He can turn a new shaft, wire a 40,000 volt transformer, build a hydraulic press, overhaul an injection pump, and a dozen other things, but a GoPro baffles him. All is right with the world.
The reason your video files get corrupted is due to the effects of Biden radiation. A dumbing down of intellectual intelligence transmission. For right now, just use the bull headed approach of moving forward with shear determination. Lol
Coming from mining and general heavy industry, not oil industry--I can imagine oil may flow into well area from surroundings "indefinitely", under some circumstances. I'm *impressed* by this old setup.
Hell yeah Zack! This is just what I needed right now. Always nice to watch you work on this older equipment and explain to us how it works. It's definitely relaxing for me anyways!
Another most excellent video! Two friendly comments: 1.) Thank you so much by not boring us with endless video facing off the work (which you didn't do anyways). 2.) Next time you are at the swap meet, there's always that guy selling assorted wrenches for two bucks each. Buy some dedicated wrenches for that lathe!
Your point #1... Exactly! That shit drives me crazy. "Regular" machinists going through the motions of stuff that is absolutely not necissary. And going for that .0001" when .001" or .01" is all that's necissary.
There is no better anywhere than Texas Patch Engineering !! Thanks for the update ... and you stay in touch and we will, too ... Just keep on pumping that Texas Crude !!
Back in the day, I would align the belt sheaves with a long 1/2" or 3/4" fiberglass rod laid across the grooves in both sheave wheels for good quick belt alignment. I keep the rods under the seat of the service truck. I enjoy your video much!
Thanks for keeping this piece of history working, and showing your machining skills as well. Here in Western Pa you still see some old wells randomly appearing on the hillsides of a pasture with big pvc barrel hooked up for anything that may get pumped out. Other times if youre just driving through the backwoods you may find a derelict well mostly hidden in the trees - covered in rust and moss. I also remember when I went camping to Wyoming for a few weeks back in 2008; how on the drive there I would see some of these on the plains working in rhythm .... up and down up and down. It sticks in my mind because I wasnt in a rush and wasnt driving on the interstate at the time; so I had pulled off to the side of the road to check my maps and have a quick lunch. One side of the road had this massive farm field... no idea any more if it was corn or wheat; and on the other was just regular plains with the wells.
Awesome job, Zach!! Love the old equipment and to see someone keeping it running and producing... Not just scrapped or sitting in a museum.. Wish I had that skill and life... Look forward to seeing future progress in your fields
I can see where the machining tools and the knowledge to operate them would be essential to running an operation like yours. I would think your long term exit plans would include finding the next generation operator who can multi-craft and is hands-on. Outstanding video!
I'm an old guy worked heavy equipment for around 45 years . Looks to me this guy could build anything ,repair anything ,keep it running!!!!! Great job on that shaft!!!!!
All that machine work you did was pretty darn Amazing to watch Zach. Funny how some of the oldest tools in the shop tend to be the best. Great work sure enjoy your content
This is the only guy I have ever subscribed to, he's not fake like other shows, he does it his way and to bad if you don't like the way he does it, not trying to impress the arm chair oil men out there
You inspired me to get an oil field job up here in canada. Am a painter by trade, so i got a coatings job on the new LNG plant that canadas building up north! Not quite the same as what you do but excited to get my foot in the door.
Thank you for these videos! I was always fascinated by the old oil pumps in southern Ohio and always wondered what was inside. Now i know. Thanks! Please keep up the great videos. I do a lot of the same things you're doing. 😀
Nice to see ya saving big bucks doing your own machining. That's got to save absurd money and time besides getting exactly what you want. Knurling a shaft is an old timey repair so it may have been done long ago. It seems odd for an old US manufacturer to knurl an undersized part (though it lasted many decades) when it's so quick to machine another simple shaft like that one. Knurling was also a common way to make piston skirts a closer fit in worn cylinder bores and to make stock OD valve guides fit a loose guide hole in an engine cylinder head. (Do not confuse that with the much more common knurling the INSIDE of valve guide.) Knurling a bushing can improve a press fit too , like the common cheap spacer bushings pressed into riding mower idler and tension pulleys.
Zach, if you had been listening…, I was yelling at you even, that the measurement was 14.5inches…, hahaha..! Excellent video, I don’t know “jack” about machining, but watch many channels here with that content, I love your step by step narration(s), and description(s). Thank you sir.
Zach, I’ve been watching your videos for years. I know it’s a pain in the ass to make these videos when you’re busy but thank you so much!! I think you’re the fucking man.
