PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING FUND
POS AM, 1996-06-13
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<PAGE>
As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on  June 13, 1996


                             Registration No. 33-63635

                      SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                            Washington, D.C.  20549

                               POST EFFECTIVE
                               AMENDMENT NO. 1
                                     to
                                  FORM S-1
                            REGISTRATION STATEMENT
                                   Under
                           THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933


                         PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING PROGRAM
                   (Exact name of registrant as specified in
                                 its charter)

      West Virginia                         1381                    Applied for
(State or other jurisdiction of  (Primary Standard Industrial    (IRS Employer
incorporation or organization)     Classification Code Number) Identification #)


                               103 East Main Street
                          Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330
                                 800/624-3821


(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code,
 of registrant's principal executive offices)

                            Steven R. Williams, President
                          Petroleum Development Corporation
                              103 East Main Street
                           Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330
                                 800/624-3821
(Name, address including zip code, and telephone number, including
 area code, of agent for service)

                                 Copies to:

                               Laurence S. Lese
                       Metzger, Hollis, Gordon & Mortimer
                              1275 K Street, N.W.
                            Washington, D.C.  20005
                               (202) 842-1600
          
            Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public:  As
soon as practicable after the registration statement becomes affective.

            If any of the securities being registered on this Form are to be
offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 the Securities
Act of 1933, check the following box.
                     X 

<PAGE>
                                 PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING PROGRAM
                                 Form S-1 Cross Reference Sheet
                             (Pursuant to Item 501(b) of Regulation S-K)


                                        PART I
                                INFORMATION REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

     Item No. and Caption of Form S-1
                                                      Location or Heading
                                                        in Prospectus

1.   Forepart of the Registration State-        Facing page of Registration
     ment and Outside Front Cover Page          Statement; Cover Page of
     of Prospectus......................        Prospectus


2.   Inside Front and Outside Back Cover        Inside Front and Outside Back
     Pages of Prospectus................        Cover of Prospectus

3.   Summary Information, Risk Factors and      Summary; Risk Factors
     Ratio of Earnings to Fixed Charges.

4.   Use of Proceeds....................        Source of Funds and Use of
                                                Proceeds

5.   Determination of Offering Price....        Summary; Assessments and
                                                Financing

6.   Dilution...........................       *

7.   Selling Security Holders...........       *

8.   Plan of Distribution...............       Terms of the Offering; Plan
                                               of Distribution

9.   Description of Securities to be           Summary of Partnership
     Registered.........................       Agreement; Appendix A -
                                               Form of Limited
                                               Partnership Agreement

10.  Interest of Named Experts and             Experts
     Counsel............................

11.  Information With Respect to the           Summary; Participation in
     Registrant.........................       Costs and Revenues; Proposed 
                                               Activities; Competition,
                                               Markets and Regulation;
                                               Management; Conflict of
                                               Interest; Prior Activities;
                                               Financial Statements

12.  Disclosure of Commission Position         Fiduciary Responsibility of
     on Indemnification for Securities...      the Managing General Partner
                                               Act Liabilities



*Item is omitted because the answer is negative or the Item is
inapplicable.<PAGE>
PROSPECTUS

                    PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING PROGRAM
                   $1,000,000 Minimum Subscriptions

      PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program (the "Program") is a series of up to
eight limited partnerships which will be formed to drill, own, and operate
natural gas wells in West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky,
Michigan and/or     Indiana      interests in the Program will be offered
over a two-year period with interests in the partnerships designated "PDC
1996-_ Limited Partnership" being offered only during 1996 and interests 
in the partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" being
offered only during 1997.  The primary purpose of the partnerships will
be to generate revenue from gas sales and distribute the proceeds to the
partners.  The economic benefits of the investment are expected to include
deductions in 1996 (with respect to the partnerships designated "PDC 1996-
_ Limited Partnership") and in 1997 (with respect to partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership") for intangible drilling costs
and subsequently when wells are in production for depletion.  See "Summary
- -- Terms of the Offering."      This offering of PDC 1996-A LP, the first of
the Program's partnerships, closed on June 5, 1996.  The current offering
relates to the offering of partnership interests in the remaining seven
partnerships of the Program.    

      -    Units of preformation general partnership interest and limited
           partnership interest         in gas development limited
           partnerships are offered.

      -    The managing general partner anticipates that, if the minimum
           offering of $1 million is achieved, approximately 89.3% of the total
           capital contributions will be utilized for gas well drilling and
           completion activities.  See "Source of Funds and Use of Proceeds."

      THESE SECURITIES ARE SPECULATIVE AND INVOLVE A HIGH DEGREE OF RISK. 
SEE "RISK FACTORS."  Significant risks include, but are not limited to:

      -    The drilling of gas wells is highly risky and includes the
           possibility of a total loss of one's investment.

      -    Total reliance is on the managing general partner for management and
           control of each partnership.

      -    No prospects for gas drilling have yet been selected and therefore
           no investor will have an opportunity to evaluate any of the
           prospects before investing in the partnership.

      -    Investors who purchase general partnership interests may be subject
           to unlimited liability.  All general partnership interests will be
           converted into limited partnership interests upon completion of
           drilling.

      -    Revenues of each partnership are directly related to natural gas
           prices which cannot be predicted.

      -    An investment in the Program is illiquid -- investors may not be
           able to sell their partnership interests.

      -    Investment is suitable only for investors having substantial
           financial resources and who desire a long-term investment.

      -    Significant tax considerations are involved in an investment,
           including

<PAGE>
           --   possible modification or elimination of tax benefits
           --   possible loss of partnership classification
           --   limited partners must have substantial current taxable income
                from passive trade or business activities to benefit from tax
                losses arising from the particular partnership
           --   possible recognition of taxable income by an Investor Partner
                with no corresponding cash distribution by the partnership

      -    The partnerships are subject to various conflicts of interest
           arising out of their relationship with the managing general partner,
           including the fact that the dealer manager is an affiliate of the
           managing general partner and its due diligence examination
           concerning this offering cannot be considered to be independent.

      -    Substantial compensation and fees are payable by the partnership to
           the managing general partner and affiliates upon formation and
           throughout the life of the partnership.


         Except as stated in the next sentence,     the minimum capital for
each partnership to be raised from investors is $1 million, while the maximum
capital is $10 million.     The minimum capital to be raised from investments
with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited
Partnership will be $1.5 million for each Partnership, while the maximum
capital for each of these Partnerships will be $15 million.      The managing
general partner has complete discretion as to when the offering of a 
particular partnership terminates at any point after the minimum subscription
is reached.  Nevertheless, it is the intention of the managing general partner
to terminate the offering of each partnership (assuming the minimum subscription
has been reached) at or near the time of the respective targeted closing dates
for each partnership.  No offering of a partnership designated "PDC 1996-_
Limited Partnership" is permitted to extend beyond December 31, 1996 and no
offering of a partnership designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" is
permitted to extend beyond December 31, 1997.   See "Terms of the Offering --
General."  No particular partnership will be funded if the minimum subscription
is not attained.  Moreover, no Units in a Partnership will be offered or sold
after the closing of the offering of that Partnership.

      Subscription proceeds of each Partnership will be held in a separate
interest-bearing escrow account at PNC Bank, N.A., Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania (the "Escrow Agent").  In the event that the minimum required
subscription is not realized with respect to a Partnership, that
Partnership will not be funded, and the Escrow Agent will promptly return
all subscription proceeds to the respective subscribers in full with any
interest earned thereon and without any deduction therefrom.  See "Terms
of the Offering -- General."

      Units are being offered at a price of $20,000 per Unit.  The minimum
subscription is one-quarter Unit ($5,000).  The managing general partner
in its discretion must consent before subscriptions for less than full
Units will be accepted, after reviewing state law suitability requirements
and the financial capability of the prospective investor.  Units will not
be sold to tax-exempt investors or to foreign investors.

THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY, NOR HAS THE
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE GOVERNMENTAL AGENCY PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR
ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS.  ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.


                                    - 2 -
<PAGE>
NEITHER THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK NOR THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF THE STATE OF NEW JERSEY NOR THE BUREAU OF SECURITIES OF THE
STATE OF NEW JERSEY HAS PASSED ON OR ENDORSED THE MERITS OF THIS OFFERING. 
ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS UNLAWFUL.


