The worlds fastest roughnecks

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  • Опубліковано 10 лип 2008
  • Real roughnecks working real efficiantlly.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 6 тис.

  • @zants_
    @zants_ 2 роки тому +6625

    This is what I was worried all jobs would be like as a kid.

    • @josephfigueroa3527
      @josephfigueroa3527 2 роки тому +287

      Super cool, well paying, and laborious?

    • @johnnyblack612
      @johnnyblack612 2 роки тому +324

      @@josephfigueroa3527 well paying? Haha wtf

    • @alanr4845
      @alanr4845 2 роки тому +46

      @@josephfigueroa3527 Dude these are big balled life threatening jobs, look at Deepwater Horizon.

    • @josephfigueroa3527
      @josephfigueroa3527 2 роки тому +105

      @@alanr4845 oh I know, still pays great and builds strength.

    • @rileymannion5301
      @rileymannion5301 2 роки тому +241

      @@johnnyblack612 bro it's good pay, 120k a year plus!

  • @McKannon
    @McKannon 3 роки тому +3355

    And somewhere, someone is complaining about the temperature in their office.
    Edit: To all the people whining in reply, no one cares.

    • @ChickenPizza
      @ChickenPizza 3 роки тому +96

      For half the wages 😂

    • @9622AvAtAr
      @9622AvAtAr 3 роки тому +37

      @@ChickenPizza uhmm, if you want to be sarcastic, then shouldn't it be "for double the wages"? That implies that they already have a good life but still complain in petty stuffs.
      They didn't teach you that in sarcasm 101?

    • @ChickenPizza
      @ChickenPizza 3 роки тому +129

      @@9622AvAtAr It's not my fault that you think every office worker makes a shit ton of money. Maybe do a little research before you try to instruct people you don't know on things you don't understand.

    • @9622AvAtAr
      @9622AvAtAr 3 роки тому +15

      @@ChickenPizza who says we're talking about "every office worker"? You didn't know how to be sarcastic and now you display how you lack even comprehension? Wow what a killer combo dude 🤣

    • @ChickenPizza
      @ChickenPizza 3 роки тому +50

      @@9622AvAtAr Who is we? Do you think the internet is some collective of like-minded individuals that you're special enough to be a part of? Get over yourself. You're a nobody.

  • @coolyungdru
    @coolyungdru Рік тому +620

    Shout out to all the blue collar men out there. You are truly the backbone of our society.

    • @luthervaughn1
      @luthervaughn1 Рік тому +75

      Shout out, in all honesty, to all the white men in this world.
      Damn, white man be doin' some shit up. Makin' shit beautiful & comfortable for all of us!!!
      And we clown him & say he's the worst. Shit. I got respect for the white man.

    • @randylltarlly7021
      @randylltarlly7021 Рік тому +55

      @@luthervaughn1 ruckus?

    • @EvilSt0ner
      @EvilSt0ner Рік тому +51

      @@luthervaughn1 I live in a farm area, never seen a black person working on a farm before. Also worked at Honda almost all their employees are white. Construction has a lot of natives. The people that cry racism and slavery literally work at Circle K or Uber eats.

    • @briannaharper1116
      @briannaharper1116 Рік тому +12

      Lol guy lives in a fish bowl and speaks for all ppl. My dad literally raises cattle locally. They meet other black farmers/cattlemen at least once a month.
      The issue is there aren’t many people of color that own heaps of land. Not many have had the opportunity to inherit it.

    • @tonymatur4694
      @tonymatur4694 Рік тому +6

      @@EvilSt0ner haha true most of my Uber eats are arrived by blacks 😂

  • @dennishorn8636
    @dennishorn8636 2 роки тому +53

    When I saw the title I thought it might be a video of me 50 years ago! Ha! I spent 50 years in the oil and gas business and Roughnecking was my favorite job, working derricks was the most coveted spot and my favorite! Hat's off to all my oilfield brothers who do a job most people couldn't or wouldn't want to do. It takes a special breed, willing to test themselves every day and they take great pride in their work. Most of us think we were the best there was, never met a derrickman who didn't think he was the best!.....Son of a Roughneck!

    • @secondaccount6716
      @secondaccount6716 Рік тому +6

      i was roughnecking offshore south africa. the assistant driller who i hated came to me and said go and relieve Mcdonald up the derrick. i am terrified of heights. if anyone else including the rig super had said that to me i would have said.......cant do it cause i am scared of heights. but for this dick.......i went up there hahahaha. two months later got the job......and still hated heights lol. the things the ego makes us do :D

    • @direstraitssydneyaustralia4180
      @direstraitssydneyaustralia4180 Рік тому +1

      Every word you say rattles my memories from the late '60s and early '70s. It's something you never forget. It was always hard work... and sometimes could be bloody dangerous if someone messed up. But the mateship and trust bonds you developed amongst your team and every team you ever became a part of had to be earned. A new boy on the team was watched like a hawk. "Is he dangerous? Is he a liability? Can we trust him? Will he pull his weight?" Those bonds once earned were something very special. You had become a part of a, well I still don't know what it was? Some kind of rare fraternity, maybe? But you did know it was something special. I've never experienced anything quite as tight as those drill floor bonds from fifty years back.

    • @saintguns6758
      @saintguns6758 Рік тому

      That’s BIG BOY money right there! Rigs have changed a lot since then but took a special breed to do this

    • @bringanotebook28
      @bringanotebook28 Місяць тому +1

      @@saintguns6758 Rigs are very automated now! Unless you're in some place that's very old, or without much to shell out for newer equipment, Kelly rigs and throwing chain are mostly a thing of the past. Maybe it's a better thing, I know a guy who lost his entire forearm to a chain spinning and tearing it off.

  • @latex1881
    @latex1881 3 роки тому +4670

    Clean break, smooth transitions, solid transfer, matched rhythms, you can tell these boys been working together for a while

    • @latex1881
      @latex1881 3 роки тому +226

      @@mikerotch6733 your mom does

    • @NobleKnowledgeofphilly
      @NobleKnowledgeofphilly 3 роки тому +49

      Sad it's all gonna be replaced by robotic arms

    • @tnxjesus
      @tnxjesus 3 роки тому +155

      @@NobleKnowledgeofphilly sad really? Tell that to all the workers that have died. Or rather tell their families and see how sad it is.

    • @isaiahh1568
      @isaiahh1568 3 роки тому +50

      @@tnxjesus lmao u think that just applies to rigging? tell that to all the families who have starved to fucking death because they can’t feed their families because they have no job because some pos builds a robot that can do the same thing we can

    • @tnxjesus
      @tnxjesus 3 роки тому +1

      @@isaiahh1568 not at all

  • @Slugg-O
    @Slugg-O 3 роки тому +1086

    I worked on a rig back in the late 70's and every move these guys made is still fresh in my mind. I knew what their next move would be before they made it. Not sure what in this video is supposed to make them the world's fastest but they are damn good. Smooth and coordinated. Every motion must have a purpose and set up the next move for yourself and partner.
    I envied the skill of an old roughneck I worked with named Leon. With a name like that you know he was born to work in the oil field. Anyway, Leon was a soft spoken older man who always wore long sleeve shirts with the cuffs buttoned. He was a chain hand and at the end of his shift the cuffs of his gloves wouldn't even be dirty. His movements were fluid , smooth, and steady with no wasted motion, and he was always smiling. Come to think of it I don't even remember seeing him break a sweat. Me on the other hand, I couldn't get a drink from the water can without coming back wet. I met a lot of hands back then but none like Leon. He was king of the rig floor and a real nice guy. RIP wherever you are, Leon.