I worked at a Oilfield Pipe & Supply in the early 80's and we put jackshafts on many single reduction pumping units (it was hard at the time to get any pumping units) We used I beam and pillow block bearings. I wonder now how long any of them lasted.
I worked at a sawmill for 8 years and have taken out of the bolts from a split bushing and used them to pull out the core ; it made life much more easy to remove the pulley and replace it with one that might be better .
The label on your jeans looks like the labels on my Round House jeans. If so, in my experience, these are good jeans. Made in Shawnee, Oklahoma near where I grew up.
Hey Zach, glad to see your back out in the oil fields. I love that old dinosaur pumping unit! It amazes me how long those pools of oil can produce with proper maintenance. I take it that it produces sweet West Texas Intermediate. Hopefully you have a good producer there. It's great that you can do your own maintenance on these units. Your pumping experience is awesome, so glad to see you enjoy your work and sharing it with us RUclipsrs. I know I speak for all of us that we appreciate the time you take to put these exceptionally interesting videos together. Always a pleasure to see.
Zach, that’s some good machinist work in this video. As someone who went to school for it, sure there are some speeds and feeds that could be better but overall goes to show machining isn’t rocket science by any means
Go pro's are evil! (just like trucks) They are part of the master plan to see we stay aggravated. I don't make You Tube videos and they managed to aggregate me. Well the one I had did and it's gone now. Nevertheless great stuff as always Zack, looking forward to your next repair adventure.
The corrupted files could be magnetic disruption maybe the device or card is getting too close to metal, or an electric motor, or some type of coil. I really enjoy these videos!
I used to work at Lufkin Industries in the foundry - the castings should have a part number and date code on all of them (although I don';t know when they started doing that-it was at least an 80 year old system when I started there). The first 3 digits of the date code are the Julian day of the year it was made (e.g. Jan 1 is 1 and Dec 31st is 365); the 4th and 5th digits are the year (I could have that flipped though, it's been awhile since I was there). If there are more digits, that's the mold number for that day (e.g. they ran the pattern through the mold line more than once). Hope that helps!
that is one hell of a tail stock on that lathe. Damn son. I've seen bigger, but I don't know that I've seen bigger with that bed length. If I can find you a new wheel for your saddle would you be interested, on my dime.
Great video zack. I had a great time watching. Suggestion. Two damn cameras. So many other creaters complain about cam glitches.. they get different models and different memory cards just to capture the video. Two running the same vodeo😂
Gotta love straight forward equipment. As for gopros, everybody with gopros has trouble with them, for the price you'd think they'd be less buggy. If it was any other piece of equipment people would likely call them a knock off camera with a high price tag.
Nice video like usual. Thinking about it, there probably aren't too many different size bolts on each machine. I wonder if it would make any sense to buy a lot of cheap wrenches of the most commonly needed sizes, and leave a set of wrenches at every work site which includes all the wrenches needed for that machine.
I used celestial navigation to get a close approximation and then comparison of the mountains in the background I have calculated your location so I may drop by and help you with your technical difficulties in hopes that any faulty GoPro’s will be donated to my channel. I will be in the Long Beach, California area on the second Tuesday of next week…..hope to see you then. (Thanks for the content)
Harbor Frightening Tools to the rescue. Yes, they are disposables. Nice work Gasman, thanks for the oil!. You might find this funny, but I use 140wt gear oil on electric fan bushing and bearings. Shop sized or bathroom heater sized, they wont squeak for a VERY long time after a load of 140wt. 1921 - The first radio broadcast of a baseball world series game.
Hey Zach, Ive watched several of your videos and I'm curious does Texas not require some type of berm/containment area around a tank battery. Here in KY it is a requirement for us. Keep up the good work.
Good stuff. Wish you showed how you aligned the 2nd keyway cut to the first. Did you just put the key in and run a square off the table to the 1st keyway to make sure it was 90deg to the bed? Or something else fancy? Love these repairs!
Great Job. Sorry about the Lufkin Engineering being bought out by GE and they closed it down - I believe the shaft balancing unit is in operation. Foundry gone as is engineering. Sad but the drop in business forced the issue with aging owners. No one could buy it but GE stepped up then crashed them as GE got into trouble.
Another fix for open keyways is to use a gib-head key, with either single or double head. The double head gib key is installed on the sheave before the sheave is placed on the shaft, the single can be on the sheave or shaft just as long as you dould check the head is on the captured side. A bit surprised that you have that horizontal mill setup for an endmill rather than a slot cutter, which is where they really excell. I suppose it's what you had on hand, slot cutters will allow woodruff keys for the captive option.