                                                             Underwriting
                                     Price to                Discounts and     
              Proceeds to the
                                      Public                  Commissions      
               Partnerships(1)

Per Unit . . . . . . . . . . . .    $    20,000           $    2,100 (10.5%)   
            $    17,900 (89.5%)
Total Minimum.(2). . . . . . . .    $ 1,000,000           $  105,000 (10.5%)   
            $   895,000 (89.5%)
Total Maximum. . . . . . . . . .    $50,000,000           $5,250,000 (10.5%)   
            $44,750,000 (89.5%)


(1)  Before deducting expenses payable by the Partnership estimated at $100,000
     if the minimum number of Units is sold ranging to $300,000 if the maximum
     number of Units is sold, including legal, accounting, printing, and filing
     and registration fees.  The Managing General Partner will pay Organization
     and Offering Costs in excess of 10 1/2% of Subscriptions.
   
(2)  With respect to each of PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D
     Limited Partnership, the minimum price to the public will be $1,500,000,
     the underwriting, discounts and commissions will be $157,500 (10.5%), and
     the proceeds to the Partnership will be $1,342,500 (89.5%).    


                                 PDC Securities Incorporated, Dealer Manager
                              and an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner
                                                       103 East Main Street
                                            Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330
                                                          (800) 624-3821
          A Member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. and
                  Securities Investor Protection Corporation

                               The date of this Prospectus is  June 13,1996.




















                                    - 3 -
<PAGE>
      Each partnership intends to furnish to investors annual reports
containing audited financial statements, a report thereon by its
independent certified public accountants, and a semiannual report
containing unaudited financial information for the first six months of
each year.























































                              - 4 -
<PAGE>
                          TABLE OF CONTENTS
                                                                  Page

SUMMARY...........................................................  1

RISK FACTORS.......................................................11
     Special Risks of the Partnership..............................11
     Risks Pertaining to the Natural Gas Investment................17
     Tax Status and Tax Risks......................................18

TERMS OF THE OFFERING..............................................21
     General.......................................................21
     Activation of Partnerships....................................25
     Types of Units................................................26
     Conversion of Units by Additional General Partners............27
     Unit Repurchase Program.......................................28
     Investor Suitability..........................................30

ASSESSMENTS AND FINANCING..........................................33

SOURCE OF FUNDS AND USE OF PROCEEDS................................34
     Source of Funds...............................................34
     Use of Proceeds...............................................34
     Subsequent Source of Funds....................................35

PARTICIPATION IN COSTS AND REVENUES................................36
     Revenues......................................................36
     Costs.........................................................37
     Allocations Among Investor Partners; Deficit Capital Account
      Balances.....................................................42
     Cash Distributions Policy.....................................42
     Termination...................................................43
     Amendment of Partnership Allocation Provisions................43

COMPENSATION TO THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND AFFILIATES........44

PROPOSED ACTIVITIES................................................47
     Introduction..................................................47
     Drilling Policy...............................................49
     Acquisition of Undeveloped Prospects..........................50
     Title to Properties...........................................52
     PDC Prospects.................................................52
     Drilling and Completion Phase.................................56
     Production Phase of Completion................................61
     Interests of Parties..........................................62
     Insurance.....................................................62
     The Managing General Partner's Policy Regarding Roll-Up
      Transactions.................................................65

COMPLETION, MARKETS AND REGULATIONS................................66
     Completion and Markets........................................66
     Regulation....................................................68

                             i
<PAGE>
                                                                  Page

     Natural Gas Pricing...........................................69
     Proposed Regulations..........................................69

MANAGEMENT.........................................................70
     General Management............................................70
     Experience and Capabilities as Driller/Operator...............70
     Petroleum Development Corporation.............................70
     Certain Shareholders of Petroleum Development Corporation.....72
     Renumeration..................................................74
     Legal Proceeding..............................................74

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST..............................................74
     Certain Transactions..........................................79

FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER...........82

PRIOR ACTIVITIES...................................................83
     Prior Partnerships............................................83
     Previous Drilling Activities..................................86
     Payout and Net Cash Tables....................................88
     Tax Deductions and Tax Credits of Partnerships in Previous
      Partnerships.................................................96

PARTNERSHIP PROVED RESERVES AND FUTURE NET REVENUES...............101

TAX CONSIDERATIONS................................................104
     Summary of Conclusions.......................................104
     General Tax Effects of Partnership Structure.................108
     Intangible Drilling and Development Costs Deductions.........109
          A.  Classification of Costs.............................110
          B.  Timing of Deductions................................110
          C.  Recapture of IDC....................................111

DEPLETION DEDUCTIONS..............................................111
     Depreciation Deductions......................................112
     Interest Deductions..........................................112
     Transaction Fees.............................................113
     Basis and At Risk Limitations................................114
     Passive Loss Limitations.....................................114
          A.  Introduction........................................114
          B.  General Partner Interests...........................115
          C.  Limited Partner Interests...........................116
     Conversion of Interests......................................116
     Alternative Minimum Tax......................................116
     Gain or Loss on Sale of Property or Units....................117
     Partnership Distributions....................................118
     Partnership Allocations......................................118
     Profit Motive................................................118
     Administrative Matters.......................................119
     Accounting Methods and Periods...............................121


                               ii<PAGE>
                                                                  Page

      Social Security Benefits; Self-employment tax...............121
      State and Local Taxes.......................................121
      Individual Tax Advice Should Be Sought......................121

SUMMARY OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT..................................121
      Responsibility of Managing General Partner..................121
      Liabilities of General Partners, Including Additional
       General Partners...........................................122
      Liability of Limited Partners...............................122
      Allocations and Distributions...............................122
      Voting Rights...............................................123
      Retirement and Removal of the Managing General Partner......124
      Term and Dissolution........................................124
      Indemnification.............................................126
      Reports to Partners.........................................126
      Power of Attorney...........................................126
      Other Provisions............................................126

TRANSFERABILITY OF UNITS..........................................127

PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION..............................................128

SALES LITERATURE..................................................130

LEGAL OPINIONS....................................................130

EXPERTS...........................................................130

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION............................................130

GLOSSARY OF TERMS.................................................131

APPENDICES:

A.  Form of Limited Partnership Agreement.........................A-1
B.  Subscription Agreements.......................................B-1
C.  Special Subscription Instructions.............................C-1
D.  Opinion of Counsel -- Tax Considerations......................D-1





                              iii




   
<PAGE>
SUMMARY

     This summary is qualified in its entirety by the more detailed
information appearing elsewhere in this Prospectus.  Prospective investors
are directed to the "Glossary of Terms" at the end of this Prospectus,
which defines the capitalized terms appearing throughout the Prospectus.

Terms of the Offering

     The Program.  PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program (the "Program") is a
series of up to eight limited partnerships (each hereinafter referred to
as a "Partnership" or where the context so provides as the "Partnerships")
to be formed under and governed by the West Virginia Uniform Limited
Partnership Act.  Units will be offered over a two-year period with Units
in the Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" being
offered only during 1996 and Units in the Partnerships designated "PDC
1997-_ Limited Partnership" being offered only during 1997.  The rights
and obligations of the Partners of each Partnership will be governed by a
Limited Partnership Agreement (the "Partnership Agreement"), the form of
which is attached to the Prospectus as Appendix A.  For a description of
the principal terms of the Partnership Agreement, see "Summary of
Partnership Agreement."  The managing general partner of each Partnership
will be Petroleum Development Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the
"Managing General Partner").  The subscription periods for all
Partnerships designated "PDC  1996-_ Limited Partnership" and those
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" will terminate on December 31,
1996 and December 31, 1997, respectively, unless earlier terminated or
withdrawn by the Managing General Partner.  

     A total of 2,500 Units at $20,000 per Unit, aggregating $50,000,000,
is being offered.  "Unit" means a Partnership interest of a Limited
Partner or of an Additional General Partner purchased by an Investor
Partner by an investment of $20,000.  This interest is the right and
obligation to share a proportional part of the Investor Partners' share of
Partnership income, expense, assets and liabilities.  The fractional
interest purchased by a one unit investment in the Investor Partners'
interest in the Partnership income, expense, assets, or liabilities (see
the table under "Summary -- Participation in Costs and Revenues") is the
ratio of one unit to the total number of units sold.  Investors may choose
to purchase units of general partnership interest or units of limited
partnership interest.  The Managing General Partner will convert all units
of general partnership interest into units of limited partnership interest
upon completion of drilling.  Units will not be sold to tax-exempt
investors or to foreign investors.  The minimum investment by an investor
is $5,000.  

     The minimum number of Units which must be sold to allow a Partnership
to be funded is 50 Units, or $1,000,000    (75 Units or $1,500,000 for
each of PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership
    . The maximum subscription for any Partnership is $10,000,000 (500
Units)     ($15,000,0000 or 750 units for each of PDC 1996-D Limited
Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)    .  The Managing General
Partner has complete discretion as to when the offering of a particular
Partnership terminates at any point after the minimum subscription is
reached.  It is the intention of the Managing General Partner to terminate
the offering of each Partnership (assuming the minimum subscription has
been reached) at or near the time of the respective targeted closing dates
for each Partnership, which are set forth in "Terms of the Offering --
General."  No offering of any Partnership designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" or "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" is permitted to extend
beyond December 31, 1996 or December 31, 1997, respectively.

