By melting the ice on it and then off the machine or any electric appliance that is on. Then fix the pipe firmly where it fits.
Before you fix something you've got to understand the well. The oil is leaking from a wellbore, which is really a pipe that allows oil to flow from an underground deposit at about 13,000 ft to the ocean floor. The oil at present is coming up through the pipe, then passing through the blow out preventer (BOP) stack and escaping through the riser. A cement seal is in place between the casing pipe and formation at least from the ocean floor to part way down the last string of pipe. You don't want to destroy this seal. I guess the bomb idea is to destroy the BOP and wellhead. Oil would continue to flow without the stack, but the bomb would shake the earth so much that you will break down the cement seal between the pipe and formation, fractured some of rock, and oil will come out from both the pipe and the behind the pipe. I imagine there would be a pile of rubble subsea, from which the gas would make a worm hole followed by easy passage of oil.
depends on where the oil leak is at
The oil ends up under the frozen water.
What kind of pipe, what feeds the pipe, and where is it located? If it is a floor drain, put some vegetable oil down the p-trap to seal the trap and stop the sewer gases from coming back.
The alternator oil pipe on combo van leaking does feed the vacuum and the return pipe.
No...what in the world would possess a man to think that explosives would be safe to use on an oil well. The proper way to drill an oil well would be to use a "Drill Bit" followed by a series of tools and special pipe to make up the "Bottom hole assembly" or the BHA. As the bit drills deeper a series of pipe are added to the top of the drilling pipe, these are call "Drill Pipe"
If we assume that the pipe is completely full of oil, it would just be the volume of the pipe = pi * r2 * l, where pi = 3.14159, r = radius, and l = length of the pipe. If the pipe is not full, then multiply the volume by the percentage of oil in the pipe. For example, if 50% full, then multiply by .5. If the pipe bends, take into account the different volume of the bend. If the bend is 90 degrees, this can be accomplished by taking the average length of the two bent segments for the length.
OCGT pipe stands for Oil Country Tubular Goods. Most OCTG pipe is used in the application of drilling and pumping oil wells
if your talking about the 2000 rpm 'rattle' then this is the down pipe. the factory pipe is really two pipes, on inside another. you can fix it by cutting a slit in the outer pipe and welding the outer pipe to the inner pipe. make the cut at the bottom on the down pipe, where it bends to go under the oil pan.
That depends entirely on the viscosity of the liquid in the pipe ! Water would flow faster than oil !
cause so times if you crash in a rock or a tree . then the oil comes out of the pipe
Picks up oil.