Rocky Mountain Rod
Rocky Mountain Rod’s Inspection Shop was started
in November 2004 in Casper, Wyoming. The
founders of Rocky Mountain Rod have worked in
the oil industry all their lives and recognized
a need for an independent rod inspection
facility. With sucker rods being a
critical part of the oil well pumping system,
wear from metal-to-metal contact inside the oil
well tubing string lead to failures.
That’s where
Rocky Mountain Rod comes in; oil companies send
us used sucker rods that we inspect with our
state of the art facility. Leading the charge
is Phil Winburn with over 30 years
experience in sucker rod inspection. Phil is
recognized as a leader in the industry. Phil’s
background in inspection Quality Assurance and
Safety Management will insure that the company
is continually operated in the mode of “Quality
is our prime concern and safety is our way of
life.”
Rocky Mountain Rod Guiding
Plant was started in 2006 with completion in the
summer of 2007. The Guiding Plant is a state of
the art facility. The rod string
condition has direct impact on fluid lifting
efficiency, and rod failures lead to a loss of
production. Proper attention to the integrity
of a rod string can aid in obtaining optimum
operating conditions. The integrity of the
string depends on the proper functioning of each
individual sucker rod joint in the string. Some
rods are subjected to severe operational
conditions such as corrosive fluids exposure,
cyclic loading and lateral bending stresses,
which can lead to material fatigue and
deterioration. failures in rod bodies and
coupling connections are probably the most
common types of metal failures in the oil
industry. In many older oil fields, where
artificial lift is required, pulling crews work
day and night to keep the wells pumping. Sucker
rod inspection can substantially reduce the
failure rate and result in thousands of dollars
saved by reducing pulling jobs and rod
replacement cost.
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· Used
sucker rod inspection at regular intervals can
substantially
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reduce failure rate.
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Usable sucker rods can be retained in service
for maximum
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return on investment.
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Defective rods are eliminated from the string.
Preventive maintenance
costs a lot less than a rod or tubing failure.
The American Petroleum Institute states, "We
consider shot peening, when properly controlled
and applied, a satisfactory method of cold
working a metal surface to improve fatigue
life."
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