trinityboringsolutions.com

directional boring installing underground utilities

Enid, Oklahoma · Licensed and Insured · Since 1965

Directional Boring Contractors in Enid, OK with 24/7 Emergency Crews

As Enid keeps growing in Northwestern Oklahoma on the eastern edge of the Great Plains, you need directional boring contractors in Enid, OK who can run new water, sewer, gas, electric, and fiber lines through streets, driveways, and tight utility corridors without tearing up the surface. Trinity Boring Solutions brings 24/7 trenchless crews to Enid from our Yukon base.

HDD · Trenching · Hydro-Vac
Water · Sewer · Gas · Electric · Fiber
Residential · Commercial · Municipal
24/7 Emergency Utility Response

Call(405) 409-7423
Address9102 NW Expressway, Yukon, OK 73099
HoursOpen 24 hours
Rated5.0 stars (45 reviews)

Full-Scope Underground Utility Work in Enid, Oklahoma

Enid is a community of about 51,308 people in Garfield County, served by US-81, US-60 and US-64, with Downtown Enid among its local landmarks. Enid is a built-out regional hub with ongoing street, waterline, and sanitary sewer work, so utility projects often involve established corridors, roadway coordination, and mixed urban/industrial access conditions.

That mix of established neighborhoods and new construction is exactly where trenchless work pays off. We provide 24/7 underground utility installation in Enid using horizontal directional drilling (HDD), trenching, and hydro-vac so you can replace aging water and sewer mains, run new gas and electric services, build fiber and telecom routes to homes and businesses, and upgrade irrigation and lighting circuits, all while keeping roads, driveways, and landscaping intact.

Older parts of Enid often sit on top of utilities that were installed decades ago, while newer developments need fresh service runs to every lot. Open-cut trenching across a finished street or a paved parking lot means lane closures, pavement restoration, and a long list of permits. Directional boring lets us thread a new line under all of that from a small entry pit to a small exit pit, so the surface above stays in one piece and your project keeps moving.

Need directional boring contractors in Enid, OK who answer the phone 24/7? Call (405) 409-7423.

What Directional Boring Is and Why Enid Projects Use It

Directional boring contractors in Enid OK drilling a trenchless utility crossing

Directional boring, also called horizontal directional drilling or HDD, is a trenchless method for installing
underground utilities without digging a long open trench. Instead of cutting a continuous slot across the ground,
the crew drills a small, steerable pilot hole along a planned path from an entry pit to an exit pit. The hole is
then enlarged, and the new pipe or conduit is pulled back through it. For property owners and project managers in
Enid, that means a new water, sewer, gas, electric, or fiber line can cross a street, driveway, creek, or
finished landscape while the surface above stays almost untouched.

The process has three basic stages. First, the pilot bore: a drill head with a transmitter is steered along the
designed line and grade while a locator on the surface tracks its exact depth and position. Second, pre-reaming:
a reamer is pulled back through the pilot hole to widen it to the size needed for the product pipe. Third, pullback:
the new HDPE, steel, or conduit pipe is connected behind the reamer and pulled into place in one continuous run. A
bentonite or polymer drilling fluid cools the tooling, carries cuttings out of the hole, and stabilizes the bore so
it does not collapse.

Compared with open-cut trenching, directional boring contractors in Enid, OK use HDD to avoid tearing up
pavement, to keep traffic moving, to protect mature trees and existing utilities, and to cross obstacles that a
trench simply cannot. It is not always the cheapest method on a wide-open dirt lot, where a trencher may win, but
on developed property and under roads such as US-81 it usually saves money once you add up restoration,
permitting, and downtime. We pick the method honestly, based on the ground and the obstacle, not based on selling
one technique.

Why Enid Trusts Our Trenchless Crews

  • New and replacement water and sewer lines that must cross streets, driveways, and crowded utility corridors.
  • Fiber and telecom builds: backbone routes, laterals, and business drops across Enid neighborhoods and commercial corridors.
  • Primary and secondary electric, site lighting, and light-pole circuits for shopping centers, schools, and industrial yards.
  • Irrigation mains and control wire for parks, medians, athletic fields, and large HOA common areas.
  • Long driveway and acreage crossings to shops, barns, and outbuildings without a trench scar across the whole property.