Great video!! I've had the same issue with Gopro on my videos. I don't just hit the record button. I power and then start to record. When done with a clip, I hit the record button to stop recording and then power down the gopro. I just don't hit record again... I power cycle the go pro to record again. That stopped me loosing audio on video clips.
Great video. Love watching you work on the old equipment. Have to ask a question; how did you come to own the well/pump instead of the original producer?
Hey Zack, my name is Stewart. I'm in Naples, Florida and I'm using my wife's channel on RUclips here but very interesting. I have a curious question. How deep is that well? And you said it's 100 years old? And what state is it in? Are you in Texas, Oklahoma or Arkansas? Which are you in or Louisiana? But I think it's great all this stuff you're doing. I've always been fascinated by oil wells and I still can't really figure out the casing, the drill, rod and all that stuff but never mind. Have a great day!.
From a loggers perspective why don't you have a service truck, nothing fancy, mine is a one ton so over loaded as to be called "the road slug" and as l age l find the luxury of the small crane on the back very agreeable with my back!
I have thought about getting one. Most of my day is spent driving around leases checking stuff and gauging tanks. A service truck would beat you to death and not get around in the mud. Most of these videos happen after that without a trip back home to get another truck anyway.
I do love those shaft taper locks. Compared to fitting hubs on to straight shafts. Do you have a rough time between changing the bearings on your electric motors? How many years do motor bearing last in constant use 24/7 ?
Sometimes GoPro's will overheat and shut down if left in direct sun. Also I prefer using a usb cable vs removing the card, seems like less corruption issues that way.
He can turn a new shaft, wire a 40,000 volt transformer, build a hydraulic press, overhaul an injection pump, and a dozen other things, but a GoPro baffles him. All is right with the world.
Hahaha
😅
Hey sometimes electrodigicals are confusing
Just continues to show which kinds of skills actually matter in the real world
Yea, but I am in the same boat, if God had intended us to use electrons he never would of invented ballpene hammers and double jacks!!
Nice job, 102 years old well still producing, run by an antique pump jack. Way cool Zach, thanks again for sharing.
The reason your video files get corrupted is due to the effects of Biden radiation. A dumbing down of intellectual intelligence transmission. For right now, just use the bull headed approach of moving forward with shear determination. Lol
Coming from mining and general heavy industry, not oil industry--I can imagine oil may flow into well area from surroundings "indefinitely", under some circumstances.
I'm *impressed* by this old setup.
Hell yeah Zack! This is just what I needed right now. Always nice to watch you work on this older equipment and explain to us how it works. It's definitely relaxing for me anyways!
Hahaha thanks for watching
These unit repairs and work-overs are a favorite of mine. Thanks for bringing us along Zach. Best Wishes to You and Your Family.
Thanks.
Very neat to see a horizontal mill in action.
Zach, you are one heck of a machinist!
Thanks.
I was taught to use what I got. Cannot buy every tool, though I have tried. You are good enough at the machining.
Good for another hundred years!
Great video. Like seeing videos like this. My dad was a pumper for Chevron for 30 years. Watched him for years doing maintenance like this.👍
Thanks.
everyone knew yer dad was a pumper.
Another most excellent video! Two friendly comments: 1.) Thank you so much by not boring us with endless video facing off the work (which you didn't do anyways). 2.) Next time you are at the swap meet, there's always that guy selling assorted wrenches for two bucks each. Buy some dedicated wrenches for that lathe!
Your point #1... Exactly! That shit drives me crazy. "Regular" machinists going through the motions of stuff that is absolutely not necissary. And going for that .0001" when .001" or .01" is all that's necissary.
Thank you, Zach, for taking the time and trouble to share this. Really appreciate and enjoy it!
24:40 I like how it uses a ratchet strap for a belt.
Love watching you working the wells
There is no better anywhere than Texas Patch Engineering !! Thanks for the update ... and you stay in touch and we will, too ... Just keep on pumping that Texas Crude !!
Except for California Patch
Back in the day, I would align the belt sheaves with a long 1/2" or 3/4" fiberglass rod laid across the grooves in both sheave wheels for good quick belt alignment. I keep the rods under the seat of the service truck. I enjoy your video much!
Excellent repair! I enjoy your videos, in the field very much.
