Drilling EngineeringDrilling Hydraulics
Apparent Viscosity from 600 RPM Reading Formula
Apparent Viscosity from 600 RPM Reading calculates apparent viscosity for drilling hydraulics workflows in drilling engineering.
How engineers use this formula
Use this formula when the listed inputs (theta_600) are known and the assumptions behind the cited drilling hydraulics relationship match the engineering case being checked.
Assumptions
- Input values are representative for the well, reservoir, fluid, or equipment case being evaluated.
- The declared units match the field-unit constants used in the formula.
- The cited formula applies to the selected petroleum engineering workflow.
Limitations
- The calculation does not replace a full engineering model or operating procedure.
- Accuracy depends on the source correlation, assumptions, input quality, and unit consistency.
Common mistakes
- Mixing unit systems without converting the inputs.
- Using default example values as field recommendations.
- Applying the formula outside the source assumptions.
Default example
Using the default inputs, AV equals 28 cP.
theta_600dial units
56
Inputs
theta_600
dial units600 RPM Rheometer Dial Reading
Outputs
AV
cP
Apparent Viscosity
theta_600
dial units
600 RPM Rheometer Dial Reading
Source and review
reviewedDrilling Manual rheometer test method.
Source