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How Do You Steer a Drill Below The Earth? - YouTube
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In December 2019, the City of Fort Lauderdale,
Florida experienced a series of catastrophic
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ruptures in a critical wastewater transmission
line, releasing raw sewage into local waterways
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and neighborhoods. Recognizing the need for
improvements to their aging infrastructure,
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the City embarked on a plan to install
a new pipeline to carry sewage from the
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Coral Ridge Country Club pumping station
across 7 miles (or 12 kilometers) to the
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Lohmeyer Wastewater Treatment Plant.
But just drawing a line on the map
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hides the enormous complexity of a project
like this. Installing an underground pipeline
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through the heart of a major urban area while
crossing three rivers is not a simple task.
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Underground utilities are usually installed by
a technique known as trenching. In other words,
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we excavate a trench down from the surface, place
the line, backfill the soil, and repair whatever
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damage to the streets and sidewalks remains. That
type of construction is profoundly disruptive,
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requiring road closures, detours, and pavement
repairs that never quite seem as nice as the
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original. Trenches are also dangerous for the
workers inside, so they have to be supported
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to prevent collapse. Beyond the human risk,
in sensitive environmental areas like rivers
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and streams, trenching is not only technically
challenging but practically unachievable because
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of the permits required. In fact, trenching
in urban areas to install pipelines these days
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is for the birds. When the commotion of
construction must be minimized, there are
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many trenchless technologies for installing pipes
below the ground. One of those methods helped Fort
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Lauderdale get a 7-mile-long sewer built in less
than a year and half, and is used across the world
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to get utility lines across busy roadways and
sensitive watercourses. I’m Grady and this is
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Practical Engineering. On today’s episode, we’re
talking about horizontal directional drilling.
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This video is sponsored by Curiosity
Stream and Nebula. More on them later.
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If you’ve ever seen one of these machines on
the side of the road, you’ve seen a trenchless
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technology in action. Although there are quite
a few ways to install subsurface pipelines,
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telecommunication cables, power lines, and sewers
without excavating a trench, only one launches
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lines from the surface. That means you’re much
more likely to catch a glimpse. Like laparoscopic
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surgery for the earth, horizontal directional
drilling (or HDD) doesn’t require digging open
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a large area like a shaft or a bore pit to get
started. Instead, the drill can plunge directly
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into the earth’s surface. From there, horizontal
directional drilling is pretty straightforward,
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but it’s not necessarily straight. In fact, HDD
necessarily uses a curved alignment to enter
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the earth, travel below a roadway or river,
and exit at the surface on the other side.
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Let me show you how it works and at the end, we’ll
talk about a few of the things that can go wrong.
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The first step in an HDD installation is
to drill a pilot hole, a small diameter
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borehole that will guide the rest of the
project. A drill rig at the surface has
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all the tools and controls that are needed.
These rigs can be tiny machines used to get
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a small fiber-optic line under a roadway or
colossal contraptions capable of drilling
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large-diameter boreholes for thousands
of feet at a time. As such, many of the
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details of HDD vary across projects, but the
basic steps and equipment are all the same.
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As the drill bit advances through the earth,
the rig adds more and more segments of pipe
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to lengthen the drill string. Through this pipe,
drilling fluid is pumped to the end of the string.
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Drilling fluid, also known as mud or slurry,
serves several purposes in an HDD project. First,
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it helps keep the drill bit lubricated and
cool, reducing wear and tear on equipment
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and minimizing the chances of a tool breaking
and getting stuck in the hole. Next, drilling
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fluid helps carry away the excavated soil or rock,
called the cuttings, and clear them from the hole.
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Finally, drilling fluid stabilizes and seals
the borehole, reducing the chance of a collapse.
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I have here an acrylic box partly full
of sand, a setup you’re probably quite
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familiar with if you follow my channel. Turns
out a box of sand can show a lot of different
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phenomena in construction and civil engineering.
Compared to soils that hold together like clay,
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sand is the worst case scenario when it comes
trying to keep a borehole from collapsing.
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If I pull away this support, the simulated
borehole face caves in no time. If I add
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groundwater to the mix, the problem is even
worse. Pulling away the support, the wall
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of my borehole doesn’t stand a chance. Let me
show you how drilling fluid solves this problem.