We match the method to the job: HDD for crossings under US-81, US-60 and US-64 and built-out areas, trenching for straight-shot open ground in yards and easements, and hydro-vac for potholing and soft-dig around the existing utilities common across Enid.

For a plan that blends directional boring, trenching, and hydro-vac on one Enid project, call now.

HDD, Trenching, or Hydro-Vac: How We Choose for Your Enid Site

Every underground utility job in Enid comes down to one question: what is the safest, fastest, lowest-cost way
to get the line from point A to point B without damaging what is already there? Here is how we decide.

When directional boring wins

We reach for HDD whenever the bore has to cross something we do not want to disturb: a paved road, a driveway, a
parking lot, a creek or drainage way, a row of mature trees, or a yard with finished landscaping and irrigation.
HDD also wins in congested corridors where the ground is full of existing water, sewer, gas, and electric lines and
a trench would be too risky. Because the entry and exit pits are small, restoration cost and permitting are usually
far lower than open-cut.

When trenching wins

On open ground with no surface to protect, such as a vacant lot, a field, or a wide easement, a trencher or
excavator is often faster and cheaper than setting up a directional boring rig. We trench for tie-ins, for short shallow runs, and for
segments where we need full visual access to the pipe as it goes in. On many Enid projects we combine the two:
bore the road and driveway crossings, trench the open straightaways in between.

When hydro-vac wins

Hydro-vac uses pressurized water and a powerful vacuum to dig safely around utilities that are already in the
ground. We use it to pothole and daylight existing lines before a bore so we know exactly what we are crossing, to
expose tie-in points without risking a strike, and for soft-dig and slot trenching in sensitive areas. It is the
safest way to dig near live gas, fiber, and electric, and it is a core part of how directional boring contractors
in Enid, OK keep every job claim-free.

Directional Boring Contractors in Enid, OK: Full Service List

Here is how our HDD, trenching, and hydro-vac crews cover everything from one house service to full city and commercial utility builds across Enid.

Water and Sewer Lines

HDD and trenching for individual services and large mains: domestic water, fire lines, gravity sewer, force mains, and storm drains that must maintain grade across streets, alleys, and long drives.

Gas, Electric and Site Power

Directional boring and trenching for gas services, primary and secondary electric, generator feeds, and site-lighting circuits serving shops, schools, commercial sites, and industrial yards.

Fiber, Telecom and Low-Voltage

Multi-duct telecom and fiber conduit banks, ISP and municipal fiber backbones, business and school laterals, and low-voltage conduits installed via HDD, trenching, and hydro-vac as needed.

Hydro-Vac and Slot Trenching

Hydro-vac daylighting and potholing to expose existing utilities, soft-dig around critical lines, and narrow slot trenching in congested or sensitive areas where a trencher is too risky.

If it involves underground utilities in Enid, Trinity Boring Solutions can design a trenchless or mixed plan that fits.

Our Step-by-Step Directional Boring Process in Enid

A clean bore is the result of planning, locating, and disciplined execution, not luck. Here is what a typical
Enid directional boring project looks like from your first call to final tie-in.

  1. Call and scope. You tell us the Enid address or cross street, the utility type, the
    approximate distance, and what we are crossing. We can usually give ballpark guidance on the phone and schedule a
    site visit the same week, or dispatch immediately for emergencies.
  2. Locate and design. We file an Oklahoma 811 locate request so the public utilities are marked,
    add private locating and hydro-vac potholing where needed, and design the bore profile: depth, line, grade, entry
    and exit points, and pipe size.
  3. Permits and coordination. When a job crosses a city street, county road, or state right of
    way, we handle the boring permits and coordinate with the city, county, or Garfield County so the crossing is
    legal and inspected.
  4. Pilot bore. The steerable drill head is pushed along the designed path while a surface
    locator tracks depth and pitch in real time, keeping the bore on line and clear of every marked utility.
  5. Ream and pull back. This is the stage where directional boring earns its keep: we enlarge the
    hole to the right diameter, then pull the new water, sewer, gas, electric, or fiber pipe into place in one
    continuous run behind the reamer.
  6. Tie-in and restore. We connect the new line, pressure-test or proof where required, backfill
    the small pits, and leave the site clean. Because we did not open-cut the surface, there is little to no pavement
    or landscape restoration.

Want this done right on your Enid project? Call (405) 409-7423.