I really like your logic for just make a whole new shaft. No pun intended job WELL done.
bet you don't have trouble falling asleep at night .keep up the great work
Thanks for keeping this piece of history working, and showing your machining skills as well. Here in Western Pa you still see some old wells randomly appearing on the hillsides of a pasture with big pvc barrel hooked up for anything that may get pumped out. Other times if youre just driving through the backwoods you may find a derelict well mostly hidden in the trees - covered in rust and moss.
I also remember when I went camping to Wyoming for a few weeks back in 2008; how on the drive there I would see some of these on the plains working in rhythm .... up and down up and down. It sticks in my mind because I wasnt in a rush and wasnt driving on the interstate at the time; so I had pulled off to the side of the road to check my maps and have a quick lunch. One side of the road had this massive farm field... no idea any more if it was corn or wheat; and on the other was just regular plains with the wells.
Awesome job, Zach!! Love the old equipment and to see someone keeping it running and producing... Not just scrapped or sitting in a museum.. Wish I had that skill and life... Look forward to seeing future progress in your fields
Thanks!
I can see these making a comeback seeing how expensive new ones are.
This is what its about. Keeping them running. Stay safe my friend.
The oilfield maintenance and repair videos are my favorite. This one was especially good! 👍👍
Thanks.
I've worked on a bunch of old Hit & Miss well engines and stationary engines doing machining and restoration for guys, never a dull moment!!
Good job Zack, love your videos, and you say it how it is. I worked in the Oil Field for 40 years and know where you are coming from.
I can see where the machining tools and the knowledge to operate them would be essential to running an operation like yours. I would think your long term exit plans would include finding the next generation operator who can multi-craft and is hands-on.
Outstanding video!
Always happy to see a new video from you showing how things are done!
You got about as beautiful of a Feb day in OK you can get. Feels good to be out working in the sun. Love the machining skills!
When I’m notified of a new @TheZachLife video, immediately stop down to watch it. Thanks, Zach!
Hahaha thanks for watching.
Being a boiler maker down here in Australia it's nice to watch someone else do the work for a change. Yahoo buckeroo
Hahaha
I'm an old guy worked heavy equipment for around 45 years . Looks to me this guy could build anything ,repair anything ,keep it running!!!!! Great job on that shaft!!!!!
Thanks.
Watching you do your work is kool don't know why but is kool to see you do your thing. Thanks for the video
I love these videos! I have oil and grease for guts.
Thanks for the quick lesson, nice t/o see you use your space and beautiful antique tools. Cheers from Calgary, Canada.
All that machine work you did was pretty darn Amazing to watch Zach.
Funny how some of the oldest tools in the shop tend to be the best. Great work sure enjoy your content
A little TLC goes along way, your a good mechanic/business man.
This is the only guy I have ever subscribed to, he's not fake like other shows, he does it his way and to bad if you don't like the way he does it, not trying to impress the arm chair oil men out there
You inspired me to get an oil field job up here in canada. Am a painter by trade, so i got a coatings job on the new LNG plant that canadas building up north! Not quite the same as what you do but excited to get my foot in the door.
Awesome.
You are better machinist than I expected. Well done.
BTW, the problem with your GoPro is that it is a GoPro. They pretty much suck these days.
That video working on this well from 5 years ago got me to sub to your channel
Awesome.
Thank you for these videos! I was always fascinated by the old oil pumps in southern Ohio and always wondered what was inside. Now i know. Thanks! Please keep up the great videos. I do a lot of the same things you're doing. 😀
Nice to see ya saving big bucks doing your own machining. That's got to save absurd money and time besides getting exactly what you want.
Knurling a shaft is an old timey repair so it may have been done long ago. It seems odd for an old US manufacturer to knurl an undersized part (though it lasted many decades) when it's so quick to machine another simple shaft like that one. Knurling was also a common way to make piston skirts a closer fit in worn cylinder bores and to make stock OD valve guides fit a loose guide hole in an engine cylinder head. (Do not confuse that with the much more common knurling the INSIDE of valve guide.) Knurling a bushing can improve a press fit too , like the common cheap spacer bushings pressed into riding mower idler and tension pulleys.
I absolutely love your videos! Don't worry too much about the GoPro trouble you managed to get around it just fine.
I'm working on a Parkersburg 114 saddle bearing, the grease worms ate the hell out of it, looks like I will have to make one from scratch.
hi Zach, cheers from Orlando, FL...Paul
Hey! That was a great video Zack! Refreshed my memory on running those machine tools also. Keep those oil wells pumping that black gold. From Iowa.
Zach,
if you had been listening…, I was yelling at you even, that the measurement was 14.5inches…, hahaha..!