                              - 1 -
<PAGE>
     All subscriptions are payable in cash upon subscription.  The
execution of the Subscription Agreement by a subscriber constitutes a
binding offer to buy Units in a Partnership.  Once an investor subscribes
for Units, that investor will not be able to revoke his Subscription. 
Escrowed Subscriptions will be promptly returned to the respective
subscribers of the particular Partnership if the Partnership is not closed
by the sixtieth day following the anticipated offering termination date
with respect to each respective Partnership, or if     PDC 1996-C Limited
Partnership or PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership or PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership      or PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership has not closed on or
before December 31, 1996 or December 31, 1997, respectively. Subscription
proceeds of each Partnership will be held in a separate interest-bearing
escrow account at PNC Bank, N.A., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (the "Escrow
Agent").  In the event that the minimum  required subscription of
$1,000,000     ($1,500,000 with respect to each of PDC 1996-D Limited
Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)      is not realized in
the offering of Units of any particular Partnership, that Partnership will
not be funded, and the Escrow Agent will promptly return all subscription
proceeds with respect to the particular Partnership to the respective
subscribers in full with any interest earned thereon and without any
deduction therefrom.  For a full discussion of the various terms of the
offering, see "Terms of the Offering" below.

     The Partnerships are being formed to drill, own, and operate natural
gas wells in West Virginia, Ohio, and/or Pennsylvania and to produce and
sell gas from these wells.  The Managing General Partner may determine to
drill wells in New York     Kentucky, Michigan, and Indiana.      Of the
offering proceeds available for drilling operations, the Managing General
Partner plans to utilize all such proceeds in the drilling of development
wells but may utilize up to 10% on one or more exploratory wells.  See
"Proposed Activities" and "Glossary of Terms" for the definitions of
"Development Well," "Exploratory Well," and other terms which are used in
this Prospectus.

     The address and telephone number of the Partnerships and Petroleum
Development Corporation, the Managing General Partner, are 103 East Main
Street, P.O. Box 26, Bridgeport, West Virginia 26330 and (800) 624-3821.

     Conversion of Units by Additional General Partners.  Additional
General Partners (those investors who purchase Units of general
partnership interest) of a particular Partnership will have the right to
convert their Units into Units of limited partnership interest and
thereafter become limited partners of that Partnership.  Moreover, the
Managing General Partner will convert all Units of general partnership
interest of a particular Partnership into Units of limited partnership
interest upon completion of drilling of that Partnership.  See "Tax
Considerations -- Conversion of Interests," "Terms of the Offering --
Conversion of Units by Additional General Partners," and "Proposed
Activities -- Insurance."

     Unit Repurchase Program.  Beginning with the third anniversary of the
date of the first cash distribution of the particular Partnership,
Investor Partners (those persons who invest in a Partnership, either as
Additional General Partners or as Limited Partners) of that Partnership
may offer their Units to the Managing General Partner for repurchase. 
Repurchase of Units is subject to certain conditions, including the
financial ability of the Managing General Partner to purchase the Units
and certain opinions of counsel.  Subject to such financial condition and
opinions of counsel, the Managing General Partner will offer annually to
repurchase for cash a minimum of 10% of the Units originally subscribed to
in the Partnership.  Subject to such conditions, the Managing General
Partner is obligated to purchase all Units presented to it by investors,

                                    - 2 - 
<PAGE>
up to the 10% ceiling as stated above.  The repurchase price will be based
upon a minimum of three times cash distributions during the 12 months
preceding receipt of the request for repurchase or some greater amount
which is solely in the discretion of the Managing General Partner.  Such
repurchase price will not necessarily represent the fair market value of
the Units.  See "Terms of the Offering -- Unit Repurchase Program" and
"Tax Considerations -- Conversion of Interests."

     Suitability Standards -- Long-Term Investment.  The Managing General
Partner has instituted strict suitability standards for investment in the
Partnerships.  The high degree of investment risk together with the
restrictions on the sale of Units, lack of a market for the Units, and the
tax consequences of the sale of Units makes investment in the Partnerships
suitable only for persons who are able to hold their Units on a long-term
investment basis.  See "Terms of the Offering -- Investor Suitability."

     Risk Factors.  This offering involves numerous risks, including the
risks of oil and gas drilling, the risks associated with investments in
oil and gas drilling programs, and significant tax considerations.  See
"Risk Factors" and "Tax Considerations."  Each prospective investor should
carefully consider a number of significant risk factors inherent in and
affecting the business of the Partnerships and this offering, including
the following:

Special Risks of the Partnerships:

     -   The drilling and completion operations to be undertaken by each
         Partnership for the development of natural gas reserves involve
         the possibility of a total loss of an investment in a
         Partnership.

     -   The Managing General Partner will have the exclusive management
         and control of all aspects of the business of each Partnership.
         No investor will be permitted to take part in the management or
         in the decision-making of the Partnership.

     -   No Prospects have been or will be selected for acquisition by a 
         particular Partnership until after activation of that
         Partnership. Therefore, no investor will have an opportunity to
         evaluate any of the Prospects before investing in a Partnership. 
         Because all subscriptions are irrevocable, because the offering
         period for a particular Partnership can extend over a number of
         months, and because no Prospect will be acquired until activation
         of a Partnership, delays in the investment of proceeds from the
         initial subscription date are likely.

     -   Investors who invest as Additional General Partners will have
         unlimited liability for all obligations and liabilities of
         creditors and claimants arising during such time they were
         Additional General Partners from the conduct of Partnership
         operations and if such liabilities exceed the Partnership's
         assets and insurance and the assets of the Managing General
         Partner (which has agreed to indemnify the Additional General
         Partners).

     -   Investors in a Partnership must assume the risks of an illiquid 
         investment.  Investors may be unable to sell their Partnership  
         interests.  There will be no market for the Units.

     -   The Partnerships are subject to various conflicts of interest
         arising out of their relationship with the Managing General

                                    - 3 -
 <PAGE>
         Partner, including:  the Managing General Partner currently
         manages oil and gas drilling programs similar to the
         Partnerships; the Managing General Partner decides which
         Prospects each Partnership will acquire; the Managing General
         Partner will act as operator and will furnish drilling and
         completion services to the Partnerships; the Managing General
         Partner is general partner of numerous other partnerships and
         owes duties of good-faith dealing to such other partnerships;
         and the dealer manager, an Affiliate of the Managing General
         Partner, will receive sales commissions as a result of sales
         of Units.

     -   The Managing General Partner and Affiliates will receive fees
         and compensation throughout the life of each Partnership.  If
         and to the extent these fees and compensation create conflicts
         between the best interests of the investors and the best
         interests of the Managing General Partner, the Managing General
         Partner may have incentives to act in a manner not in the best
         interest of the Partners.

     -   It is possible that some or all of the insurance coverage
         which the Partnership has available may become unavailable or
         prohibitively expensive.  In such event, the investors could
         be subject to greater risk of loss of their investment since
         less insurance would be available to protect against casualty
         losses.

     -   To the extent that less subscription proceeds are raised, the
         Partnership will be able to drill fewer wells, the result of
         which there will be less diversification of the investors'
         investment and less ability of the Partnership to spread the
         risk of loss.

     -   The Managing General Partner and Affiliates may also purchase
         Units, the effect of which may be to assure that the minimum
         aggregate subscription amount is reached.

     -   The Partnership is permitted to drill one or more Exploratory
         Wells.  Drilling Exploratory Wells involves greater risks of
         Dry Holes and loss of the Partnership's investment.

Risks Pertaining to Natural Gas Investments:

     -   Natural gas drilling is a highly speculative activity.  There
         is a possibility that wells drilled may not produce natural
         gas.  Even wells which are productive may not produce gas
         in sufficient quantities to return all or a significant
         portion of the investment.

     -   Future gas prices are unpredictable.  If gas prices go down,
         investor returns will go down.

     -   Access to markets for gas produced by wells may be restricted
         as a result of many factors, including distances to existing
         pipelines, an oversupply of crude oil and natural gas,
         changing demand from weather conditions, and regulations set
         by Federal and state governmental authorities, thus impeding
         or delaying revenues to the Partnerships.


                                    - 4 -

<PAGE>
Tax Risks:

     -   No ruling has been obtained from the Internal Revenue Service
         (the "Service") as to partnership status of the Partnerships.

     -   Investment as an Additional General Partner may not be advisable
         for a person whose taxable income from all sources is not
         recurring or is not subject to high marginal federal income
         tax rates.

     -   Investment as a Limited Partner may be less advisable for a
         person who does not have substantial current taxable income
         from passive trade or business activities.