    • @donarthiazi2443
      @donarthiazi2443 2 роки тому +8

      Dead

    • @northwestrockgem9745
      @northwestrockgem9745 2 роки тому +33

      that's quite a story man I'd wish I'd met him.

    • @skiddburns8664
      @skiddburns8664 2 роки тому +39

      I worked on rigs like this from 79 to 86. Met a lot of good people, real men.

    • @guyn1007
      @guyn1007 2 роки тому +13

      Loved watching this, brought back a lot of memories
      I worked on big iron triples in South Australia and on Barrow Island off the northwest coast of Western Australia in the early 90’s
      Loved the work and the blokes I worked with ( most of them), wish I could go back, too old now

    • @Slugg-O
      @Slugg-O 2 роки тому

      @@donarthiazi2443 Thanks for the respect asshole.

  • @justinneill5003
    @justinneill5003 Рік тому +55

    I was roughnecking for Bawden on the Piper Alpha in the North Sea in the late 70s, this brings back memories (except for the weather!) 12 hour shifts, 2 weeks straight. The work is hard & intense especially when you trip in and out on the same shift, but it was exhilarating, you get a bit of an adrenaline rush. I’ll admit I loathed being stuck out there, especially the first week; it was all about the money, but when you were busy the time passed quicker. No health & safety either, I still have scars from the sodium hydroxide burns (they added it to the drilling mud and didn’t bother telling us.) Glad to have done it, and being on the Piper, glad I stopped when I did.

    • @cyvideoprods
      @cyvideoprods Рік тому +4

      You the man. I did the North Sea in the late '60s. two on and one off and sometimes a five weeker. Yes, well remember waking up and hearing the Draw Works humming. Having breakfast and doing a 12 hour shift to finish the trip out and then back in again. Health and Safety? What was that? Your health and safety depended on your crew mates. You all had to think and work as one and be 100% vigilant 100% of the time. Wintertime freezing night rain and cold... I'll never forget those nights!

    • @justinneill5003
      @justinneill5003 Рік тому +1

      @@cyvideoprods Ah yes, memories! The stink of fumes from the chopper when arriving on the pad, the sweet smell of the same fumes when leaving it😀 Being a decade earlier, it was probably even tougher for you out there. No more “North Sea Tigers” nowadays though… the drill floor is all automated from the warmth of an office, as I understand. They’d get a bit of a surprise if they had to go “old school!” 👍👍👍

    • @cyvideoprods
      @cyvideoprods Рік тому +1

      @@justinneill5003 Yes, can still hear and recall all the sounds and smells. Pipe dope, dining room galley smells, diesel, mud... the mud!. The rigs are where I discovered Tabasco. I was the projectionist on a number of rigs, movies before turning in. Sadly, though, I had a couple of mates badly injured in SE Asia drilling for Sedco off Timor in '71. Gave it away after that.

    • @neromachiavelli5670
      @neromachiavelli5670 Рік тому

      @@cyvideoprods did you make 6 figs?

    • @direstraitssydneyaustralia4180
      @direstraitssydneyaustralia4180 Рік тому +4

      ​@@neromachiavelli5670 Nah! US75K was the best I ever made. About A$85K back then. A decent wage in Sydney was about A$110. You could buy a house in Sydney for between $12-20,000, so that was big money back then. On average, that was for around 32 weeks of work a year. On offshore rigs, two weeks on, one week off. I was working a lot in SE Asia as that's where the money was. A lot of it exploratory drilling in the Timor Sea. Every six months they would fly you back to home base, wherever that may be. Then you'd come back, for another six month stint. Offshore drilling paid nearly double what I could earn on a land rig. Some of the best money if you could get a start, where you could earn up to $100k was if you could get onto the North Slope rigs in Alaska. In 1974 they started to use land rigs on the frozen sea ice. Rigging down when the thaw came in. Roughnecks in Alaska are earning no more today than in the boom years of the mid-'70s. They were good times, though. Fondly remembered.

  • @barnabybot
    @barnabybot Рік тому +4

    Meanwhile at the local nursery, the ladies discover that they've run out of biscuits for coffee.

  • @travisschmidt3383
    @travisschmidt3383 3 роки тому +982

    Not gonna lie this shit looks intimidating as hell

    • @CEOofSleep
      @CEOofSleep 3 роки тому +138

      I feel like I'm going to lose a limb just by watching

    • @AzngameFreak03
      @AzngameFreak03 3 роки тому +30

      @@CEOofSleep I already feel emasculated for seeing such huge steel balls in this video.

    • @MrSh4des
      @MrSh4des 3 роки тому +34

      If you think the work looks brutal just wait til you meet the crew. Started rough necking when I was 18 best decision of my life.

    • @GATOxNORTE
      @GATOxNORTE 2 роки тому +1

      Wht r they doing?

    • @MrSh4des
      @MrSh4des 2 роки тому +3

      @@GATOxNORTE tripping pipe on an oil rig

  • @anthonyrichard461
    @anthonyrichard461 2 роки тому +856

    Dangerous and very hard work. My dad did this type of work until he retired in his early 70's He only lost half a finger unlike many who lost a lot more. Much respect for these lads!

    • @Drew15000
      @Drew15000 Рік тому +20

      How would a 60 year old do this without being a liability?

    • @anthonyrichard461
      @anthonyrichard461 Рік тому +87

      @@Drew15000 Anyone doing this type of work is a liability. The older guys tend to be safer from experience. Also most of the older guys tend to move to other less physical work positions on the rigs.

    • @user-tr2dh4xx6u
      @user-tr2dh4xx6u Рік тому +22

      @@anthonyrichard461 I have no idea what they are doing but it looks like they added an extension to the drilling head?
      why do they need to do it so fast, why not take a minute or two so they dont lose a finger

    • @thedude5599
      @thedude5599 Рік тому +36

      @@Drew15000 anyone any age could do this. Safety is what gets most strong young bucks. A 60 year old man with all his fingers who has done this 30 plus years aint losing a finger I bet you that.

    • @I_Mark_Mills
      @I_Mark_Mills Рік тому +4

      @@thedude5599 And anyone who's lost one to the job has hopefully learned their lesson! Haha

  • @stevejohnson9340
    @stevejohnson9340 Рік тому +7

    Roughnecked out of GC Kansas in the early 90s for a few years. Then I was offered a job on a casing crew. Loved running casing. Never regretted it. Teaches you hard work, camaraderie. Makes a man out of you that’s for sure. Great memories……

  • @chrissibersky4617
    @chrissibersky4617 Рік тому +18

    "Women should get paid the same as men."
    - Dancing TikTok nurse

    • @user-zq3iz3zn5m
      @user-zq3iz3zn5m Місяць тому

      They do in the patch. Female engineers receive the same as men. If you're on the rig and you can cut it, raises come just the same as men.

