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- 2 October 2006
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Yeah, i had a listen to the radio announcement........must have some fissure/pressure that they struck to pull out when they did.....
I wonder if they will have to go back a frac stimutalte the first 2 wells for better producing rates, as if my menmory serves me wright, the first 2 wells where drilled, and hooked srtraight up to production......no frac stim????
Champions area wells generally produce at higher initial rates and recover more gas than wells in Burleson County. However, the Champions gas contains very little condensate.
The Austin Chalk is a naturally fractured reservoir with a dominant set of vertical fractures trending northeast
During November 2007 the well produced an average of 3.8 million cubic feet of gas per day and 280 barrels of drilling fluid per day.
.... so is anyone interested in Jet 3 flowing at 10.8MMCFD, with BUR @ 30%NRI? I would have thought that was an interesting number
hi dukey,
there are 41.5 million option and 93 million heads
good luck with your calc's
regards mick..
I thought 3 producers before end of year and that is unlikely now but who cares, the bigger picture is still unfolding.
In this particular plot there is consistent production at profitable flow rates so Jet will likely do the same.
Building a regular bank of producers will come about faster than one can forget about them.
Well 3: Jet 3, Champions Area, Grimes County (BUR WI 37.5%)
Gas production and sales commenced on 11 January 2008 from the Jet Unit 3 well at an initial rate of around 8 mmcfd of gas. This is a strong flow rate as the well is in a clean-up phase (expelling drilling fluids as well as gas).
Ol` mate at 15 cents got his fill on the day this well report comes out.
A newbie question, seeing how well the company is starting to do the SP seems to remain the same, would this be mainly due to the market not noticing BUR? Or would there be any other reason?
spmonkey
i dont know if the jet flow rates are particularily brilliant.. the wells are expensive and the giddings wells traditionally have a 40% decline after 4 months, and then they dont usually hold, they usually drop and drop and drop..... so maybe the figures are just not impressive enough..
the other thought i had on the giddings is that it has some 3700 wells in it already, leaving only tiny pockets to drill in on any given lease.. in the presentations they show the leases and where the wells go, when i look at the leases i see hundreds of horizontals all next to each other. i guess i look at the leases differently to other investors, i studied BUR for a while, but i couldnt get excited with what i saw, even when the sp went through the roof i couldnt get excited about it... take 50 paces in any direction and your literally standing on top of another horizontal..
i hope they get things happening, believe me when i say i know what its like to be sitting and waiting,, O&G is full of long delays and more delays and changes and delays... high risk and high reward..
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