     -   Federal income tax payable by an Investor Partner by reason of
         his distributive share of Partnership income for any year may
         exceed the cash distributed to such Partner by the Partnership.

     -   Even though the Partnerships will not register with the Service
         as "tax shelters," there still remains a likelihood of an audit
         of the Partnerships' returns by the Service.

     -   Of the total program proceeds, the 10 1/2% utilized for
         syndication costs, offering costs, and commissions, is
         nondeductible for the life of the Partnership, and 2-1/2%
         is utilized for the management fee, some or all of which
         may not be deductible and some of which may be deductible
         only over a 60 month period.

Compensation of the Managing General Partner

     The following is a tabular presentation of the items of compensation
respecting the Managing General Partner:
<TABLE>
<S>                   <S>                             <S>
Recipient            Form of Compensation            Amount
                      
Managing General     Partnership interest            20% interest(1)
Partner

Managing General     Management Fee                  2.5% of Subscriptions
Partner                                               (non-recurring fee)(2)

Managing General     Sale of Leases to               Cost, or fair market
Partner               Partnerships                   value if materially less
                                                     than Cost(3)

Managing General     Contract drilling rates         Competitive industry
Partner                                              rates(3)

Managing General     Operator's Per-Well Charges     $300 per well per
Partner                                              month(3)

Managing General     Direct Costs                    Cost(3)
Partner

Managing General     Payment for equipment,          Competitive prices(3)
Partner and          supplies,     gas marketing     
Affiliates           and other services(4)


                              - 5 -<PAGE>
Affiliate            Brokerage sales commissions;    10.5% of Subscriptions
                     reimbursement of due            $105,000 ranging to
                     diligence and marketing         $5.25 million(5)
                     support expenses; wholesaling 
                     fees
<FN>
_____________________
(1)  The Managing General Partner will contribute to the Partnerships an
     amount equal to at least 21-7/8% of the aggregate contributions of
     the Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner will subordinate
     its share of Partnership distributions.  See "Participation in Costs
     and Revenues," below.  

(2)  The one-time fee will range from $25,000 if the minimum number of
     Units is sold to $1,250,000 if the maximum number of Units is sold.

(3)  Cannot be quantified until Partnership is conducting business.

   
(4)  Some of the gas produced by the Partnerships will be marketed by Riley
     Natural Gas Company ("Riley"), a subsidiary of the Managing General
     Partner. The Managing General Partner acquired Riley in April, 1996.    

(5)  PDC Securities Incorporated, an Affiliate of the Managing General
     Partner, will receive as Dealer Manager of the offering sales
     commissions, reimbursement of due diligence and marketing support
     expenses, and wholesaling fees payable from the Subscriptions of the
     Investor Partners of $5,250,000 if the maximum number of Units is
     sold ranging to $105,000 if the minimum number of Units is sold.  PDC
     Securities Incorporated may, as Dealer Manager, reallow such
     commissions and due diligence and marketing support expenses in whole
     or in part to NASD licensed broker-dealers for sale of the Units,
     reimbursement of due diligence and marketing support expenses, and
     other compensation, but will retain the wholesaling fees, which will
     equal 0.5% of Subscriptions and will range from $5,000 if the minimum
     number of Units is sold to $250,000 if the maximum number of Units is
     sold.
</TABLE>

 Participation in Costs and Revenues

     Partnership profits and losses will be allocated 80% to the Investor
Partners and 20% to the Managing General Partner throughout the term of
each Partnership.  The Partnership is structured to provide preferred cash
distributions to Investor Partners so that they might receive cash
distributions equal to a minimum of 10% of their Subscriptions per year on
a cumulative basis for the first     ten     years of partnership well
operations.  To help investors achieve this level of cash distributions,
the Managing General Partner will subordinate up to 50% of its share of
Partnership distributions for the     ten     year period commencing upon
the first distribution of revenues after all Partnership wells have been
placed in production.      In addition to the foregoing subordination
provision, if on any anniversary of the first distribution after all
Partnership wells have been placed in production, the cumulative
distributions to the Investor Partners have averaged less than 15% of
their Subscriptions on an annual basis, and the distributions for the
twelve months preceding the anniversary have totaled less than 10%,
Petroleum Development Corporation shall refund to the Partnership which
shall thereupon distribute to the Investor Partners an amount equal to the
difference between the amount distributed to Investor Partners during the

                                    - 6 -
<PAGE>
preceding twelve month period, and the lesser of 10% of the Investor
Partner Subscriptions or the amount the Investor Partners would have
received had they been allocated 90% of the Partnership's distributions
during that twelve month period.  These subordination provisions shall
expire on the tenth anniversary of the first distribution from all
partnership wells.      Thus Investor Partners could receive up to 90% of
Partnership distributions during the subordination period.  See
"Participation in Costs and Revenues -- Revenues -- Preferred Cash
Distributions," below.     THE ABOVE-REFERENCED PREFERRED CASH
DISTRIBUTIONS AND SUBORDINATION POLICY IS NOT, AND SHOULD NOT BE
CONSIDERED BY ANY INVESTOR PARTNER TO BE, ANY FORM OF GUARANTEE OR
ASSURANCE OF A RATE OF RETURN ON AN INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP.  THE
POLICY IS THE RESULT OF A CONTRACTUAL AGREEMENT BY THE MANAGING GENERAL
PARTNER AS SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH 4.02 OF THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT. 
THERE IS NO GUARANTEE OR ASSURANCE WHATSOEVER THAT THE PARTNERSHIP WILL
DRILL COMMERCIALLY SUCCESSFUL GAS WELLS OR THAT THE CASH DISTRIBUTIONS TO
THE PARTNERS, INCLUDING ANY CASH DISTRIBUTIONS PURSUANT TO THE POLICY,
WILL ACHIEVE A 10% RATE OF RETURN.                                       

     The table below summarizes the participation in the costs and
revenues of the Partnerships by the Managing General Partner and the
Investor Partners, taking account of the Managing General Partner's
contribution to the capital of the Partnerships.  The table is reproduced
in full, with footnotes, under "Participation in Costs and Revenues." 
<TABLE>
<S>                                              <S>       <S>
                                                        Managing
                                            Investor    General
                                             Partners   Partner 
   Partnership Costs

Broker-dealer Commissions and Expenses(1). . .   100%      0%
Management Fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   100%      0%
Lease Costs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .     0%    100%
Tangible Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . .     0%    100%
Drilling and Completion Costs. . . . . . . . .     0%    100%
Intangible Drilling and Development Costs. . .   100%      0%
Operating Costs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    80%     20%
Direct Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    80%     20%
Administrative Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . .     0%    100%

      Partnership Revenues

Sale of Oil and Gas Production(2). . . . . . .    80%     20%
Sale of Productive Properties. . . . . . . . .    80%     20%
Sale of Equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .     0%    100%
Sale of Undeveloped Leases . . . . . . . . . .    80%     20%
Interest Income. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    80%     20%
<FN>
____________________
(1)  Organization and Offering Costs, net of the Dealer Manager
     commissions, discounts, due diligence expenses, and wholesaling
     fees, of the Partnerships will be paid by the Managing General
     Partner and not from Partnership funds.  In addition, Organization
     and Offering Costs, including commissions, in excess of 10 1/2% of
     Subscriptions will be paid by the Managing General Partner, without
     recourse to the Partnerships.

(2)  To the extent that Investor Partners receive preferred cash
     distributions (see "Participation in Costs and Revenues --
     Revenues - Preferred Cash Distributions"), the allocations for

                                    - 7 -
<PAGE>
     Investor Partners will be increased accordingly and the
     allocation for the Managing General Partner will likewise
     be decreased.

</TABLE>
     The Managing General Partner will pay for all Leases and tangible
well equipment.  The entire Capital Contribution of the Investor Partners,
after payment of brokerage commissions, due diligence reimbursement, and
the Management Fee, will be utilized to pay for intangible drilling costs.
In the event that the Intangible Drilling Costs exceed the funds of the
Investor Partners available for payment of Intangible Drilling Costs
(herein "excess IDC"), a portion of the Capital Contribution of the
Managing General Partner may be used to pay such excess IDC.  If the cost
of Leases, tangible well equipment, and excess IDC were to exceed the
Managing General Partner's Capital Contribution of 21-7/8% of the
aggregate Capital Contribution of the Investor Partners, then the Managing
General Partner will increase its Capital Contribution to fund such
additional capital requirements.