  • @billycarpenter4740
    @billycarpenter4740 6 років тому +3337

    back in 1974- 1977 I roughnecked on a double in the Permian Basin ( central west Texas ). Went to high school during the day and worked the night shift. We all got hurt, made good friends and showed what we were made of. There's nothing like pulling a " wet string" at night during the winter and getting rained on. You smell like "pipe dope and mud" until you've been away from the rig a couple days and have taken several showers. Saw a 17 year old chain chunker get 1/2 his foot cut off when a drill pipe dropped on his foot. Does anyone remember just how heavy those drill collars were ? I also worked a single lay down rig for Serendipity Dill Co. out north of Pecos, Texas. Never worked so fast and so hard on such and old junky rig. Good stories now tho. Billy from Abilene

    • @evanw2195
      @evanw2195 5 років тому +84

      Sean you’ve never done anything but flip burgers what’s makes you so qualified

    • @dennisturman1726
      @dennisturman1726 5 років тому +156

      Hey Sean, don't be an idiot. Nobody wants to lose half a foot at work. Roughnecking is an "honest job" work outside in the rain, sun and snow for 12 hours a day and night. The rig doesn't stop so if it's Christmas and it's your shift then your at work. Most guys (such as your self most probably) can't handle the work, it's back breaking and if you're the worm (low man on th totem pole) you are constantly getting screamed at. These guys work a dangerous job and go home bloody and bruised on a daily basis but you wouldn't want to run into them at the bar after work cause they'd still kick you ass for being such a shit talking punk. You can thank them though oil is in everything around you, not just in your gas tank. It's in paint, medicine, everything plastic including your precious Xbox remote, it's in the components of your tv and the tires of your prius, it's in your clothes and your food. You're welcome!

    • @justinmontagne6543
      @justinmontagne6543 5 років тому +158

      I've worked shit jobs like these and it's nothing to be proud of, working long hours so your girl can get away with cucking you behind your back. And the sad thing is these cucks deep down know and they lie to themselves to make themselves feel like their life isn't 100% dispensable in this society, not to mention you won't be able to find another woman because you're working long hours. They boast about honest hard work while smoking cigs and chugging energy drinks all day while most likely being hungover from the night before because deep down they hate their life, and all those bad habits that they share with their room temperature IQ buddies and coworkers they pretend to enjoy until they're addicted and slowly kill themselves... Unless of course they lose half their foot or worse for a company that doesn't give a shit about them 😆

    • @benwinter2420
      @benwinter2420 5 років тому +18

      Yeah 'wet' trips are a hoot . . for near an entire 12 hr shift

    • @waynegreen8815
      @waynegreen8815 3 роки тому +38

      Midland Odessa??💪💪👍👍

  • @2000ds650
    @2000ds650 3 роки тому +307

    It’s like watching a nascar pit crew. So precise and efficient.

    • @user-cb1ln8vc8d
      @user-cb1ln8vc8d 3 роки тому +7

      Little bit less pay though!

    • @rymarsrs8552
      @rymarsrs8552 2 роки тому +5

      @@user-cb1ln8vc8d What? Nascar pit stop crew make terrible money! Haha

    • @derbigpr500
      @derbigpr500 2 роки тому +3

      NASCAR pit crews are the exact opposite of precise and efficient lmao.

    • @drewjohnson4794
      @drewjohnson4794 Рік тому +4

      Yeah, except this job is actually important, unlike any job in pro sports entertainment for those who love being asleep sheep.

    • @SamuelRosadoEsq
      @SamuelRosadoEsq Рік тому

      @@drewjohnson4794 oh man, so edgy

  • @cameronwright3764
    @cameronwright3764 9 місяців тому +6

    first rig i worked was gearhart drilling services , rig 6 , spinning chain had just been banned in australia but we were still throwing. no top drive no pipe spinners, pipe spanners & chain tongs . never experienced work like that in my life , nearly killed me in the beginning but i could not get enough. watching these fellas brings back the best days of my life

  • @dannysan1272
    @dannysan1272 Рік тому +10

    The amount of skill and synchronicity going on here is amazing. I’ve done dangerous jobs involving massive amounts of solvents but this is something else.

  • @blakeanderson4022
    @blakeanderson4022 5 років тому +2485

    Respect to all hard workers out there.
    These days my body is broken after heart failure nine times. I can no longer work but at night I dream of it.

    • @brey432
      @brey432 4 роки тому +62

      If it helps my mother always said Jeremiah 29:11 Psalm 91 and Ezekiel 36:26

    • @WarthunderDude69
      @WarthunderDude69 4 роки тому +17

      Blake Anderson yeah you can do it anymore because you’re a Pussy who collects a free check each week. Bumming off society while these idiots in the video make my family rich. Fucking peasants. And you dream of working like this for 40+ years????? No wonder people commit suicide lol

    • @oroshikarasu7769
      @oroshikarasu7769 3 роки тому +83

      THAT ONE GUY Fucking bigot.

    • @LANGI902
      @LANGI902 3 роки тому +13

      @@oroshikarasu7769 hey man his name is THAT ONE GUY he warned ya 😅

    • @minamur
      @minamur 3 роки тому +122

      I love that one guy trying to troll but no one really cares

  • @Don-jt7ch
    @Don-jt7ch 2 роки тому +21

    You can tell they did this a 1000 times and mastered it to perfection. Their teamwork is so perfect they don’t even need to speak to each other.

  • @alphaomega17
    @alphaomega17 Рік тому +7

    It's a blessing we have cameras now so everyone can see just how hard and smart some guys work. Respect

  • @Faronthefiddler
    @Faronthefiddler 11 місяців тому +2

    I roughnecked with Tom Brown Drilling on old wore out, Rig No. 10. 1973. In the hot sun and ice with very cold wind. Those Waukesha engines gave us relief from the bitter cold. Permian Basin.

  • @Winteramen
    @Winteramen 3 роки тому +366

    I was gripped watching this. I have no idea what they're doing. The internet continues to remind me how big this world is, and how much there is to this life. I watched everything they were doing, and no clue what it's all for

    • @tavspop
      @tavspop 3 роки тому +39

      I believe they're just adding another section of pipe so they can keep drilling deeper. They are badass though.

    • @Winteramen
      @Winteramen 3 роки тому +8

      @@tavspop definitely cool perspective of the world man

    • @rubytuesday2913
      @rubytuesday2913 3 роки тому +3

      Ah. You’d be to thick to understand anyways.

