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Table of contents
Opening credits
Title card: Red Adair Co., Inc. Presents
Title card: The Devil's Cigarette Lighter
Title card: Narrated by Red Adair
Overview of work site and Gassi Touil (GT2) fire
Aerial view of Hassi Messaoud campsite
Close-up of GT2 fire
Sign: Entree Interdite Danger De Mort
Debris from well explosion
Drilling for water in the Albian Water Sand
Lifting jackknife rig for first relief hole
Long shot of GT2 fire
Directional driller reading chart
Water drilling operation and worker accomodations
Aerial view of well campsite
Digging water pits and covering with polyethylene
Camp entrance and safety precautions
Sign: Controle Permanent Du Personnel [Button system for keeping track of workers]
Coffin attached to helicopter
Working area for assembling equipment
Adair with Ed "Coots" Matthews
Water cooled hook
Filling water pits
Long shot of GT2 fire
Cooling GT2 site
Aerial view of work site
Workers assembling water monitor houses; Adair mentions that the nozzles are manufactured by Ohio's Akron Brass Company
Caterpillar D8 tractors
First monitor house moving in
Worker opening valves to water pumps
View of GT2 well fire with reflection on water
Removing wreckage from pipeline explosion
Worker Charlie Tolar
Adair explains some of the hand signals used by the crew
Removing derrick
Relief hole
Adair explains process of pumping mud into relief holes
Removing mud tank
Removing mud pump
Sign: SGE 81
Boom with broken hook
Main flow
Boom with shield
Cutting wreckage from drilling rig
Adair details process of using cutting torch to break up wreckage
Night view of GT2 well fire with debris removed
Workers in relief hole
Adair acknowledges the presence of french workers and crews on blowout sites
Cooling area around fire
Adair details the proper weather for putting out fire
Using explosive charges to stop GT2 fire
Preparing explosives
Shot bucket
Adair loading charges
Adair describes headaches from glycerin and attempted remedies
Charlie Tolar helping with main charge
Adding Ansul Dry Chemical to the charge
Wrapping charge in asbestos
Adair, Boots, Coots, and Tolar setting charge
Explosion; Fire put out
Aftermath of explosion
Adair directing workers
Hook after explosion
Gas rushing out of well head
Leaking water hoses
Replacing wellhead and blowout preventer
Removing damaged wellhead
Clearing area around wellhead; Adair talks about precautions taken to avoid sparks or static electricity that could re-ignite a well fire
Diagram: Damaged wellhead, with Adair detailing the wellhead replacement operation
Digging out area below wellhead
Drilling engineer for CEP [Compagnie D'exploration Pétrolière] with the last name Le Blanc
Sawing conductor pipe with hacksaws
Sawing off pipe head with sand line
Adair explains why he's cutting off wellhead
Cutting section of conductor pipe to expose casing
Close-up of gas rushing out of pipe (Adair calls this "flow")
Pipe cutter tool, with Adair detailing its design process, crediting Mark [sp?] and Associates, and Lecryder [sp?] Gear
Adair and crew wearing goggles and working next to pipe
Section of conducter pipe blowing off pipe
Worker putting hand into gas flow; Adair comments, "Now this is a foolish stunt."
Assembling new wellhead, with Adair detailing parts that were manufactured by Cameron Iron Works
Close-up of damaged wellhead
Hinge bolt
Welding hinge bolt to Cameron AW-type 1500 series braden head
Adair directing workers
Installing new wellhead and blowout preventer
Diagram: Cameron AW-type braden head
Using boom to drop head onto pipeline
Diagram: Cameron 900-series flange, slips, and packing element
Safety engineer using Explosimeter gas detector
Blowout preventer
Two six-inch flow lines with two valves on each side, a Cameron manual valve and a Cameron Type F 1500 series blowout preventer
Dropping blowout preventer into place
Worker using Explosimeter
Bolting blowout preventer to wellhead
Pulling blowout preventer into place
Adair pulling rope connected to blowout preventer
Workers attaching bolts in adverse conditions
Charlie Tolar
Shutting off the gas flow to GT2 and finishing job
Adair: "And this is what you waited six months to do."
Adair and workers walking off job site
John Korshe [sp?], who Adair describes as a "head man" for CEP [Compagnie D'exploration Pétrolière] and COPEFA [France-Africa Oil Company]
Close-up of GT2 gas flow with blowout preventer and safety lock attached
Long shots of gas flow
Choke manifold
Closing off valve, with gas flow coming to a stop
Diagram: Cameron wellhead, spool, blowout preventer, valves and flow lines. Adair details how the equipment was installed and used
Adair: "The irony of the whole thing is they don't want gas, so they'll cement this whole well up and just leave it."
Aerial view of work site
Long shot of fire burning in the night, panning to show reflection on work truck
Pumping mud into GT2; CEP's [and COPEFA's?] mud-pumping set-up
John Korshe [sp?] giving the order to fill the GT2 well with mud
Adair on costs of job
End credits
Title card: A Film Presentation By: Cameron Iron Works, Inc.
Title card: Under supervision of Boone & Cummings Advertising Agency