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I’m mixing up a handcrafted artisanal batch of
drilling mud, a slurry of water and bentonite
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powder. This is a type of clay created by
volcanic ash that swells and stays suspended
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when mixed with water. It’s pretty gloopy stuff,
so it gets used in cosmetics and even winemaking,
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but it’s also the most common constituent in
drilling fluids. If I add the slurry to one
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side of the demo, you can see how the denser
fluid displaces the groundwater. It’s not the
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most appetizing thing I’ve ever put on camera, but
watch what happens when I remove the rigid wall.
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The drilling fluid is able to support the face
of the sand, preventing it from collapsing. In
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addition to supporting the sand, the drilling
fluid seals the surface of the borehole to reduce
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migration of water into or out of the interface.
In most HDD operations, the drilling fluid flows
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in through the drill string and back out of the
borehole, carrying the cuttings along toward the
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entry location where it is stored in a tank or
containment pit for later disposal or reuse.
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So far HDD follows essentially the same steps as
any other drilling into the earth, but that first
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‘D’ is important. Horizontal directional
drilling means we have to steer the bit.
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The drill string has to enter the subsurface from
above, travel far enough below a river or road
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to avoid impacts, evade other subsurface
utilities or obstacles below the ground,
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and exit the subsurface on the other side
in the correct location. I don’t know if
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you’ve ever tried to drill something, but
so far when I do it, I’ve never been able
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to curve the bit around objects. So how is it
possible in horizontal directional drilling?
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There are really two parts to steering a drill
string. Before you can correct the course,
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you need to know where you are in the first
place, and there are a few ways to do it.
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One option is a walkover locating device that
can read the position and depth of a drill bit
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from the surface. A transmitter behind the bit
in the drill string sends a radio signal that
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can be picked up by a handheld receiver. Other
options include wire-line or gyro systems that use
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magnetic fields or gyroscopes to keep track
of the bit's location as it travels below
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the surface. Once you know where the bit is,
you can steer it to where you want it to go.
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I’ve made up a batch of agar, which is a
translucent gel made from the cell walls of
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algae. I tried this first in the same acrylic box,
but the piping hot jelly busted a seam and came
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pouring out into my bathtub, creating a huge mess.
So, you’ll have to excuse the smaller glassware
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demo. My simulated drill string is just a length
of wire. There are two things to keep in mind
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about directional drilling: (1) Although they seem
quite rigid, drill pipes are somewhat flexible
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at length. If I take a short length of this wire
and try to bend it, it’s pretty difficult, but a
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longer segment deflects with no problem. And, (2)
you don’t have to continuously rotate the drill
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string in order to advance the borehole. You can
just push on it, forcing the bit through the soil.
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My wire pushes through the agar without much
force at all, and a drill string can be advanced
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through the soil in a similar way, especially
when lubricated with water or drilling fluid.
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The real trick for steering a drill string is
the asymmetric bit. Watch what happens when I
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put a bend on the end of my wire and advance
it through the agar. It takes a curved path,
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following the direction of the bend. If I rotate
the wire and continue advancing, I can change the
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direction of the curve. The model drill string is
biased in one direction because of the asymmetry,
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and I can take advantage of that bias to
steer the bit. I can steer the string left,
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then rotate and advance again to steer the bit
to the right. I’m a little bit clumsy at this,
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but with enough control and practice, I could
steer this wire to any location within the agar,
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avoid obstacles, and even have it
exit at the surface wherever I wanted.
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This is exactly how many horizontal directional
drills work. The controls on the rig show the
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operator which way the bit is facing. The
drill string can be rotated to any angle
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(called clocking), then advanced to change the
direction of the borehole. Sometimes a jet nozzle
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at the tip of the bit sprays drilling fluid
to help with drilling progress. If the nozzle
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is offset from the center, it can help create a
steering bias like the asymmetric bit. Just like
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the Hulk’s secret is that he’s always angry, a
directional drill string’s secret is that it’s
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always curving. The rig operator’s only steering
control is the direction the drill string curves.
