Depends...
First all oil wells are rated in barrels (42 gal).
Some wells can produce hundreds of barrels of fluid per day. Some wells produce only one or less than 1 barrel of fluid per day.
The fluid they produce can also vary in the amount of oil they produce, some wells might produce a lot of fluid but its only 5% oil where the rest is salt water. While other wells produce pure oil and all in between. Some wells even actually inject fluids back down into the geological formation. Not every well you see is a producer.
You might have two wells 50' apart and they produce completely different amounts of oil. It all depends on the geology down where they drilled and luck since you really never know what is down there until you drill the hole.
i personally thimk that you should get more answers
Well, refineries typically get 19.6 gallons of gasoline from each 42-gallon barrel of crude oil: about 46%.
Well, yes...but crude oil isn't exactly made; they drill a hole in the ground and pump it out.
About 19.6 gallons of gasoline from each barrel of crude oil. According to API: 'Better refining technologies have made it possible to produce over 21 gallons of gasoline from a 42-gallon barrel of crude oil ' also look at the National Petroleum Refiners Association I wish i had my old thinkpad up and running, i know I have a really good graph of all the products that are taken from a '55' gal barrel of oil.. with additaves, it adds up to quite a bit more than the 'barrel' itself..
A standard barrel of oil contains approximately 159 liters of gasoline.
how many pints are in 2 gallons well it is 16 pints in 2 gallons
its a low volume high preasure pump. there no good for a pool they dont have the flow and if is a cast iron pump it will bleed , so you will have rust streaks. but if its all ya got go with it.. your pool pump repair guy in longwood fl
Well, 71 gallons is equal to 284 quarts, which is equal to 568 pints.
well
Filled to the top, this well would hold about 956 gallons of water.
There are many reasons why NYMEX crude oil goes up and down in prices. This includes the level of production from crude oil suppliers as well as world events and government policy.
No. its not the pump, its the pipe size..That 1.5hp pump well only pump about 32psi (at sea level) but a large volume of water, a .5hp pump well also pump app. 32 psi but a smaller volume. Look at the filter it well have the total GPL (gallons per minute) then look at the pump it well have the pump curve.. Better yet, look up Hayward on the net and ask for the site for hydraulics, it well show you how to figure the right pump to the right filter to to total gallons.. Yes, this pump will do the job for you. This pump will easily do 37 GPM, 24 hours a day, which is what you will need, since you probably have 70-80 feet of head, due to 1.5 inch plumbing. If you want to reduce the head losses, you will need to at least re-do the above ground plumbing to 2 inch diameter, especialy going to the pump.