    • @avalon-vx
      @avalon-vx 3 роки тому +3

      You sound like a smart guy my friend. I agree🙏

    • @andrewroberts7428
      @andrewroberts7428 3 роки тому +109

      @@rubytuesday2913 a humble, curious person is always going to get further in life than an asshole, guess which one you are in that scenario

  • @bradmetcalf5333
    @bradmetcalf5333 8 років тому +2573

    People who don't take pride in hard work cant understand things like this. The 6 years I worked the oil field it was a competition to see who could bust their ass the hardest and fastest. We weren't unionized and didn't spend all day complaining about how hot it was or how tired we were. We showed up and worked 12+ hours giving it all we had so when that fat check came every two weeks you know that you earned it. We knew the whole time we were making some corporate suit filthy rich but we were taken care of. It was honorable to knock off at the end of shift covered in grease and mud. Makes you appreciate things more.

    • @bamaman5252
      @bamaman5252 7 років тому +18

      Do u still work there

    • @bradmetcalf5333
      @bradmetcalf5333 7 років тому +24

      Fox Wright we were takin care of.

    • @bradmetcalf5333
      @bradmetcalf5333 7 років тому +77

      Fox Wright we were making 300 bucks a day lol they didn't have to be to nice to us haha

    • @gulshanrao619
      @gulshanrao619 7 років тому +6

      sir i want to join oil rig...so can u guide me...how can i join.......Gulshanrao619@gmail.com

    • @bradmetcalf5333
      @bradmetcalf5333 7 років тому +118

      If you're still a roughneck after 10 years then you're not trying..... 10 years into that work and you're a driller or a tool pusher making twice the money and doing a 10th the manual labor.

  • @jesse_campbell
    @jesse_campbell Рік тому +1

    Thanks to the army of men doing these kinds of jobs for us.

  • @billycarpenter4740
    @billycarpenter4740 2 роки тому +24

    Full disclose....... I put in my time in the West Texas oil fields. Continued on to school at Texas A & M. Worked as a crane operator, then got out there and hung steel as an iron worker. Crushed a heel and foot hanging "red iron", so had to take up a desk job. Moved to Orlando, Florida in 1983 and was a real estate agent/ broker for 31 years. Currently my retirement job I manage a boat marina weekends and work as a maintenance man in a hotel a couple days a week. 63 now, and proud of my past work efforts. Hope the young guys will make grasp life by the balls !!!! Hell yeaaaa !! A TEXAN 'till I die !

  • @glentaylor9996
    @glentaylor9996 3 роки тому +414

    Watching this after being a driller myself. Reminds me why I only have one thumb left

    • @tgm_rka8888
      @tgm_rka8888 3 роки тому +36

      Shit bro.. if you are telling the truth I’m sorry. I bet the pay was good tho

    • @glentaylor9996
      @glentaylor9996 3 роки тому +71

      @@tgm_rka8888 yeah not joking, losing a thumb isn't the worst thing to ever happen to anyone. Pretty common injury in any industry when working with steel and hydraulics 👍

    • @LONDONSD1
      @LONDONSD1 3 роки тому +3

      1 thumb left? Wow 🥺

    • @LONDONSD1
      @LONDONSD1 3 роки тому

      1 thumb left? Wow 🥺

    • @billycarpenter4740
      @billycarpenter4740 3 роки тому +13

      My dad was a retired TSGT from the USAF, he ran the jet engine shop. After doing each of the floor positions and as derrick man he became a driller. He's how I got working onto a rig. A good experience for me as a young guy.

  • @billyhighfill
    @billyhighfill Рік тому +1

    Hats off to you fellas. That’s a dangerous, dynamic, dirty job!! 🦾🦾🦾🦾

  • @camban
    @camban Рік тому +3

    No idea what they’re doing but 14 years later they still look good doing it 💪🏻

  • @nfidlart8005
    @nfidlart8005 5 років тому +30

    "Hit it like you live".... I started out in 1975 as a floor hand on a jackknife drilling rig in Fort Stockton Texas. This is exactly how it used to be back then on those old school rotary drive power rigs. We worked our asses off, didn't mind getting dirty, and took pride in doing the job. The new generation of rigs have changed for the better, but the young guys starting out today can't appreciate the improvements if they never experienced working on the older rigs.

  • @rsmail7426
    @rsmail7426 2 роки тому +42

    People who have never worked like this don't realize you get the same highs as excercise and weightlifting but also actually contribute to the world and get paid. Everyone should have to work like this once in their life.

    • @crmags
      @crmags 2 роки тому +6

      Contribution to the world??? If making an iPhone is also contributing to the world, sure I guess drilling a hole in the ground is too.
      A contribution to the world would be an engineer figuring out how to fully automate drilling and mining and stop these guys getting killed and maimed all the time.

    • @alphaomega17
      @alphaomega17 Рік тому +11

      As someone who knows a bodybuilder that died because of chemicals taken took to stay buff, I have to agree this seems so much more fulfilling than being at the gym all day and posting on Facebook about muscles that don't actually serve any purpose.

    • @lance-biggums
      @lance-biggums Рік тому +9

      @@crmags Not everything can be automated away. Nor should it be.

    • @crmags
      @crmags Рік тому +1

      @@lance-biggums No, but dangerous and shitty jobs definitely should be.

    • @Reaganator2
      @Reaganator2 Рік тому

      @@crmags Where did the gas in the engineers car come from? Who forged the steel? Who assembled it? Who cut down the tree his pencil was carved from? All done so an engineer can sit at a desk and contribute to the world in their own way. You clearly have either never done blue collar work or have tried and failed. Your comment reeks of bourgeois elitism and I wouldn't be surprised if considered us proletariats to be yokels.

  • @user-hb4np1uk8i
    @user-hb4np1uk8i 2 місяці тому

    Love this work,done long enough,&50yr old now, as motor man,,but had a slip disc,still love to return,,great job guys all do and respect,stay safe

  • @_DB.COOPER
    @_DB.COOPER Рік тому +3

    I didn’t see any earth shattering speed there, I just seen men doing a job.

  • @rowdyropp7464
    @rowdyropp7464 6 років тому +66

    I just really take pride in watching floorhands trip the kelley and making connection. The amount of activity involved near the draw works when this goes on is phenominal! Thanks guys for making all that oil makes possible! Hope your moneys are abundant and your days are safe!

  • @jdone9774
    @jdone9774 7 років тому +49

    13 years under my belt and the best is having a crew that work well together and look out for one another meaning these boys are like brothers from another mother and spend more time with each other than own family. sweet vid and love how prepared for next task they are and know what to do next, must have been working together for a while HANDS DOWN TO YOU BOYS love how all you hear is iron clanking and no talking PERFECT

    • @spiteu9272
      @spiteu9272 2 роки тому

      Yo, you gay?

    • @secondaccount6716
      @secondaccount6716 Рік тому +1

      yeah our crew spoke little and did a lot. band of brothers. worked offshore scotland south africa australia and norway

  • @chrisminblkdiamond
    @chrisminblkdiamond 2 роки тому +2

    Oil company makes billions and these guys get a thanks keep it up!

    • @Old-biker
      @Old-biker Рік тому

      No. what if it's a duster I have seen oil companies go broke with a few your not going to hit oil every time. And money only comes in after you pay for the well if a well only puts out 15 cubes a day a lot of times it mostly water 80 -90 % take a long time to pay for.. It took a long time to get were it is...