Application of Proceeds

     The Managing General Partner estimates that the proceeds from the
aggregate contributions to the capital of a Partnership by the Investor
Partners and the Managing General Partner will be applied as follows,
assuming the minimum number of Units is sold.  For a more extensive
presentation of the use of proceeds, see "Source of Funds and Use of
Proceeds" later in the Prospectus.
<TABLE>
<S>                                                        <S>
                  Activity                            Percentage of Total
                                                     Capital Contributions
Drilling and Completion Costs. . . . . . . . . . . . . .  89.3%
Organization and Offering Costs. . . . . . . . . . . . .   8.6%
Management Fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2.1%
Total. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100.0%
</TABLE>
 Tax Considerations; Opinion of Counsel

     The Managing General Partner has received an opinion from its
counsel, Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     , Washington, D.C.,
concerning all material federal income tax issues applicable to an
investment in the Partnerships.  To be fully understood, the complete
discussion of these matters set forth in the full tax opinion in Appendix
D should be read by each prospective investor partner.  Based upon current
laws, regulations, interpretations, and court decisions, Metzger, Hollis,
Gordon &     Alprin      has rendered its opinion that (i) the material
federal income tax benefits in the aggregate from an investment in the
Partnership will be realized; (ii) each Partnership will be treated as a
partnership for federal income tax purposes and not as a corporation and
not as an association taxable as a corporation; (iii) to the extent the
Partnership's wells are timely drilled and amounts are timely paid, the
Partners will be entitled to their pro rata share of the Partnership's IDC
paid in 1996 with respect to Partnerships designated as "PDC 1996-_
Limited Partnership" and in 1997 with respect to Partnerships designated
as "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership"; (iv) neither the at risk nor the
adjusted basis rules will limit the deductibility of losses generated from
the Partnership; (v) the interests of persons who purchase Units of
general partnership interest will not be considered a passive activity
within the meaning of Code Section 469 and losses generated while such
general partnership interest is so held will not be limited by the passive
activity provisions; (vi) Limited Partners' interests (other than those 

                                    - 8 -
<PAGE>
held by investors of general partnership interest who convert their
interests into Limited Partners' interests) will be considered a passive
activity within the meaning of Code Section 469 and losses generated
therefrom will be limited by the passive activity provisions; (vii) the
Partnership will not be terminated solely as the result of the conversion
of Partnership interests; (viii) to the extent provided herein, the
Partners' distributive shares of Partnership tax items will be determined
and allocated substantially in accordance with the terms of the
Partnership Agreement; (ix) the Partnership will not be required to
register with the Service as a tax shelter; and (x) each Partner will be
entitled to his distributive share of the Partnership's cost recovery
deduction.

     Due to the lack of authority, or the essentially factual nature of
the question, counsel expresses no opinion on the following:  (i) the
impact of an investment in the Partnership on an Investor's alternative
minimum tax, due to the factual nature of the issue; (ii) whether, under
Code Section 183, the losses of the Partnership will be treated as derived
from "activities not engaged in for profit," and therefore nondeductible
from other gross income, due to the inherently factual nature of a
Partner's interest and motive in engaging in the transaction; (iii)
whether any of the Partnership's properties will be considered "proven"
for purposes of depletion deductions, due to the factual nature of the
issue; (iv) whether any interest incurred by a Partner with respect to any
borrowings will be deductible or subject to limitations on deductibility,
due to the factual nature of the issue; and (v) whether the fees to be
paid to the Managing General Partner and to third parties will be
deductible, due to the factual nature of the issue.

Rights of the Investor Partners

     The rights of the Investor Partners will be governed by the
Partnership Agreement, which is attached to this Prospectus as Appendix A. 
The following is a summary of the more significant of their rights.

     -  The Managing General Partner will have the exclusive right to
        manage and control all aspects of the business of the 
        Partnership.  No investor will have any voice in the 
        day-to-day business operations of the Partnership.

     -  Profits and losses are to be allocated and cash is to be
        distributed in the manner discussed in the section entitled
        "Participation in Costs and Revenues."

     -  Investors owning 10% or more of the then outstanding Units have
        the right to ask the Managing General Partner to call a meeting
        of the Investor Partners.  Each Unit is entitled to one vote on
        all matters.  A vote of a majority of the then outstanding Units
        is required to approve any sale of all or substantially all of the
        Partnership's assets; the removal of the Managing General Partner
        and the election of a new managing general partner; the
        dissolution of the Partnership; any non-ministerial amendment to
        the Partnership Agreement; and the cancellation of contracts for
        services with the Managing General Partner. 

     -  The Managing General Partner has agreed to indemnify each investor
        who owns Units of general partnership interest for obligations,
        losses, or judgments of the Partnership or the Managing General
        Partner which exceed the amount of applicable insurance coverage
        and amounts which would become available from the sale of all
        Partnership assets.

                                    - 9 -
<PAGE>
     -  The Managing General Partner is obligated to furnish investors
        semi-annual and annual reports.  The reports will contain
        financial statements (audited in the annual reports), 
        information regarding transactions between the Managing General
        Partner and the Partnership, reserve information prepared by an
        independent petroleum engineer, and information regarding the
        Partnership's activities.

     -  Investors may sell, transfer, or assign their Units, subject to
        the consent of the Managing General Partner and provided that
        the transferee satisfies all applicable suitability requirements.

     -  Investors have the right to inspect the Partnership's books and
        records at any reasonable time.

 RISK FACTORS

     Investment in the Partnerships involves a high degree of risk and is
suitable only for investors of substantial financial means who have no
need of liquidity in their investments.  In analyzing this offering,
investors should carefully consider the following risk factors. 

Special Risks of the Partnerships

     Speculative Nature of Investment; Investment Suitable Only for
Financially Able.  The drilling and completion operations to be undertaken
by each of the Partnerships for the development of natural gas reserves
involve the possibility of a total loss of an investment in a Partnership. 
Drilling activities may be unprofitable, not only from non-productive
wells, but from wells which do not produce natural gas in sufficient
quantities or quality to return a profit on the amounts expended. 
Investment is suitable only for individuals who are financially able to
withstand a total loss of their investment.  See "Terms of the Offering --
Investor Suitability."

     Exclusive Reliance Upon Managing General Partner for Management of
Partnerships; Investor Partners May Not Manage.  The Managing General
Partner will exclusively manage and control all aspects of the business of
each  Partnership and will make all decisions respecting the business of
each Partnership.  The Investor Partners will not take part in the
management of any Partnership.  See Article VI and Section 7.01 of the
Partnership Agreement.

     Prospects Not Yet Identified or Selected; No Opportunity for
Investors to Evaluate Prospects.  The Managing General Partner has not
selected any Prospect for acquisition by any Partnership and will not
select Prospects for a particular Partnership until after the activation
of that Partnership.  Investor Partners will not have an opportunity
before purchasing Units to evaluate for themselves the relevant
geophysical, geological, economic or other information regarding the
Prospects to be selected.  Because all Subscriptions are irrevocable,
because the offering period for a particular Partnership can extend over
a number of months, and because no Prospect will be acquired until after
activation of that Partnership, delays in the investment of proceeds from
the initial subscription date are likely.

     Unlimited Liability of Additional General Partners.  Under West
Virginia law, the state in which each Partnership is to be formed, general
partners of a partnership have unlimited liability with respect to that
partnership; therefore, the Additional General Partners will be liable
individually and as a group for all obligations and liabilities of

                                    - 10 -
<PAGE>
creditors and claimants, whether arising out of contract or tort, in the
conduct of Partnership operations.  Additional General Partners may be
subjected to liability for amounts in excess of their Subscriptions, the
assets of the Partnership, including insurance coverage, and the assets of
the Managing General Partner, which has agreed to indemnify the Additional
General Partners.

     Compensation Payable to the Managing General Partner and Affiliates;
Possible Conflicts of Interest.  The Managing General Partner and
Affiliates will receive compensation throughout the life of the
Partnership.  The Managing General Partner will contribute to the
Partnerships an amount     in cash      equal to not less than 21-7/8% of
the Capital Contributions of the Investor Partners; the Managing General
Partner is moreover obligated to pay for all Lease and tangible drilling
Costs with respect to each Partnership organized.  The Managing General
Partner's share of operating profits in each Partnership will be 20%
(subject to the preferred cash distribution policy).  The Partnership at
closing of the Partnership will pay to the Managing General Partner a
one-time Management Fee equal to 2.5% of total Subscriptions.  The
Partnership will pay the Managing General Partner as operator for drilling
and completing the Partnership's wells an amount equal to $60 per foot for
the first 2,200 feet of well depth plus $16 per foot for each additional
foot below 2,200 feet to the deepest penetration with respect to each well
completed and placed into production, plus actual intangible costs of
extra zone completions, and an amount equal to $33 per foot for the first
2,200 feet of well depth plus $9 per foot for each additional foot below
2,200 feet to the deepest penetration of each well which the Managing
General Partner determines not to complete.  During the production phase
of operations, the Managing General Partner as operator will receive a
monthly fee of $225 per well for operations and field supervision and $75
per well for accounting, engineering, management, and general and
administrative expenses for producing wells.  The Partnership will
reimburse the Managing General Partner for all documented out-of-pocket
expenses incurred on behalf of the Partnership.

