We once had a failed squeeze job because of a channel in the formation - long story short, we cemented about 1000' in the casing... We had to get one of these bits and a motor - the drilling bit company said, "once you make up that bit and run it - it is yours". We said "we need to drill out the cement, we are not worried about the cost" - well come time to sign the ticket... But now I see and appreciate why these bits are the best for drilling any kind of medium. Ulterra #1
I wonder if the process inside the furnace actually involves heat treatment of a machined piece or foundry of the metal base carrying the bit theets. I would suspect that a casted base piece would be fragile and thus not having enough strenght
they always heat treated the parts after casting in the furnaces for roller cone bit parts for PDC bits ( fixed cutter) they never heat treated specifically due to tungsten being quite strong
@@xKGMx- I'm an aerospace guy, but I heard something about drilling bits for the petroleum engineering sector that compared them with some advanced metallurgy and technologies we typically only see in aero. Thanks for the response!
That whole process looks fucked the way they do it, I didn't see not one quality guy there 😂 there just sending out thermal damaged bits with all those heat cycle processes back to back back but , I know this bit got cracks in it
Its drill bit that low production volume and doesnt have to highest tolerance like piston engine. Also drill bit has many various kind pattern bit depends models and not practical set up cnc for evey bit
I used to furnace, grind, blast and do the mold assembly of fixed cutter bits, it was a very interesting job
Please send me your contact info
We once had a failed squeeze job because of a channel in the formation - long story short, we cemented about 1000' in the casing... We had to get one of these bits and a motor - the drilling bit company said, "once you make up that bit and run it - it is yours". We said "we need to drill out the cement, we are not worried about the cost" - well come time to sign the ticket...
But now I see and appreciate why these bits are the best for drilling any kind of medium. Ulterra #1
Great production value
excellent video.
wow what a great tools I really wanna thank you for all your
hard work
Pretty Cool Video!
Go Team Ulterra!
The mechanism
Why can’t perishable drill bits be deployed in series to eliminate tripping operation and reduce total time for drilling ?
el desbaste por electrolicis cuanto amperios cunsume y de cuantos voltios es su rectificador?
Mechanism
thanks
Amazing video! Thank u for excellent explanation!
it looks good. Please keep the contact
That was a dope vid
Saludos desde Chile .
Rock-N-Roll
Super engineering
Cost
I wonder if the process inside the furnace actually involves heat treatment of a machined piece or foundry of the metal base carrying the bit theets. I would suspect that a casted base piece would be fragile and thus not having enough strenght
they always heat treated the parts after casting in the furnaces for roller cone bit parts for PDC bits ( fixed cutter) they never heat treated specifically due to tungsten being quite strong
@@grunge-mb9sb How do these compare with Halliburton bits?
@@LRRPFco52 I build bits at Halliburton and watching this video our bits are 1000x better lol
@@xKGMx- I'm an aerospace guy, but I heard something about drilling bits for the petroleum engineering sector that compared them with some advanced metallurgy and technologies we typically only see in aero. Thanks for the response!
$40,000-$60,000 each tricone bit?
wow nice video, to brief
what is 4" drill bit price in india.
WhatsApp008615130758692
Interesting
good
Cool
j'adore c' métier 'moi je suis HSE. le forage m' plais beaucoup '
There is no easy life for anyone, only the strong survive in this case.😀
Watching the process of brazing those cutters in, and i can see why they call you ult-terrible
That whole process looks fucked the way they do it, I didn't see not one quality guy there 😂 there just sending out thermal damaged bits with all those heat cycle processes back to back back but , I know this bit got cracks in it
our content is the same
32mm milga
Uterra rox
They designed it on a computer but then use a guy freehand with a grinder to finish it??? Seems extremely primitive manufacturing methods
Its drill bit that low production volume and doesnt have to highest tolerance like piston engine. Also drill bit has many various kind pattern bit depends models and not practical set up cnc for evey bit
Hell weve had ulteras out run Smith 50s.
Edit: HAAAAAAHA! WHAT KINDA PUFFNECK WEARS A JUMPSUIT
Mechanism
Mechanism