Formation Intelligence
Offset records, geology expectations, pressure windows, and thermal exposure are collected so rig and bit choices are discussed with the right operating assumptions.
Technology is the creative page for this innovation-led site. It explains how drill rigs, bits, gauges, directional drilling, and service workflows become more valuable when the buyer can see the operating data that supports each decision.
Offset records, geology expectations, pressure windows, and thermal exposure are collected so rig and bit choices are discussed with the right operating assumptions.
Permanent downhole gauge planning, telemetry requirements, and post-completion data expectations help the team avoid equipment choices that create information gaps later.
Monitoring points for vibration, torque, mud behavior, and service events make the field program easier to supervise across remote or multi-site operations.
Maintenance intervals, spares, training, support escalation, and low-impact operating practices are connected to equipment selection from the start.
A useful digital drilling conversation does not begin with software alone. It begins with the physical drilling program and asks what information must be trusted during and after execution. The site therefore presents technology as a layer around equipment: the drill bit generates behavior, the rig and directional system respond to the field, downhole gauges preserve evidence, and service teams translate signals into action. This approach gives procurement and engineering teams a more complete way to evaluate Schlumberger drilling equipment, especially when projects involve difficult formations, remote locations, or sustainability reporting requirements.