     The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may enter into the
transactions with the Partnership for services, supplies, and equipment
and will be entitled to compensation at competitive prices and terms as
determined by reference to charges of unaffiliated companies providing
similar services, supplies, and equipment.  PDC Securities Incorporated,
an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner, will receive a fee as Dealer
Manager equal to 10 1/2% of the subscription proceeds (ranging from
$105,000 if the minimum number of Units is sold to $5,250,000 if the
maximum number of Units is sold) for sales commissions, reimbursement of
bona fide due diligence expenses, and wholesaling fees.  PDC Securities
Incorporated, as Dealer Manager, may reallow such sales commissions and
expenses in whole or in part to NASD-licensed broker-dealers for sale of
the Units but will retain the wholesaling fees.  See "Compensation to the
Managing General Partner and Affiliates."

     If and to the extent these fees and compensation create conflicts
between the best interests of the Investor Partners and the best interests
of the Managing General Partner, the Managing General Partner may have
incentives to act in a manner not in the best interest of the Investor
Partners.  For example, the Managing General Partner could have an
incentive to continue to operate wells which were no longer economic to
the Partnership, in order to continue to receive the operating fees.  In
view of the fact that the Managing General Partner has a fiduciary duty to
act in furtherance of the best interests of the Investor Partners (see
"Fiduciary Responsibility of the Managing General Partner"), the Managing
General Partner will resolve such conflicts in favor of the interests of
the Investor Partners.

                                    - 11 -<PAGE>
     Irrevocable Subscriptions; Escrow of Subscription Funds.  The
execution of the Subscription Agreement by a subscriber constitutes a
binding offer to buy Units in a Partnership.  Once an investor subscribes
for Units, that investor will not be able to revoke his Subscription. 
Subscription proceeds of each Partnership will be held in a separate
interest-bearing escrow account with PNC Bank, N.A.  In the event that the
offering of Units in a particular Partnership has not closed by the
sixtieth day following the anticipated offering termination date, the
Managing General Partner will cause all escrowed funds to be promptly
returned to the respective investors of the particular Partnership which
has not closed with any interest earned thereon and without any deduction
therefrom.  If the respective offerings of Units in PDC 1996-C Limited
Partnership or PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership have not closed on or before
December 31, 1996 or the respective offerings of PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership or PDC 1997- D Limited Partnership have not closed on or
before December 31, 1997, the escrowed funds with respect to that
particular offering which has not closed will be promptly returned to
those respective investors with any interest earned thereon and without
any deduction therefrom.

     Speculative Nature of Prospect Acquisitions -- No Assurance of Gas
Production.  The selection of Prospects for natural gas drilling is 
inherently speculative.  The Managing General Partner cannot predict
whether any Prospect will produce natural gas or commercial quantities of
natural gas.  See "Proposed Activities -- Acquisition of Undeveloped
Prospects."

     Illiquid Investment; Restrictions on Transferability of Units. 
Investors in any Partnership must assume the risks of an illiquid
investment.  Investors may not be able to sell their Partnership
interests.  There will be no market for the Units.  See "Transferability
of Units."

     Possibility of Reduction or Unavailability of Insurance; Possible
Greater Risk of Loss to Investors.  It is possible that some or all of the
insurance coverage which the Partnership has available may become
unavailable or prohibitively expensive.  In such case, the Managing
General Partner may elect to change the insurance coverage.  Upon such
change, Additional General Partners could become Limited Partners.  See
"Proposed Activities -- Insurance."  Additional General Partners who
elected to remain Additional General Partners could be exposed to
additional financial risk due to the reduced insurance coverage and due to
the fact that Additional General Partners would continue to be
individually liable for all obligations and liabilities of the
Partnership.  On the other hand, Additional General Partners who elected
to become Limited Partners could lose or suffer deferral of some or all of
the available tax deductions and credits and thereby be subject to passive
activity treatment for Partnership deductions and credits.  See "Tax
Considerations -- Passive Loss and Credit Limitations."  All Investor
Partners could be subject to greater risk of loss of their investment
since less insurance would be available to protect from casualty losses.

     Less Diversification of Risks If Less Subscription Proceeds; Greater
Risk of Loss to Investors.  The Managing General Partner intends to spread
the risk of natural gas drilling by participating in the drilling of wells
on a number of different Prospects; however, the Managing General Partner
will be able to drill approximately five wells if only the minimum amount
of Subscriptions is obtained in a Partnership.  A Partnership subscribed
at the minimum level would be able to participate in fewer Prospects,
thereby increasing the risk to the Investor Partners.  As the Partnership

                                    - 12 -
<PAGE>
size increases, the number of wells will increase, thereby increasing the
diversification of the Partnership.  However, if the Managing General
Partner is unable to secure sufficient attractive Prospects for a larger
partnership, it is possible that the average quality of the wells drilled
could decline.  In addition, greater demands will be placed on the
management capabilities of the Managing General Partner in larger
partnerships.

     Conflicts of Interest Between Managing General Partner and
Partnerships.  The continued active participation by the Managing General
Partner and its Affiliates in oil and gas activities for their own
accounts and on behalf of other partnerships organized or to be organized
by them, their sale of Leases to and other transactions with the
Partnerships, and the manner in which Partnership revenues are allocated
create conflicts of interest with the Partnerships.  In this regard,
specific conflicts include the following:  the Managing General Partner
manages other natural gas drilling programs similar to the Program, the
effect of which is that the Managing General Partner owes a duty of good
faith to each of the partnerships which it manages and actions taken with
regard to other partnerships may not be advantageous to the Partnership;
the Managing General Partner decides which Prospects each Partnership will
acquire, the effect of which is that the Managing General Partner could
benefit, as a result of cost savings or reduction of risk, for instance,
by assigning or not assigning and by retaining particular Prospects to the
Partnership; the Managing General Partner will act as operator and will
provide drilling and completion services to the Partnerships, for which
the Managing General Partner will be compensated (at rates competitive
with the rates charged by unaffiliated persons for similar services); the
dealer manager, an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner, will receive
commissions on the basis of the amount of proceeds raised in the offering
(some of which the dealer manager will reallow to the broker-dealers which
effected the actual sales of Units).  See "Conflicts of Interest."

     Unpredictable Producing Life of Wells; Uncertainty of Production. 
The Managing General Partner cannot predict the life and production of any
well.  The actual lives could differ from those anticipated.  Sufficient
gas may not be produced for investors to receive a profit or even to
recover their initial investment.

     Joint Activities with Others -- Potential Partnership Liability.  The
Partnerships will usually acquire less than the full Working Interest in
Prospects and, as a result, will engage in joint activities with other
Working Interest owners.  A Partnership could be held liable for the joint
activity obligations of the other Working Interest owners, such as
nonpayment of costs and liabilities arising from the actions of the
Working Interest owners.  Full development of the Prospects may be
jeopardized in the event of the inability of other Working Interest owners
to pay their respective shares of Drilling and Completion Costs.  See
"Proposed Activities -- Drilling and Completion Phase -- Drilling and
Operating Agreement."

     Shortage of Working Capital -- No External Sources of Funds.  The
Partnership intends to utilize substantially all available capital from
this offering for the drilling and completion  of wells and will have only
nominal funds available for Partnership purposes prior to such time as
there is production from Partnership well operations.  The Partnership
Agreement does not permit the Partnership to borrow money as may be
required for its business.  Therefore, any future requirement for
additional funding will have to come, if at all, from the Partnership's
production.  There is no assurance that production will be sufficient to
provide the Partnership with necessary additional funding.  See "Source of

                                    - 13 -
<PAGE>
Funds and Use of Proceeds -- Subsequent Source of Funds" and "Proposed
Activities -- Production Phase of Operations -- Expenditure of Production
Revenues."

     Other Partnerships Sponsored by Managing General Partner; Possible
Competition for Prospects, Equipment, Contractors, and Personnel.  During
1996 and thereafter, the Managing General Partner plans to offer interests
in other partnerships to be formed for substantially the same purposes as
those of the Partnerships.  Therefore, a number of partnerships with
unexpended capital funds, including those partnerships to be formed before
and after the Partnerships, may exist at the same time.  Due to
competition among partnerships for suitable prospects and availability of
equipment, contractors, and Managing General Partner personnel, the fact
that partnerships previously organized by the Managing General Partner and
its Affiliates may still be purchasing Prospects (when the Partnership is
attempting to purchase Prospects) may make more difficult the completion
of Prospect acquisition activities by a Partnership.