Excellent video,
I don’t know “jack” about machining, but watch many channels here with that content, I love your step by step narration(s), and description(s).
Thank you sir.
Hahaha thanks.
Zach, I’ve been watching your videos for years. I know it’s a pain in the ass to make these videos when you’re busy but thank you so much!! I think you’re the fucking man.
Thanks for watching.
I worked at a Oilfield Pipe & Supply in the early 80's and we put jackshafts on many single reduction pumping units (it was hard at the time to get any pumping units)
We used I beam and pillow block bearings.
I wonder now how long any of them lasted.
I worked at a sawmill for 8 years and have taken out of the bolts from a split bushing and used them to pull out the core ; it made life much more easy to remove the pulley and replace it with one that might be better .
Nice work and thanks for taking us along.
Impressive how precise old machine shop equipment is.
I'm wording the answers to your questions out loud, and guess what? My girlfriend thinks I'm smart😋🥰. Thanks, Zach!
Thanks for the video Zack and thank you for speeding up the slow parts.
The label on your jeans looks like the labels on my Round House jeans. If so, in my experience, these are good jeans. Made in Shawnee, Oklahoma near where I grew up.
100% USA roundhouse.
Easy call to scrap shaft.
Seriously impressed you can machine your own.
Enjoyed the Heck out of this video, thanks Zach....PB
Thanks
Hey Zach, glad to see your back out in the oil fields. I love that old dinosaur pumping unit! It amazes me how long those pools of oil can produce with proper maintenance. I take it that it produces sweet West Texas Intermediate. Hopefully you have a good producer there. It's great that you can do your own maintenance on these units. Your pumping experience is awesome, so glad to see you enjoy your work and sharing it with us RUclipsrs. I know I speak for all of us that we appreciate the time you take to put these exceptionally interesting videos together. Always a pleasure to see.
Thanks for watching. Yes we are Sweet WTI.
I'm a oilfield pumper I like your videos great videos Zach where at in oklahoma you live?
I wish you had that autio file at the end, I love to hear those old pumps run.
Zach, that’s some good machinist work in this video. As someone who went to school for it, sure there are some speeds and feeds that could be better but overall goes to show machining isn’t rocket science by any means
Go pro's are evil! (just like trucks) They are part of the master plan to see we stay aggravated. I don't make You Tube videos and they managed to aggregate me. Well the one I had did and it's gone now. Nevertheless great stuff as always Zack, looking forward to your next repair adventure.
Hahaha Thanks.
Zach you are amazing 😊
Im with you i can make parts and fix old junk but cant get along with technology great video
Hahaha
Common sense and old school though process for the win. Life gets in the way of keeping up on everything
Thank you Zack. I wonder If the electrical fields around your machines mess up the cameras. Old machines are not shielded.😊
This was awesome. Well done!
The corrupted files could be magnetic disruption maybe the device or card is getting too close to metal, or an electric motor, or some type of coil. I really enjoy these videos!
Keep up the good content, that was pretty cool to watch
I used to work at Lufkin Industries in the foundry - the castings should have a part number and date code on all of them (although I don';t know when they started doing that-it was at least an 80 year old system when I started there). The first 3 digits of the date code are the Julian day of the year it was made (e.g. Jan 1 is 1 and Dec 31st is 365); the 4th and 5th digits are the year (I could have that flipped though, it's been awhile since I was there). If there are more digits, that's the mold number for that day (e.g. they ran the pattern through the mold line more than once). Hope that helps!
Thanks for the educational vid! Outstanding!!!!
like to see the old machine tools resurrected Zach!! can you even imagine buying that stuff new?
Awesome rebuild ! 👍
that is one hell of a tail stock on that lathe. Damn son. I've seen bigger, but I don't know that I've seen bigger with that bed length. If I can find you a new wheel for your saddle would you be interested, on my dime.
Its a stout little machine. Ive actually got the broke piece i need to weld it back together.
Great video zack. I had a great time watching. Suggestion. Two damn cameras. So many other creaters complain about cam glitches.. they get different models and different memory cards just to capture the video. Two running the same vodeo😂
Gotta love straight forward equipment. As for gopros, everybody with gopros has trouble with them, for the price you'd think they'd be less buggy. If it was any other piece of equipment people would likely call them a knock off camera with a high price tag.
Zach was born in an oil field and raised in a machine shop. ❤❤❤
Awesome.
good work my guy gotta keep that old iron turning as long as possible
Just found your channel, great content.
Awesome Thanks for watching.