  • @gottago671
    @gottago671 Рік тому +6

    I worked in a metal fab facility. Couple ppl lost fingers, but never an arm. This looks ridiculously scary.

  • @kf5hcr176
    @kf5hcr176 2 роки тому +39

    Billy Carpenter,
    You write well, you've got a valuable story to tell.
    You were reared well, and are blessed to have had a appreciation of what you, and the other necks did.
    I pray we still have a few Texans with your grit.
    You helped your crew produce and you were well paid
    Y'all put fuel in my truck and kept my lights on.
    My boss in El Dorado, Arkansas,
    Dr Mark Dixon, worked out of Freeport off shore and on the deck of a rig, also Dr Dixon worked nights on rigs out around Smackover or Stephens, Arkansas while going to medical school at UAMS in Little Rock.
    Dr Dixon knew what work was and still probably is working his ass off.
    Also, Dixon has to be one of the best doctors I've ever worked with.
    We'd get med students or residents who had literally never had a job their whole life, come to our program and complain about how hard it was, and Dr Dixon would comment under his breath those Drs didn't know what hard work was.
    I've done my share, or close to it, doing hard work, labor, fencing, cows, long shore, construction, .machine shop was good, good money possible and always interesting.
    I appreciate all y'all with busted knuckles, you help us all have a better life, and I see a little John Wayne in you.
    American work ethic...made America the envy of the world-literally, and that's why they hate us. We'll just keep on going while the little, insignificant whinny bastards complain.
    Y'all have done well!

    • @NastyCortezian
      @NastyCortezian 2 роки тому +2

      Amen

    • @oscarguijosa7881
      @oscarguijosa7881 2 роки тому +5

      Yea I’m not gonna read all of that

    • @donsolos
      @donsolos Рік тому +3

      Unfortunately that era is likely at an end. I'm 30 and my generation is weak, but the next one coming of age. Thats when shit really starts hitting the fan

  • @Kraals
    @Kraals 2 роки тому +35

    It's a beautiful thing to watch an experienced crew work. I'll admit, my time on a drilling crew is limited, but I don't recall our rotary turning that fast.

    • @leemontoya8028
      @leemontoya8028 Рік тому +1

      I noticed that too!

    • @kennyr3751
      @kennyr3751 Рік тому +1

      Mighty fast indeed

    • @GuG_Scoobyy
      @GuG_Scoobyy 11 місяців тому +2

      That’s Rotary Steerable. The one you were on was Conventional

  • @iangordon5106
    @iangordon5106 2 роки тому

    Thank you for your service!

  • @laurieglenn3066
    @laurieglenn3066 Рік тому +1

    I loved watching real men without shirts work. Could watch all day. LOL

  • @crappiehookking387
    @crappiehookking387 2 роки тому +233

    My oldest Brother worked on the oil rigs in the early 90s he worked there for about 4 years, until he lost his thumb when a pipe crushed it, and had to get lower back surgery when he slipped with a pipe. He was almost going to be in a wheelchair for that injury. The oil company paid him a large amount of money, so he wouldn't sue them. Its a dangerous job to pursue and not everyone can. I got alot of respect for these guys, they get paid alot so don't feel bad for them, they are the guys driving the brand new Lifted up 3500 HD Diesel pickups. They get paid good, but it's high risk of injury.

    • @kookseatpussy7228
      @kookseatpussy7228 2 роки тому +9

      Be a travel nurse if you want real money

    • @themotorcycleguy5980
      @themotorcycleguy5980 2 роки тому

      @@kookseatpussy7228 or a traveling power lineman

    • @x1bl0odman
      @x1bl0odman 2 роки тому

      @@kookseatpussy7228 that’s where I’m headed baby

    • @evanwhittaker5287
      @evanwhittaker5287 2 роки тому +13

      35k a year isn't even close to risking your foot over

    • @Hester_prynne
      @Hester_prynne 2 роки тому +12

      the dudes driving a brand new truck but stays brand new because they never drive it

  • @levelplanet3841
    @levelplanet3841 3 роки тому +18

    Brings back a lot of memories for this old West Texas roughneck

    • @darrylmcginty1296
      @darrylmcginty1296 3 роки тому +1

      Me too brother!!
      GENE SLEDGE
      FWA
      TRI-STAR
      TOM BROWN
      Just a few I slung iron for in the 80’s-90’s all over the Permian

    • @levelplanet3841
      @levelplanet3841 3 роки тому

      ​@@darrylmcginty1296 I too worked derricks FOR TOM BROWN FWA SHARP GENE SLEDGE AND THE OFFSHORE CO. IN THE GULF OF MEXICO I NEVER SAW THE THE LEAD TONG HAND THROW THE CHAIN AS IN THIS VIDEO , NEVER IN MY 35 YEARS IN THE OILFILED.

    • @darrylmcginty1296
      @darrylmcginty1296 3 роки тому

      Motorman is throwing “throwing” the chain, looks more like he walked it up rather than throw it. I had a buddy that worked for sharp for a very long time his name is Billy Joe Lamb. Ever know him? He roughnecked, drilled, pushed etc..

    • @levelplanet3841
      @levelplanet3841 3 роки тому +1

      @@darrylmcginty1296 NO , I DON'T RECALL THE NAME, I BROKE OUT 1973 ON SHARP RIG 48 AND WORKED ON 47, OSHA SHUT DOWN 47 FAULTY DRAWORKS INJURED 4 MEN AND KILLED ONE SO I WENT TO WORK FOR SLEDGE DRILLER A.B. KANADY, SUPER WAS RED HASTING, FWA I WORKED FOR DRILLER ELMER LONG PUSHER WAS JAMES HIP. TOM BROWN THE PUSHER WAS NAMED NORM , DON'T REMEMBER HIS LAST NAME , HE PASSED OUT IN THE DOG HOUSE WATCHING HIS YOUNGER BROTHER WAS THROWING THE CHAIN WEARING RUBBER INSULATED GLOVES GOT CAUGHT IN THE CHAIN AND BROKE HIS ARM IN 4 PLACES LUCKY IT DID NOT GET RIPPED OFF. ANY OF THESE NAMES YOU KNOW ? YEP , MOTOR MAN WAS ALWAYS THE CHAIN HAND , BUT I HAVE SEEN SEVERAL VIDS WHERE THE LEAD TONG HAND THROWS THE CHAIN , LIKE THIS ONE.

    • @levelplanet3841
      @levelplanet3841 3 роки тому +1

      @@darrylmcginty1296 I WATCHED IT AGAIN SAY YOU ARE RIGHT THE MOTOR MAN IS THROWING THE CHAIN BUT WE ALWAYS THREW ON THE OUTSIDE OF THE TONGS , HE IS ON THE INSIDE , WE THREW WHERE ALL THE WRAPS WOULD BE ABOVE THE COLLAR , IT LOOKS LIKE HE DID AS YOU SAID WALKED IT UP.

  • @cheguevara7764
    @cheguevara7764 Рік тому +3

    1000 ways to lose an arm or leg is what I learned in this video

  • @misscleo378
    @misscleo378 Рік тому

    Not sure why this was recommended to me. But it was quite fascinating to watch. It’s nice seeing real men at work.