     Purchase of Units by Managing General Partner or its Affiliates May
Assure Minimum Aggregate Subscription; Limitation on Purchases.  The
Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may also purchase Units, the
effect of which may be to assure that the minimum aggregate Subscription
amount is obtained for any Partnership; however, the Managing General
Partner and its Affiliates are not obligated to purchase any Units and the
required minimum Subscription amount might not be obtained in any
Partnership.  The Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates are
permitted to purchase no more than 10% of the Units subscribed by the
Investor Partners in any Partnership.  Nevertheless, not more than $50,000
of the Units purchased by the Managing General Partner and/or its
Affiliates are permitted to be applied to satisfying the $1 million
minimum requirement for any Partnership.  The effect of this provision is
that at least 95% of the minimum subscription proceeds must be raised from
persons unaffiliated with the Managing General Partner, if a particular
Partnership is to satisfy the requirements to close a Partnership.  Any
purchases made by the Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates will
be purchased for investment purposes and not for resale. 

     Exploratory and Development Drilling; Different Degrees of Risk. 
Each Partnership may drill one or more Exploratory Wells.  Drilling
Exploratory Wells involves greater risks of Dry Holes and loss of the
Investor Partners' investment.  Drilling Developmental Wells generally
involves less risk of Dry Holes but developmental acreage is more
expensive and subject to greater royalties and other burdens on
production.

     Past Experience Not Indicative of These Partnerships.  Information
concerning the prior drilling experience of previous partnerships
sponsored by the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates, presented
under the caption "Prior Activities," is not indicative of the results to
be expected by these Partnerships.

     Sharing of Risks of Nonproductive Operations.  Under the cost and
revenue sharing provisions of the Partnership Agreement, the Investor
Partners and the Managing General Partner may share in costs
disproportionate to their sharing of revenues.  Because the Investor
Partners will bear the substantial amount of costs of acquiring, drilling
and developing the Prospects, the Investor Partners will bear the
substantial amount of costs and risks of drilling Dry Holes and marginally
productive wells.



                                    - 14 -
<PAGE>
     Restrictions Upon Activities of the Investor Partners.  The Investor
Partners are not authorized to participate in the management of the
Partnership business.  The Partnership Agreement forbids the Investor
Partners from acting in a manner harmful to the business of the
Partnership.  If an Investor Partner acts in contravention of the terms of
the Partnership Agreement, such Partner may have to pay for such losses
and such Partner may have to pay other Partners for all damages resulting
from his breach of the Partnership Agreement.

     Indemnification of Additional General Partners by Managing General
Partner; Risk of Loss of Investment.  The Managing General Partner has
agreed to indemnify each of the Additional General Partners for
obligations related to casualty and business losses which exceed available
insurance coverage and Partnership assets.  Any successful claim of
indemnification will reduce the value of the Partnership.  The value of
the investment interest of the Investor Partners would be reduced.  In
such event, the Investor Partners could lose their entire investment in
the Partnership.  The Managing General Partner will have no liability to
the Partnership or to any Investor Partner for any loss suffered by the
Partnership if the Managing General Partner in good faith determined that
its action was in the best interest of the Partnership and that such
action did not constitute negligence or misconduct of the Managing General
Partner.  See "Summary of Partnership Agreement -- Indemnification."

     Limitation of Acts Allowed by Limited Partners.  Under the West
Virginia Uniform Limited Partnership Act (the "Act"), a Limited Partner
will not be liable for the obligations of a Partnership unless such person
takes part in the control of the business of the Partnership.  The
Partnership Agreement states that a Limited Partner is not permitted to
participate in the control of the business of the Partnership.

     Risk of Return of Limited Partner Distributions.  If Limited Partners
receive a return of any part of their Capital Contributions to a
Partnership, without violation of the Partnership Agreement or the Act,
such Limited Partners will be liable to the Partnership for a period of
one year thereafter for the amount of the returned contributions.  If the
return is in violation of the Partnership Agreement or the Act, the
Limited Partners will be liable to the Partnership for a period of six
years thereafter for the amount of the contribution wrongfully returned.

     Financial Capability of the Managing General Partner as General
Partner of Several Partnerships; Significant Loss by Managing General
Partner Could Adversely Affect Partnership.  As a result of its
commitments as general partner of several partnerships and because of the
unlimited liability of a general partner to third parties, the net worth
of the Managing General Partner is at risk of reduction.  Because the
Managing General Partner is primarily responsible for the conduct of the
Partnership's affairs, a significant adverse financial reversal for the
Managing General Partner could have an adverse effect on the Partnership
and the value of the Units therein.

     No Allocations or Distributions If Capital Account Deficit.  The
Partnership Agreement prohibits the Investor Partners from receiving
allocations or distributions to the extent such would create or increase
deficits in their Capital Accounts.

     No Independent Underwriters.  PDC Securities Incorporated, the Dealer
Manager of this offering, is an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner
and is not independent which creates a conflict of interest in its due
diligence examination and evaluation of this offering.  See "Conflicts of
Interest."

                                    - 15 -
<PAGE>
Risks Pertaining to Natural Gas Investments

     Speculative Nature of Well Drilling; Production Risks.  Natural gas
drilling is a highly speculative activity marked by many unsuccessful
efforts.  Investors must recognize the possibility that the wells drilled
may not be productive.  Even those wells which are completed may not
produce enough gas to show a profit.  Delays and added expenses may also
be caused by poor weather conditions affecting, among other things, the
ability to lay pipelines.  In addition, ground water, various clays, lack
of porosity, and permeability may hinder, restrict or even make production
impractical or impossible.  Up to 10% of the Partnership's activities may
involve exploratory wells.  The likelihood of failing to find commercial
quantities of gas is relatively high in exploratory wells.

     Prices of Natural Gas Quite Unstable.  Global economic conditions,
political conditions, and energy conservation have created unstable
prices.              Depressed prices could     adversely affect the
Partnerships and the Investor Partners.  Prices for natural gas have
been and are likely to remain extremely unstable.

     Competition, Markets and Regulation.  A large number of companies and
individuals engage in drilling for natural gas and there is competition
for the most desirable Leases.  The sale of any natural gas found and
produced by the Partnerships will be affected by fluctuating market
conditions and regulations, including environmental standards, set by
state and federal agencies.         The effect of    a     surplus may be
to reduce the price the Partnerships may receive for their gas production,
or to reduce the amount of natural gas that the Partnerships may produce
and sell.  See "Competition, Markets and Regulation."

     Environmental Hazards and Liabilities.  There are numerous natural
hazards involved in the drilling of wells, including unexpected or unusual
formations, pressures, blowouts involving possible damages to property and
third parties, surface damages, bodily injuries, damage to and loss of
equipment, reservoir damage and loss of reserves.  Uninsured liabilities
would reduce the funds available to a Partnership, may result in the loss
of Partnership properties and may create liability for Additional General
Partners.  A Partnership may be subject to liability for pollution, abuses 
of the environment and other similar damages.  Although the Partnerships
will maintain insurance coverage in amounts the Managing General Partner
deems appropriate, it is possible that insurance coverage may be
insufficient.  In that event, Partnership assets would be utilized to pay
personal injury and property damage claims and the costs of controlling
blowouts or replacing destroyed equipment rather than for additional
drilling activities.

     Increases in Drilling Costs.   Current economic conditions indicate
that the costs of exploration and development are increasing gradually;
however, the oil and gas industry historically has experienced periods of
rapid cost increases from time to time, and within short periods of time. 
Increases in the cost of exploration and development would affect the
ability of the Partnerships to acquire additional Leases, gas equipment,
and supplies.  Increased drilling activity could lead to shortages of
equipment and material which would make timely drilling and completion of
wells impossible.

     Availability of Rigs and Prospects.      Although there is currently
an adequate supply of drilling rigs and prospects, a     substantial
increase in drilling operations in the United States could result in
the decreased availability of drilling rigs and gas field tubular goods. 


                                    - 16 -
<PAGE>
Also, international developments and the possible improved economics of
domestic oil and gas exploration may influence major oil companies to
increase their domestic oil and gas exploration.  Those factors may
adversely affect the operations of the Partnerships.

     Financial Condition of Subcontractors.  Although the Managing General
Partner will endeavor to ascertain the financial condition of
nonaffiliated subcontractors, if subcontractors fail to timely pay for
materials and services, the wells of the Partnerships could be subject to
materialmen's and workmen's liens.  In that event, the Partnerships could
incur excess costs in discharging such liens.

