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BP has said a relief well should be ready by August, and the DDIII is farther along, having reached a depth of nearly 11,000 feet below the seafloor. Still, Guidry said, it's unclear which rig will hit the target first. "Never know what will happen," he said. "You never know." Work goes around-the-clock on the DDII, which can hold 176 people. Eight thrusters on the rig keep it precisely positioned over the well it's drilling. The ship is so large that those aboard cannot feel it move on the water most of the time
-- unusually still for a vessel at sea. Coast Guard Adm. Thad Allen, the top federal official in the spill response, has said construction on the relief wells remains ahead of schedule. Jackson, however, noted that setbacks are routine on a drilling rig. Hydraulic hoses can snap. Early Saturday morning, one set of tongs used to tighten the casings broke down, forcing the teams to switch to a backup set. "It's business as usual, man," said Eric Jackson, a tourpusher. "Everybody tells us to be,
'Hey, don't let the pressure get to you.' This is what we do for a living, man. We drill wells. It's the same as any other day." Once one of the two relief wells intersects the damaged line, BP plans to pump heavy drilling mud in to stop the oil flow and plug the blown-out well with cement. It's a tricky task and it's not guaranteed to work. A pair of relief wells took months to stop an undersea gusher in Mexico that started in the summer of 1979. Guidry, who has been in an oil field for 27 years and worked his way up from a clothes washer, insists in his Louisiana drawl that the job is business as usual. "We try to keep the guys focused," he said. "We're just treating this like we treat any other well that we drill."
[Associated
Press;
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