The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode featuring Jeremy Skillington, CEO of Poolbeg Pharma has just been released. Listen here.
Free Air – is often a “pocket” of air trapped in part of the system such as a cylinder, hydraulic conductor or in a hydraulic pump. Free air can usually be minimized by pre-filling and bleeding a hydraulic system prior to start-up.
Service Agreements
Atlas Copco provides several types of service agreements to meet
operational requirements and to secure your productivity.
Variable price repairs – Service when you need it
Fixed price repairs – Service with controlled cost
Equipment Audit – Scheduled equipment quality control
Preventive Maintenance Programs – Peace of mind and
focus on core business
An integral part of the drilling process, iron roughnecks connect and disconnect drill pipe. Whether pipe is being fed into the wellbore or it is being taken out, the iron roughneck uses a rotary table and torque wrench(es) to make up or break down pipe.
What was once an extremely dangerous process on the rig floor has now become almost completely automated in most drilling situations. Iron roughnecks of today are fed pipe mechanically, and drillers are relatively removed from the process, many times remotely handling drilling operations from an automated drillers cabin, increasing safety and efficiency on the rig. Despite drill pipe automation, men and women who work on the rig (usually beginners) are still coined "roughnecks," named after the process of linking drill pipe together.
Iron roughnecks clamp the bottom pipe, providing torque, while a spinning or rotary wrench turns the top pipe. Thirty-foot sections of drill pipe have one female end (or tool joint) with inside threads, or a "box," and one male tool joint with outside threads, or a "pin." Pipe is strung together by twisting the box and pin pieces together.
When a drill bit needs replacement or the well has been completed, pipe is simply turned the other way to break it down.
goldgirl nothing added up if i could see the full book i maybe able to see may be . it tried getting throw the 200d twice and then started dropping . but the buying and sells wherevery of sink. like it was manipulate the prices. so first thing a gap . chesh say non then i found the open gap. which is why im thinking they tried to fill it and failed. . but that is totally my opinion. but thats a big order with some one they would not want to **** off . all im saying be careful take the stop losses out. . fingers on buy if you want in . fingers on sell . if you want out . dont let then taje them to fill orders
Tro it is hard to tell. Me and chesh was looking at back filling . Thinking thats why they dropped the bid. So they did exactly what we thought they would do rise it in to the close. They did and soon as they did To sell . If they are sells . Dropped it again then filled the gap . Just made no sense to me but then hold on the gap and order filling. Looks like it to me but that just my opinion. But i do think tree shake . They failed .
Im going to take a guess here . There was a gap from open that needed filling and a 1m order from the morning . Any one else got a idea Chesh ? That 1m was not far of that resistance. If im right this has been set up for a blue 6.60 range tomorrow.