  • @kyledrywallpuncherpro135
    @kyledrywallpuncherpro135 6 років тому +22

    TEAMWORK...and that dude didn't take the cig out his mouth the whole time.. A+

  • @jamielc3437
    @jamielc3437 2 роки тому +28

    Those are strong tuff dudes. Most people don't realize how hard this is. How heavy and grueling it is to lift and throw that stuff around. Respect

    • @secondaccount6716
      @secondaccount6716 Рік тому +2

      worked roughneck and derrick for seven years and never ever saw a fat dude on the drill floor hahhahah

  • @bighhuddinni5640
    @bighhuddinni5640 Рік тому +1

    1978 west texas ft stockton Going to school till noon, roughneck evening shift, is still fresh in my mind. "You can't get it you can't stay" was our motto. Not like today, easy push button everything.

  • @tauriel4034
    @tauriel4034 2 місяці тому

    The work of these Men together is like a Mozary symphony.

  • @user-bl3xi2bi6w
    @user-bl3xi2bi6w 8 місяців тому +1

    Они не ходят по улицам с плакатами , громят бизнеса и закатывают истерику о своих провах ☝️
    Эти ребята делают свою страну великой 👌🔥🔥🔥

  • @michaelsteyn5325
    @michaelsteyn5325 3 роки тому +18

    What a team! Each guy knew exactly what was going to happen next and was already there. That was smooth..

  • @quinton01
    @quinton01 2 роки тому +7

    I have nothing but respect for these men.

  • @Andy-wx4wx
    @Andy-wx4wx Рік тому +1

    These blokes earn their money, puts into perspective the huge salaries actors, politicians and footballers get...

  • @c.b9580
    @c.b9580 9 місяців тому +2

    I don't understand what's going on here. Or how I got here. But as a woman I'm honestly not mad at the algorithm. That's some hard working men right there.

  • @coltonhedrick9365
    @coltonhedrick9365 3 роки тому +51

    I just started helping drill water wells and the size comparison to oil drilling is insane. We go 80-120ft down where we’re drilling and since the size is so much smaller we take about 30-45 seconds per switch. Today is only my second day but so far my favorite part is the baling and water lines (since that’s all I know how to do)

    • @User-435ggrest
      @User-435ggrest Рік тому

      Hi! How's it going, still in the business? Just curious, since it's been 2 years🙂

    • @trollop4866
      @trollop4866 Рік тому +1

      Pulling them is fun as hell too. You get 20 foot of nice cold water dumped on you after unthreading he pipe... Very Refreshing

  • @davidbradley6179
    @davidbradley6179 2 роки тому +154

    I was a driller in Utah back in the early 80s and we were drilling with air and form. You were supposed to let the pressure bleed off but the hands I had were real roughnecks and we broke it off and it blew over the crown Best crew I ever had. The air jammers told me that those quick connections were the only reason we could keep drilling with air. We were as fast as this video but no video in those days.

    • @SuperMilesy
      @SuperMilesy 2 роки тому +4

      No idea what you mean but good job you yank bastard 👍 here’s a medal 🏅

    • @thetexorcist2235
      @thetexorcist2235 2 роки тому +2

      @@SuperMilesy 😂

    • @MrSimon1909
      @MrSimon1909 Рік тому

      how does it feel to be responsible for the climate crisis? you destroyed our enviroment just so you can get superrich drilling for oil.

  • @Deacon_T
    @Deacon_T Рік тому +2

    Old school roughnecking #1. Miss that style, I broke out in '79 and had the fever in my blood ever since. A lot of hard work but very rewarding. Floorhands only payed 8.50 an hour.

    • @leelunk8235
      @leelunk8235 Рік тому

      NOPE U FOOL

    • @Old-biker
      @Old-biker Рік тому

      9.10 a hour Derrick and $40 sub good money back than..

  • @robertrangiuia2613
    @robertrangiuia2613 Рік тому +1

    Awesome work brothers. From a deep sea fisherman. Love the rough and tumble of my job. It’s like a high for me putting your life in the hands of the oceans with your brothers. I’d like to end my career doing the mines.

    • @Old-biker
      @Old-biker Рік тому +1

      There is work in the northern Canada Alberta in the oil sand mines.

  • @MrHansBattle
    @MrHansBattle 2 роки тому +66

    The job posting says, "free crossfit all day long" - those are some lean tough dudes

    • @argelioolivares631
      @argelioolivares631 2 роки тому +5

      They don't drill like this no more its all digital now. For the better

    • @PhysifistEngineering
      @PhysifistEngineering 2 роки тому

      They still were in 2013 when I was doing it.

  • @mikekyzz11
    @mikekyzz11 2 роки тому +7

    Perfection. Good driller, derrick, floorhands in harmony. Beautiful

  • @deana8202
    @deana8202 5 місяців тому

    I was crazy about a roughneck. He quit school at 16 and went to work on a rig. He'd come pick me up and we'd run around all night. He was perfect. Always had a great tan, 6 pk abs and full of mischief.

  • @vinnyvidivici
    @vinnyvidivici Рік тому +1

    Them boys did all that without saying a word to each other.

  • @erikbelanger4551
    @erikbelanger4551 2 роки тому +4

    Man you can see danger in every aspect of it but they are so chill and fluid ,much respect.

  • @anonymous4319
    @anonymous4319 4 роки тому +131

    Dudes arent even moving that fast their just smooth af

    • @chuckchucky8781
      @chuckchucky8781 3 роки тому +40

      Slow is smooth and smooth is fast

    • @muhammadzaini5728
      @muhammadzaini5728 3 роки тому +1

      That was not easy task. Try yourself.

    • @ronaldgoodwin1982
      @ronaldgoodwin1982 3 роки тому

      Amazing!!

    • @SeptemberTwentyThird
      @SeptemberTwentyThird 2 роки тому +1

      That's because they all know there role in the task at hand, and fully trust each other to do there part in it.

    • @anonymous4319
      @anonymous4319 2 роки тому +1

      @@muhammadzaini5728 im not talking shit about them buddy chill they’re great workers

  • @doubledoc7807
    @doubledoc7807 Рік тому +2

    I need to watch this again, because I was totally focused on the wrong thing.

  • @nemo227
    @nemo227 7 років тому +25

    I'm an old man who just developed great respect for these drillers. I knew it was hard work and often dangerous. This is clearly a place where you have to know your job and do it well; much like working on an aircraft carrier deck or working steel on a high rise building.

  • @danieljronje3787
    @danieljronje3787 3 роки тому +30

    Much respect and a big salute to these guys.

  • @benkempf
    @benkempf Рік тому +1

    Awesome work

  • @JensSchraeder
    @JensSchraeder Рік тому

    Mad skills. Mad respect.