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And hey, if that sounds like something you’d like
to try for yourself, my friend Dan Shiffman over
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at the Coding Train YouTube channel built a
2D horizontal directional drilling simulator.
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This is an open-source project, so
you can contribute features yourself,
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but it’s also really fun if you
just want to play a few rounds.
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If you’re into coding or you're wanting to get
started, there is no better way than working
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through all the incredible and artistic examples
Dan comes up with for his coding challenges.
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Go check him out his video on HDD after
this one, and tell him I sent you.
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Once the drill string is headed in the right
direction, it can just be continuously rotated
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to keep the bit moving in a relatively
straight line. The pilot hole for an HDD
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project is just an exercise in checking the
location and adjusting the clock position
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of the drill string over and over until
the drill string exits on the other side,
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hopefully in exactly the location you
intended. But, not all soil conditions
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allow for a drill string to simply
be pushed through the subsurface.
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Rocky conditions, in particular, make
steering a drill rig challenging. An
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alternative to simply ramming the bit through
the soil is to use a downhole hydraulic motor.
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Also known as mud motors, these devices convert
the hydraulic energy from the drilling fluid
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being pumped through the string to rotate a
drill bit that chews through soil and rock.
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This allows for faster, more efficient drilling
without having to rotate the whole drill string.
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The housing of the mud motor is
bent to provide steering bias,
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and the drill string can be clocked to
change the direction of the borehole.
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Once the pilot hole exits on the other side, it
has to be enlarged to accommodate the pipe or
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duct. That process is called reaming. A reamer is
attached to the drill string from the exit hole
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and pulled through the pilot toward the drill
rig to widen the hole. Depending on the size of
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the pipe to be installed, contractors may ream
a hole in multiple steps. The final reaming is
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combined with the installation of the pipeline.
This step is called the pull back. The pipe
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to be installed in the borehole is lined up on
rollers behind the exit pit. The end of the pipe
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is attached to the remaining assembly, and the
whole mess is pulled with tremendous force through
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the borehole toward the rig. Finally, it can be
connected at both ends and placed into service.
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That’s how things work when everything goes
right, but there are plenty of things that can
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go wrong with horizontal directional drilling too.
Parts of the drill string can break and get stuck
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in the pilot hole. Drilling can inadvertently
impact other subsurface utilities or underground
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structures. The pipeline can get stuck or damaged
on pullback. Or, the borehole can collapse.
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The controversial Mariner East II pipeline in
Pennsylvania experienced a litany of environmental
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problems during its construction between 2017
and 2022. Most of those problems happened on
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HDD segments of the line and involved
inadvertent returns of drilling fluid.
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That’s the technical term for the situation when
drilling fluid exits a borehole at the surface
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instead of circulating back to the entrance
pit. The inadvertent returns in the Mariner
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East II line created water quality issues in
nearby wells, led to sinkholes in some areas,
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and spilled drilling fluid into sensitive
environmental areas. The pipeline owner was
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fined more than $20 million over the course of
construction due to violations of their permits,
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and they are still mired in legal battles and
extreme public opposition to the project to date.
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In the case of Mariner East II, most of
the drilling fluid spills were partially
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related to the difficult geology in Pennsylvania.
Clearly HDD isn’t appropriate for every project.
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But in most cases, trenchless technologies
are the environmentally-superior way to
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install subsurface utilities because they
minimize disruptions on the surface to the
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people in urban areas and sensitive
habitat around rivers and wetlands.
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This video’s sponsor is actually two sponsors,
Curiosity Stream and Nebula, which is awesome
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because you get access to both for less than the
price of similar services. Nebula’s a completely
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ad-free streaming service built by and for your
favorite independent creators like Wendover
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for us to try new ideas and longer videos that
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might not work well on ad-supported platforms
like YouTube. My videos go live there the day
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before they go on YouTube, and one of my favorite
parts of Nebula is rewatching some of my favorite
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creators’ back catalogs of videos without any
ads. And, we’re super excited to continue our
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partnership with Curiosity Stream, a service with
thousands of documentaries and non-fiction titles
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on pretty much every subject you can imagine.
Curiosity Stream loves independent creators
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and wants to help us grow our platform, so they’re
offering free access to Nebula when you sign up at
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