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The Water Cooler
General Discussion
Vermont becomes first state to ban hydraulic fracturing
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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 1797069" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>Yes I have. </p><p>I went out on a couple of frac sites a couple of years ago. At the time we manufactured the hoppers for Halliburton. All controlled by PLC'S. </p><p>The media used on the process was glass beads, pecan shells, or sand that was screened for consistancy, mixed with a slurry of drilling mud, then </p><p>Pumped into the wells that were about 2 miles deep. Then the frac'ing process started. </p><p>The pumps sent pulses into the slurry to fracture the surrounding rock/structure. </p><p>The deepest aquifer is around 2000' deep, and fracing is 2 miles deep in most cases.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 1797069, member: 5412"] Yes I have. I went out on a couple of frac sites a couple of years ago. At the time we manufactured the hoppers for Halliburton. All controlled by PLC'S. The media used on the process was glass beads, pecan shells, or sand that was screened for consistancy, mixed with a slurry of drilling mud, then Pumped into the wells that were about 2 miles deep. Then the frac'ing process started. The pumps sent pulses into the slurry to fracture the surrounding rock/structure. The deepest aquifer is around 2000' deep, and fracing is 2 miles deep in most cases. [/QUOTE]
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Vermont becomes first state to ban hydraulic fracturing
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