What Affects the Cost and Timeline of a Enid Boring Job

The most common question we get is simple: what will it cost and how long will it take? Every Enid job is
different, but the price and schedule come down to a handful of factors. Knowing them up front helps you plan a
realistic budget instead of guessing.

  • Distance and diameter. A short service bore to a single house is very different from a long
    large-diameter mainline crossing. Longer bores and bigger pipe take more time, more drilling fluid, and heavier
    tooling.
  • Soil and ground conditions. Clean sandy soil makes directional boring fast. Rock, cobble, and
    the rose-rock and shale common in parts of central Oklahoma slow things down and can require special tooling.
  • What you are crossing. A bore under US-81 or a paved parking lot needs more setback,
    permitting, and care than a run across open ground, but it saves far more in avoided restoration.
  • Existing utilities. The more buried lines in the path, the more potholing and hand-checking
    we do to stay claim-free. That is time well spent, because a utility strike costs far more than the locating.
  • Permits and inspections. City, county, and state right-of-way permits add lead time. We pull
    them and coordinate inspections so the crossing is legal and signed off.
  • Access and restoration. Tight pits, traffic control, and surface restoration all factor in.
    Trenchless work usually wins here because there is little surface to put back.

The honest answer on cost is that directional boring often looks more expensive per foot than open-cut until you
add the trench, the pavement, the traffic control, and the permits an open trench would need. On most developed
Enid sites, the all-in number favors directional boring. We give you a clear scope and a real number, not a vague range.

For a straight answer on your Enid job, call (405) 409-7423 and describe the crossing.

Equipment Our Enid Crews Run

The right machine for the ground is half the job. Our fleet lets us match the bore to the soil, the crossing, and the utility, instead of forcing one method everywhere.

  • Horizontal directional drill rigs sized for short residential shots up through long mainline crossings, with mud-mixing systems for clean cuttings control.
  • Walk-over and wireline locating so we track the drill head depth and pitch in real time and keep the bore on the planned profile.
  • Hydro-vac trucks for potholing, daylighting existing utilities, and cleaning up entry and exit pits without hand-digging blind.
  • Trenchers and excavators for open-ground runs, tie-ins, and pits where trenching is simply faster and cheaper than boring.
  • Pipe and conduit handling for HDPE fusion, steel, and multi-duct conduit so the product pipe goes in clean behind the reamer.

Not sure which method your Enid job needs? Call (405) 409-7423 and we will walk the site with you.

Directional Boring Service Area Map: Enid, Oklahoma

As directional boring contractors in Enid, OK, we cover all of Garfield County as a core part of our regular route across the Oklahoma City metro. We dispatch 24/7 from our Yukon base at 9102 NW Expressway, Yukon, OK 73099. Every bore in Enid starts with a locate request through Oklahoma 811 (Call Okie) so existing utilities are marked before we drill.

Tap to view our 24/7 directional boring service area covering Enid and Garfield County, Oklahoma.


What We Need to Quote Any Enid Utility Job

  • Enid address or closest cross street or section line.
  • Utility type: water, sewer, storm, gas, electric, fiber, irrigation, lighting, or conduit bank.
  • Approximate start and end points, estimated distance, and whether it is services, mains, or both.
  • What we are crossing: city street, driveway, parking lot, easement, creek, or open ground.
  • Your timeline and whether it is 24/7 emergency work or planned construction.

For a detailed plan, directional boring contractors in Enid, OK are a quick call away at (405) 409-7423.

Helpful Enid and Trenchless Resources

We believe in safe, permitted, well-located work. These outside resources cover dig-safe rules, trenchless methods, and local data that matter for any directional boring project in Enid, Oklahoma.

Ready to plan your bore the right way? Call (405) 409-7423.

Directional Boring Contractors in Enid, OK: Common Questions

What is the difference between directional boring and open-cut trenching in Enid?

Open-cut trenching digs a continuous open trench along the whole run, then backfills and restores the surface. Directional boring drills a steerable hole underground from a small entry pit to a small exit pit, so the surface above stays intact. In Enid, boring is the better choice under streets, driveways, and finished landscaping, while trenching can be cheaper on wide-open ground.

Can you install utilities in Enid without cutting up the road?

