I drilled my well on my mountain here. At that time in Virginia they required a license to drill, even for yourself. I protested and they changed the state rule for me! Sometimes bureaucrats listen.
My little rig was manufactured in Alabama, sold to a guy here who almost lost his house trying to pay for it. Sold it to me for the price of one drilled hole.
Certainly I'm no expert, but I don't know what you're looking at. Picture? The choices I saw were old pounders and rotary drills. The only rotary that came anywhere close to my budget was the one I bought. Came with enough stems to go 140' which was adequate here.
With a higher pump, the well reservoir's substantially smaller. Never been a problem for us even though my bore is only 4". What you're looking at bores 6"?
I'm intending to drill 2 more wells and then send my rig to a new home. It'll make somebody else as happy as it made me.
You want to learn what depth and flow are common for your area before you assume 200' of stem is enough. It sure is exciting when you hit water on your first well. Have fun.
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulic Basics - Part 2 - by Curtis Von Fange. In the last entry to this series we gave a brief overview of hydraulic system theory, its basic components and how it works. Now lets take a look at some general maintenance tips that will keep our system operating to its fullest potential. The two biggest enemies to a hydraulic system are dirt and water. Dirt can score the insides of cylinders, spool valves and pumps. Wate
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