Nice video like usual. Thinking about it, there probably aren't too many different size bolts on each machine. I wonder if it would make any sense to buy a lot of cheap wrenches of the most commonly needed sizes, and leave a set of wrenches at every work site which includes all the wrenches needed for that machine.
You ain't lazy 👍🏻
Nice Chips man! and that finish too!. Haha! You even put Abom79 to shame with those cuts. (First time watcher)
I used celestial navigation to get a close approximation and then comparison of the mountains in the background I have calculated your location so I may drop by and help you with your technical difficulties in hopes that any faulty GoPro’s will be donated to my channel. I will be in the Long Beach, California area on the second Tuesday of next week…..hope to see you then. (Thanks for the content)
Nicely done!
Harbor Frightening Tools to the rescue. Yes, they are disposables. Nice work Gasman, thanks for the oil!. You might find this funny, but I use 140wt gear oil on electric fan bushing and bearings. Shop sized or bathroom heater sized, they wont squeak for a VERY long time after a load of 140wt. 1921 - The first radio broadcast of a baseball world series game.
Great content, reminds me of me, just gotta get stuff done!
Hey Zach, Ive watched several of your videos and I'm curious does Texas not require some type of berm/containment area around a tank battery. Here in KY it is a requirement for us. Keep up the good work.
Only if a certain distance from a natural water way.
Good stuff. Wish you showed how you aligned the 2nd keyway cut to the first. Did you just put the key in and run a square off the table to the 1st keyway to make sure it was 90deg to the bed? Or something else fancy? Love these repairs!
They didn't actually need to be aligned but I just eyed it close.
Great Job. Sorry about the Lufkin Engineering being bought out by GE and they closed it down - I believe the shaft balancing unit is in operation. Foundry gone as is engineering. Sad but the drop in business forced the issue with aging owners. No one could buy it but GE stepped up then crashed them as GE got into trouble.
Another fix for open keyways is to use a gib-head key, with either single or double head. The double head gib key is installed on the sheave before the sheave is placed on the shaft, the single can be on the sheave or shaft just as long as you dould check the head is on the captured side.
A bit surprised that you have that horizontal mill setup for an endmill rather than a slot cutter, which is where they really excell. I suppose it's what you had on hand, slot cutters will allow woodruff keys for the captive option.
Great video!! I've had the same issue with Gopro on my videos. I don't just hit the record button. I power and then start to record. When done with a clip, I hit the record button to stop recording and then power down the gopro. I just don't hit record again... I power cycle the go pro to record again. That stopped me loosing audio on video clips.
Intersting.
How often do you have to replace belts on these? It seems like they might last longer with a guard to shield them from sunlight.
Zack a lot of tubers are trying the DJI equipment. And for the bearing , couldn't you put it in a oven and heat it to get a interference fit ? 😊
I just bought one and im going to give it a shot.
Adding a snap ring groove on open keyway shafts helps
Excellent work ,
Great video. Love watching you work on the old equipment. Have to ask a question; how did you come to own the well/pump instead of the original producer?
This one was bought by my grandpa.
Hey Zack, my name is Stewart. I'm in Naples, Florida and I'm using my wife's channel on RUclips here but very interesting. I have a curious question. How deep is that well? And you said it's 100 years old? And what state is it in? Are you in Texas, Oklahoma or Arkansas? Which are you in or Louisiana? But I think it's great all this stuff you're doing. I've always been fascinated by oil wells and I still can't really figure out the casing, the drill, rod and all that stuff but never mind. Have a great day!.
1600' drilled in 1921. North Texas.
From a loggers perspective why don't you have a service truck, nothing fancy, mine is a one ton so over loaded as to be called "the road slug" and as l age l find the luxury of the small crane on the back very agreeable with my back!
I was wondering the same thing.
I service heavy equipment in the field, 3/4 ton 2wd chevy, with a service bed. It serves a purpose.
I have thought about getting one. Most of my day is spent driving around leases checking stuff and gauging tanks. A service truck would beat you to death and not get around in the mud. Most of these videos happen after that without a trip back home to get another truck anyway.
GREAT JOB KEEP UP THE GREAT VIDEOS 😊
I do love those shaft taper locks. Compared to fitting hubs on to straight shafts. Do you have a rough time between changing the bearings on your electric motors? How many years do motor bearing last in constant use 24/7 ?
Usually lighting gets them before they are used up. Id say between 3 and 10 years
Sometimes GoPro's will overheat and shut down if left in direct sun. Also I prefer using a usb cable vs removing the card, seems like less corruption issues that way.