encountered in the Ventura Avenue field and mud fluid was needed to combat them, the mixing of this mud fluid has gone through a process of evolution. First, the clay was mined and hauled to the derrick, where it was shoveled into the well and left for the churning action of the bit to mix into a mud in the hole. The next move was the construction of a mixer to mix the clay to a mud fluid which was pumped into the well. These mixing
Citation

APA: F. W. Hertal E. W. Edson  (1930)  Papers - Drilling Muds - Drilling Mud Practice in the Ventura Avenue Field (With Discussion)

MLA: F. W. Hertal E. W. Edson Papers - Drilling Muds - Drilling Mud Practice in the Ventura Avenue Field (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1930.

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