  • @lesliewood4154
    @lesliewood4154 5 років тому +6

    My Daddy worked on a Drilling Rig when I was a little girl. I got to hand it to these men thats a dangerous hard job to do. The men that are doing it today for a living y'all have my Respect☺☺☺☺☺

  • @DavidWilliams-mr5nl
    @DavidWilliams-mr5nl 10 років тому +525

    Missin those good ol days of just bustin ass, no shirts, no bs, no FRC's!!! Jus turn to the right and push till it sounds expensive! !!

    • @sonboogie
      @sonboogie 9 років тому +15

      lol

    • @jimmychambers1501
      @jimmychambers1501 6 років тому +8

      We didn't have to wear hard hats in the late 80s

    • @austin3626
      @austin3626 6 років тому +26

      Video quality looks awful good to be the 80s

    • @dfelixrx7
      @dfelixrx7 6 років тому +14

      I work best without pants on

    • @tuuger
      @tuuger 6 років тому +50

      dfelixrx7 i work best naked. High on coke. Constantly smoking a joint, unsupervised.

  • @bobfeller604
    @bobfeller604 9 місяців тому +1

    I worked as a roustabout, didn't have the chance to work on a rig, I used to hear the pump jacks in my sleep.

  • @truebluedeplorable7043
    @truebluedeplorable7043 10 років тому +1320

    Gotta be the 80s. Kelly drilling and no shirts. The good old days

    • @dalethebelldiver7740
      @dalethebelldiver7740 10 років тому +92

      I once replace the finger board while it was drilling and rode the kelly block to the top and slid down the counterweight line. lol 1976 to 1982. Then started going offshore welding and diving.

    • @truebluedeplorable7043
      @truebluedeplorable7043 10 років тому +58

      DALE thebelldiver Gday Bell Diver, I was land rigs from 1982 to 1985 then off shore till 3 years ago. In China now working as Drilling Warehouse supervisor. But this video brought back memories

    • @dalethebelldiver7740
      @dalethebelldiver7740 10 років тому +62

      I hear ya. Where were you working in 82? the shit hit the fan in 81 and 82 and most everybody was out of work. Drilling rigs stacked out all over the place. I am the guy who invented the first LCM mixer the HULLHOPER. Which went belly up in 83. By then I was already into commercial diving. and doing UNDERWATER WELDING and map making. I was producing TOPOGRAPHIC MAPS FOR DREDGING COMPANIES.. Getting back to the oil field I use to do some wild as shit. like sliding down the weight indicator and riding the kelly block to the finger board and you know that's a big step over space 99' off the rig floor. We didn't do drugs then either. lol I bilt rigs from a pile of iron. from scratch. Every single part. Did you hear of BIG CHIEF, BONRAY, PARKER, VERSON AND CHOCRAN, WRANGLER, CORE, UNIT, these were a few of my customers and people I've built rigs for or just field service. I lived in OKC back then.

    • @dalethebelldiver7740
      @dalethebelldiver7740 10 років тому +45

      it sure would be fun to meet up with a bunch of old oilfield hands and have some beers. WE USE TO FIGHT ON SATURDAYS just for the fun of it and see who was the best fighter. I mean to knock the other guy out fighting. lol and we had fights in bars outside of bars in parking lots in bathrooms in the bar itself. damn........... lol dancin, F'N, FIGHT'N and havin a good ole time doing it. While RIG HANDS were out on the rig lol me and the welding crew was in town screwing the roughnecks whoring wives. In every oil field town in OKLAHOMA AND TEXAS. Indian Women too.

    • @dalethebelldiver7740
      @dalethebelldiver7740 10 років тому +33

      That's why they called us OIL FIELD TRASH

  • @johndugger1028
    @johndugger1028 5 років тому +22

    I worked for Grace Drilling (TRG) back in the late 70s early 80s, this was what we did every day, just a normal day drilling

    • @Manu24985
      @Manu24985 4 роки тому +1

      Respect, love and best wishes to you Sir.💐💐💐🙏🏻💐💐💐

    • @billycarpenter4740
      @billycarpenter4740 3 роки тому

      I worked on rigs for Safari, D & B, Serendipity south of Abilene, Tex and west also. Making a connection was just routine work while you were taking car of other things.

  • @reza_dc2
    @reza_dc2 Рік тому

    thats some hard ass work , dayam.

  • @kevinspacey5325
    @kevinspacey5325 Рік тому

    Now those are tough men. As a machinist, my hats off to you!

  • @benrifkin1981
    @benrifkin1981 2 роки тому +56

    And that ladies and gentlemen is how you make six figures without a high school diploma.

    • @noahpalladino
      @noahpalladino Рік тому +8

      Exactly! Spending your body capital instead of monetary or knowledge capital. Not for me as I'd like to have a much longer span of influence on our society, but interesting to watch nonetheless

    • @ppstorm_
      @ppstorm_ Рік тому +23

      @@noahpalladino this kid reddits

    • @Kaasbaas045
      @Kaasbaas045 Рік тому +14

      @@noahpalladino you must be fun at parties

    • @bobbypatton4903
      @bobbypatton4903 Рік тому +10

      @@noahpalladino The intrinsic value in directly creating a commodity or service for the public is hard to pinpoint, but the pride you experience as a blue collar worker is real and has merit that you may not quite understand.

    • @EdensRemorse
      @EdensRemorse Рік тому

      @@bobbypatton4903 i.e. the meth that one worker is clearly on ;)

  • @Perseverance7
    @Perseverance7 3 роки тому +33

    I, an assembly worker, can tell you from experience that this stuff literally becomes second nature.
    If you do the same thing enough times over and over you lose the need to think about it and eventually work like the masterpiece we see on screen with ease.

    • @tomminton5512
      @tomminton5512 3 роки тому +8

      ... Said the butcher with seven fingers.

    • @Perseverance7
      @Perseverance7 3 роки тому +1

      @@tomminton5512 assembly worker...butcher? I don't get the comparison man 😂
      It's called wearing proper PPE(Personal Protective Equipment), following your standardized work, and identifying potential problems to safety BEFORE an accident happens. I'm rather safe this way so your point isn't particularly valid.

    • @Perseverance7
      @Perseverance7 3 роки тому

      @@tomminton5512 also, I apologize if I misunderstood your comment for an asshole comment rather than a joking one.
      Either way, my job requires safety first otherwise I refuse to build. A serious injury isn't worth the paycheck to me.

    • @tomminton5512
      @tomminton5512 3 роки тому +7

      I was trying to make a point with humor. You are right, assembly worker and butchering does not equate. Neither does assembly line worker and working as a floor hand on a drilling rig. The most dangerous work is repetitive dangerous work.
      I was in the meat business for many years. From kill floor to retail meat cutting. Over the years I've worked with large breaking saws and other equipment that will eat PPE. Same with those rig hands.
      My comment was spured by your term "with ease". Ease as in easy.
      Maintaining focus was drilled into me constantly as a butcher. What you said just hit a nerve. I did not mean to disparedige you at all. I do know what you mean.

    • @Perseverance7
      @Perseverance7 3 роки тому +3

      @@tomminton5512 thank you for clearing that up and sorry for the misunderstanding.

  • @incominghitdadirt9587
    @incominghitdadirt9587 Рік тому +1

    Think twice before you thank a you tuber for all their hard work.