Yes. Directional boring contractors in Enid, OK install water, sewer, gas, electric, and fiber lines underneath US-81 and side streets without open-cutting the pavement. That avoids lane closures, costly road restoration, and extra permitting on your busiest corridors.

How deep do you bore utility lines in Enid?

Depth depends on the utility and what we are crossing. Typical service bores run a few feet deep, while crossings under roads, creeks, or other utilities go deeper to maintain required clearance. We design the bore profile so the new line clears every existing utility and meets code for that line type.

How much does directional boring cost in Enid, Oklahoma?

Cost depends on distance, pipe diameter, soil, what you are crossing, existing utilities, and permitting. Short residential service bores are far less than long large-diameter mainline crossings. On developed property, boring usually beats open-cut once you add pavement restoration, traffic control, and permits. Call us with the details and we give you a real number, not a vague range.

How long does a typical Enid bore take?

Many single-service bores are completed in a day, including setup, locating, the bore, and tie-in. Larger mainline crossings, long fiber runs, or rocky ground take longer. We give you a realistic timeline once we know the distance, diameter, and conditions.

Do you handle both residential services and larger commercial and municipal jobs in Enid?

Both. We bore and trench for single house services and for large work: city water and sewer mains, commercial and industrial power and communications duct banks, business drops, schools, and projects tied to Enid and Garfield County infrastructure.

When do you use HDD, trenching, or hydro-vac on a Enid job?

We use HDD for crossings and congested areas, trenching for straight-shot open ground in yards and easements, and hydro-vac for potholing and soft-dig around existing utilities. Most larger projects in Enid use a mix of all three.

Can you locate and avoid existing utilities around Enid?

Yes. Before boring we use private utility locating and hydro-vac potholing to expose existing water, sewer, gas, and electric lines. Every bore starts with an Oklahoma 811 locate request so buried utilities in Enid are marked before we drill.

Do I need a permit to bore under a street in Enid?

Crossings under city streets, county roads, or state right of way usually require a boring or right-of-way permit. We pull the permits and coordinate inspections with the city, county, or Garfield County so your Enid crossing is legal and signed off.

What soil and ground conditions do you deal with in Enid?

Central Oklahoma ground ranges from clean sandy soil to clay, shale, and rock, and parts of the area have rose-rock and cobble that slow a bore. We read the ground, pick the right tooling and drilling fluid, and adjust the bore plan so the line goes in clean.

Can you keep grade on gravity sewer and storm bores in Enid?

Yes. On properly engineered projects we use HDD methods and locating that maintain line and grade for gravity sewer and storm systems, so you get trenchless installation without giving up performance.

Can you help with full fiber or multi-duct builds in Enid?

Yes. We install single and multi-duct conduit banks for ISPs, private networks, and municipal or school fiber, including backbone routes, lateral connections, and business drops across Enid.

Will boring damage my driveway, lawn, or landscaping?

That is the whole point of trenchless work. Because we bore from small pits and pull the pipe underground, your driveway, lawn, and landscaping in Enid stay intact except for the small entry and exit pits, which we backfill and clean up.

Are you licensed and insured for work in Enid?

Yes. Trinity Boring Solutions is licensed and insured, and we have been doing underground utility work since 1965. We carry the coverage required for residential, commercial, and municipal bores in Enid and across Garfield County.

How fast can you get a crew to Enid for an emergency?

We dispatch 24/7 from our Yukon base, so we can reach Enid for emergency water main breaks, hit gas or electric lines, and storm-related utility failures any time, day or night. Call (405) 409-7423.

How do I get a quote for directional boring contractors in Enid, OK?

Call (405) 409-7423 or request a quote online. Tell us the Enid address or cross street, the utility type, the approximate distance, and what we are crossing. We will give you a clear scope and a real price, and we answer the phone 24/7.

Get a Directional Boring Quote in Enid, Oklahoma

Whether you are running one new service to a house, building a fiber route, powering a business park, or helping the city upgrade mains, the directional boring contractors in Enid, OK at Trinity Boring Solutions can design a mix of HDD, trenching, and hydro-vac that fits your project. Call our Yukon base at 9102 NW Expressway, Yukon, OK 73099 any time, day or night.

Directional Boring in Enid, OK
HDD · Trenching · Hydro-Vac
Residential, Commercial and Municipal
24/7 Emergency Boring