Another interesting day! Today I was on the "Super Vac Truck". Its basically a semi sized shop Vac on wheels! This thing can suck up anything that can fit up its 6 inch hose including the gloves right off your hands. The first load was 'invert mud' which is a heavy mixture of diesel fuel and some sort of clay mud (and a glove).
Its very heavy and apparently very expensive to make at around $150 a barrel. It looks like chocolate syrup and has the consistency of cold gear oil but smells like paint thiner. We dumped this in a large bin at a new well that is being drilled.
Our second job for the day was an accidental invert mud spill that some other company made. They where filling a tank with new invert mud and the truck driver apparently never bothered to walk around to the back of the tank to see if all the valves where closed. One truck load later there was a puddle the size of a basket ball court three inches deep behind the tanks.
The driver was fired on the spot as I was told.
I spent the rest of my day in 'Willie Wonkas chocolate river' pushing invert mud around with a giant squeegee. We salvaged around 55 barrels of a estimated 60 barrel spill. I got a free lunch and my company has likely picked up a new trucking contract!
If you ever make a really big mess the Super Vac truck rents out for $175 an hour and I get 21% of that on top of a $10 an hour base pay unless its overtime like today.
If your wondering, that works out to about $70.13 an hour.
So go ahead and pee or do whatever else you want to in the pool, I will happily clean up after you because I like my job!
The first picture is the Super Vac Truck.
The second and third pictures are the truck being dumped into the bin at the new well.
The fourth picture is the $9000 spill we cleaned up and salvaged for the other company.
The fifth picture is a new pit at the new well. Its about 50 feet wide 200 feet long and 12 feet deep. I may get to pump that out in a few weeks.
The sixth picture is the borings coming from the well as its being drilled. Today they were doing "Fast drilling" which produces a five gallon pail of borings about every 2 seconds.
Its very heavy and apparently very expensive to make at around $150 a barrel. It looks like chocolate syrup and has the consistency of cold gear oil but smells like paint thiner. We dumped this in a large bin at a new well that is being drilled.
Our second job for the day was an accidental invert mud spill that some other company made. They where filling a tank with new invert mud and the truck driver apparently never bothered to walk around to the back of the tank to see if all the valves where closed. One truck load later there was a puddle the size of a basket ball court three inches deep behind the tanks.
The driver was fired on the spot as I was told.
I spent the rest of my day in 'Willie Wonkas chocolate river' pushing invert mud around with a giant squeegee. We salvaged around 55 barrels of a estimated 60 barrel spill. I got a free lunch and my company has likely picked up a new trucking contract!
If you ever make a really big mess the Super Vac truck rents out for $175 an hour and I get 21% of that on top of a $10 an hour base pay unless its overtime like today.
If your wondering, that works out to about $70.13 an hour.
So go ahead and pee or do whatever else you want to in the pool, I will happily clean up after you because I like my job!
The first picture is the Super Vac Truck.
The second and third pictures are the truck being dumped into the bin at the new well.
The fourth picture is the $9000 spill we cleaned up and salvaged for the other company.
The fifth picture is a new pit at the new well. Its about 50 feet wide 200 feet long and 12 feet deep. I may get to pump that out in a few weeks.
The sixth picture is the borings coming from the well as its being drilled. Today they were doing "Fast drilling" which produces a five gallon pail of borings about every 2 seconds.
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