  • @daciuk8
    @daciuk8 Рік тому

    It’s all about the teamwork and that’s a good crew 🇬🇧

  • @TheSofaKing20
    @TheSofaKing20 3 роки тому +13

    I miss those days. Good Iron. Good Crew. Good Pay. Early 80's. 17 years old and rich.

    • @darrylmcginty1296
      @darrylmcginty1296 3 роки тому

      Me too brother!!
      GENE SLEDGE
      FWA
      TRI-STAR
      TOM BROWN
      Just a few I sling iron for in the 80’s-90’s all over the Permian

  • @sk22ng
    @sk22ng 4 роки тому +18

    Been there, done that! speed combined with safety was always essential. Nice crew! God bless the 5 man crews.

  • @colinchesbrough5772
    @colinchesbrough5772 2 роки тому

    I was waiting for them to start singing "back streets back, ALRIGHT!"

  • @philmulrooney7020
    @philmulrooney7020 2 роки тому

    “Roughnecks” NAH, that was slick AF🤟

  • @tkhannibal2476
    @tkhannibal2476 3 роки тому +109

    Dude almost got his head separated from his shoulders.

    • @t_train3796
      @t_train3796 3 роки тому +8

      There's videos out there of this going wrong and guys getting their grapes smooshed, kinda like how you described.

    • @waynegreen8815
      @waynegreen8815 3 роки тому +1

      When? I missed it

    • @--OpT.OuT--
      @--OpT.OuT-- 3 роки тому

      Damn sure did

    • @--OpT.OuT--
      @--OpT.OuT-- 3 роки тому

      @@waynegreen8815 1:36

    • @trickhealey
      @trickhealey 3 роки тому +16

      Don’t think so, looked to me that he knew it was coming and precisely knew the limits of travel.

  • @garyprice8490
    @garyprice8490 2 роки тому +3

    Real men who work together for the benefit of others. And they work really hard for their money. Something that does not happen much anymore. I would rather work with guys like this!!

  • @michaeltillman6604
    @michaeltillman6604 2 роки тому +1

    Brings back memories I worked on a worker rig out of Louisiana and a jackup rig out of Texas. Hard work honest living.

  • @nickbono8
    @nickbono8 2 роки тому +84

    I did geotechnical drilling for a few years and this brought back some memories, even though this type of drilling is pretty different. It is a great feeling once you find that system that works for you and your coworkers. Hard work, long days, usually covered head to toe with mud… good times.

    • @MikailStoner
      @MikailStoner 2 роки тому +2

      Assuming Very good pay though too?

    • @nickbryangaming8008
      @nickbryangaming8008 Рік тому +1

      Man I do geotechnical drilling as a job right now man an I love it one of the best jobs I’ve ever worked for an I was doing cell phone towers before doing drilling

    • @CougerFilms
      @CougerFilms Рік тому +2

      4 years geo drilling done both geo is 10x harder. these guys have it easy....

    • @User-435ggrest
      @User-435ggrest Рік тому +2

      @@CougerFilms you still drilling? And is the pay good?😀

    • @CougerFilms
      @CougerFilms Рік тому +2

      @@User-435ggrest oh yea. Over 100k a year now.

  • @vadymbrykalov8733
    @vadymbrykalov8733 3 роки тому +28

    Almost looked like a well choreographed dance (minus all the risk)

  • @frankygers
    @frankygers Рік тому +1

    All three finished their careers with 5 fingers.

  • @juliobonilla2222
    @juliobonilla2222 Рік тому

    Amazing crew

  • @spooneycyrax1236
    @spooneycyrax1236 2 роки тому +11

    Imagine trying to learn that on your first day

  • @PetrolucrumSFO
    @PetrolucrumSFO 9 років тому +7

    That's some good synergy there!
    Roughnecks, Oil, Petro Lucrum, Gas

  • @hellyea489
    @hellyea489 Рік тому

    Not a word spoken, perfect coordination.
    Also I love the way they obey all occupational safety rules like wearing gloves, a helmet and long trousers, but the manual didn't say anything about the shirts so they just didn't bother.

  • @2WhiteAndNerdy
    @2WhiteAndNerdy Рік тому +1

    I guarantee these guys never had to take sleeping pills to get a good night's rest.

    • @DemonPrinceofHell
      @DemonPrinceofHell Рік тому

      Nah because they probably had a wife to sleep well with

  • @Zar4thustr4
    @Zar4thustr4 9 років тому +628

    It seems as if the guy in the front is facing the chance of sudden death at least one time per connection ...

    • @justindbridges304
      @justindbridges304 6 років тому +41

      That's the thrill and the test

    • @davecrupel2817
      @davecrupel2817 6 років тому +57

      justin d Bridges and the letter to his family.

    • @rowdyropp7464
      @rowdyropp7464 6 років тому +28

      You cant imagine the dangers and the strengths it takes to trip pipe, TD, and make connection till you have!

    • @Hey_its_Koda
      @Hey_its_Koda 6 років тому +141

      How do you learn all of this. I mean i think a first day on the job would be hell.

    • @madjack1748
      @madjack1748 6 років тому +1

      Nice.

  • @michealbeers777
    @michealbeers777 9 років тому +299

    ......the advantages of being YOUNG!

    • @kashmir4617
      @kashmir4617 8 років тому +9

      +Micheal Beers you know I've heard many of my lecturers tell me about being young and working on an oil rig is advantageous. Even my 29 year old brother works on one, his work isn't labor intensive but people still say age can be a high factor lol.

    • @michealbeers777
      @michealbeers777 8 років тому +27

      +⇒Kashmir⇐ your brother's lucky, not all jobs on an oil rig are hard......but most are. The young get old very fast, especially the ones who drink and smoke.

    • @kashmir4617
      @kashmir4617 8 років тому +5

      Micheal Beers He's been promoted to an mechanical engineer, works mainly in the engine room and on the computers. Yeah drinking and smokes does take a toll on your body and performance.

    • @sgtshamrock
      @sgtshamrock 6 років тому +29

      Our country is supposed to be built by our young generation, nowadays the millennials couldn't handle this kind of work and that's sad.

    • @sgtshamrock
      @sgtshamrock 6 років тому +10

      Whaaaa, typical whiny millenial....

  • @Kathrynlove
    @Kathrynlove Рік тому

    I showed my son the oil rigs and he said, Stop! I thought you didn't want me to have a traumatizing childhood..lol.

  • @agungwibowo2313
    @agungwibowo2313 3 роки тому +20

    Everybody know what to do. best teamwork.

  • @GreenKingDean
    @GreenKingDean 2 роки тому +5

    I like how they come out of no where from the wood work into the Frame like some mythical beast soldiers only born for this one job 😂

  • @denalihighway
    @denalihighway Рік тому

    I must try to remember this video when I come home and say "I had a tough day at work" :)

  • @stevevoyles3816
    @stevevoyles3816 Рік тому +1

    I worked in oilfield growing up in the Permian basin, worked lead tongs on oil rig, doing exactly what these men were doing. Swore to never go back to oil fields when I joined the military in 71...