     Shut-in Wells; Delays in Production.  Production from wells drilled
in areas remote from marketing facilities may be delayed until sufficient
reserves are established to justify construction of necessary pipelines
and production facilities.  In addition, production from wells may be
reduced or delayed due to marketing demands which tend to be seasonal. 
Wells drilled for the Partnerships may have access to only one potential
market.  Local conditions including but not limited to closing businesses,
conservation, shifting population, pipeline maximum operating pressure
constraints, and development of local oversupply or deliverability
problems could halt sales from Partnership wells.

     Delay in Distributions of Revenue.  Distribution of revenue may be
delayed for substantial periods of time after discovery of natural gas due
to unavailability of, or delay in obtaining, necessary material for
completion of a well; reduced takes by purchasers of natural gas due to
market conditions; delays in obtaining satisfactory purchase contracts and
connections for gas wells; delays in title opinions and obtaining division
orders; and other circumstances.

Tax Status and Tax Risks

     It is possible that the tax treatment currently available with
respect to natural gas exploration and production will be modified or
eliminated on a retroactive or prospective basis by additional
legislative, judicial, or administrative actions.  The limited tax
benefits associated with gas exploration do not eliminate the inherent
attendant risks.  See "Tax Considerations."

     Partnership Classification; No IRS Ruling Sought.  Tax counsel has
rendered its opinion that each Partnership will be classified for federal
income tax purposes as a partnership and not as an association taxable as
a corporation or as a "publicly traded partnership."  Such opinion is not 
binding on the Service or the courts and the Managing General Partner will
not request a ruling from the Service confirming the opinion of counsel. 
The Service could assert that a Partnership should be classified as an
association taxable as a corporation or as a "publicly traded
partnership."  If a Partnership is so classified, any income, gain, loss,
deduction, or credit of the Partnership will remain at the entity level,
and not flow through to the Investor Partners, the income of the
Partnership will be subject to corporate tax rates at the entity level and
distributions to the Investor Partners may be considered dividend
distributions subject to federal income tax at the Investor Partners'
level.  See "Tax Considerations -- General Tax Effects of Partnership
Structure."

     General Partner Interests Versus Limited Partner Interests.  An
investment as an Additional General Partner in a Partnership may not be
advisable for a person whose taxable income from all sources is not
recurring or is not normally subject to the higher marginal federal income

                                    - 17 -
<PAGE>
tax rates.  An investment as a Limited Partner may not be advisable for a
person who does not anticipate having substantial current taxable income
from passive trade or business activities.  Such a person cannot utilize
any passive losses generated by the Partnerships until he is in receipt of
passive income.

     The Additional General Partners will have the right to convert their
interests into limited partnership interests, subject to certain
limitations.  The Managing General Partner will convert all Units of
general partnership interest into Units of limited partnership interest
upon completion of drilling.  Upon the conversion, gain will be recognized
to the extent that any liabilities of which he is considered relieved due
to the conversion exceed his adjusted basis in his Partnership interest.

     Partnership income, losses, gains, and deductions allocable to any
Limited Partners will be subject to the passive activity rules whereas
those allocable to an Additional General Partner will generally not be
subject to the passive activity rules.  Upon conversion of an Additional
General Partner's interest to that of a Limited Partner, subsequently
allocable income and gains will be treated as nonpassive while losses and
deductions will be subject to limitation under the passive loss rules. 
See "Tax Considerations."

     Tax Liabilities in Excess of Cash Distributions.  Federal income tax
payable by an Investor Partner by reason of his distributive share of
Partnership taxable income for any year may exceed the cash distributed to
such Partner by the Partnership.  An Investor Partner must include in his
own return for a taxable year his share of the items of the Partnership's
income, gain, profit, loss, and deductions for the year, to the extent
required under the Internal Revenue Code as then in effect, whether or not
cash proceeds are actually distributed to the Partner.  For example,
income from the Partnership's sale of gas production is taxable to
Investor Partners as ordinary income subject to depletion and other
deductions; an Investor Partner's distributive share of the Partnership's
taxable income will be taxable to such Partner whether or not it is
actually distributed, for example, where Partnership income is used to
repay Partnership indebtedness.

     Chance of Audits.  Although the Partnerships will not be registered
with the Service as "tax shelters," it is likely that the Service will
audit each Partnership's returns.  If such audits occur, tax adjustments
might be made that would increase the amount of taxes due or increase the
risk of audit of Investor Partners' individual tax returns.  In addition,
costs and expenses may be incurred by a Partnership in contesting such
adjustments.  The cost of responding to audits of Investor Partners' tax
returns will be borne solely by the Investor Partners whose returns are
audited.  See "Tax Considerations -- Administrative Matters."

     Items Not Covered by the Tax Opinion.  Due to the lack of authority,
or the essentially factual nature of the question, however, tax counsel to
the Partnership, Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     , has expressed
no opinion as to the following:  (i) whether the losses of the Partnership
will be treated as derived from "activities not engaged in for profit,"
and therefore nondeductible from other gross income, (ii) whether any of
the Partnership's properties will be entitled to percentage depletion,
(iii) whether any interest incurred by a Partner with respect to any
borrowings will be deductible or subject to limitations on deductibility,
(iv) whether the fees to be paid to the Managing General Partner and to
third parties will be deductible, and (v) the impact of an investment in
the Partnership on an Investor's alternative minimum tax.


                                    - 18 -
<PAGE>
     For the reasons more fully described below, tax counsel has expressed
no opinion on: (i) the deductibility in a given year of any intangible
drilling and development costs incurred in a year prior to drilling of the
wells to which such costs relate, (ii) the availability or extent of
percentage depletion deductions to the Partners, (iii) the federal income
tax treatment of interest expense on debt incurred by investors in
connection with their acquisition of Units, (iv) the amount, if any, of
the Management Fee, the Dealer Manager's Fee and various other fees paid
to third parties, the Managing General Partner, the Operator, or their
affiliates that will be deductible or amortizable, and (v) whether an
investment in the Partnership may subject an investor to the, or increase
an investor's, alternative minimum tax.

     Various of the above-referenced matters are factual in nature, and
the facts are unknown at this time.  Therefore, counsel is unable to
render an opinion at this time with respect to these matters as to the tax
consequences and burdens a taxpayer will likely experience as a result of
an investment in the Partnership.  The facts when they become known with
respect to the various matters referred to above will vary from taxpayer
to taxpayer and will result in different tax consequences and burdens for
individual taxpayers.

     Prospective investors should recognize that an opinion of counsel
merely represents such counsel's best legal judgment under existing
statutes, judicial decisions, and administrative regulations and
interpretations.  There can be no assurance, however, that some of the
deductions claimed by a Partnership will not be challenged successfully by
the Service.

     Working Interest Exception to the Passive Loss Limitations.  Tax
counsel to the Managing General Partner has rendered its opinion that
interests in the Partnerships held by the Additional General Partners will
not be subject to the passive activity rules.  However, losses arising
after a conversion to limited partnership interests will be treated as
passive and, consequently, will only be available to offset passive
income.  Losses allocable to the Limited Partners will be subject to the
passive loss rules, while income so allocable will be passive except to
the extent characterized as portfolio.

     Material Portion of Subscription Proceeds Not Currently Deductible. 
A material portion of the Subscription proceeds of a Partnership will be
expended for cost and expense items which will not be currently deductible
for income tax purposes.  See "Tax Considerations -- Transaction Fees."

     Prepayment of Drilling Costs.  Some drilling cost expenditures may be
made as prepayments during 1996 (with respect to Partnerships designated
as "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership") and 1997 (with respect to
Partnerships designated as "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership") for drilling
and completion operations which in large part may be performed during 1997
and 1998, respectively.  All or a portion of such prepayments may be then
currently deductible by the applicable Partnership if the well to which
the prepayment relates is spudded within 90 days after December 31, 1996
or 1997,  respectively; the payment is not a mere deposit; and the payment
serves a business purpose or otherwise satisfies the clear reflection of
income rule.  A Partnership could fail to satisfy the requirements for
deduction of prepaid intangible drilling and development costs.  The
Service may challenge the deductibility of such prepayments.  If such a
challenge were successful, such prepaid expenses would be deductible in
the tax year in which the services under the drilling contracts are
actually performed.  See "Tax Considerations -- Intangible Drilling and
Development Costs Deductions."

                                    - 19 -
<PAGE>
 TERMS OF THE OFFERING

General

     -   Up to eight limited partnerships (four in 1996, four in 1997)

     -   Units of general partnership interest and Units of limited      
   partnership interest being offered -- investor may choose

     -   $20,000 Units

     -   Minimum subscription $5,000

     -   Minimum partnership -- $1,000,000 in subscriptions

     -   Maximum partnership -- $10,000,000 in subscriptions

     -   Maximum aggregate subscriptions for eight partnerships --       
  $50,000,000

     -   Subscription proceeds will be placed in escrow until Partnership 
        funded.

     An aggregate of $50,000,000 of preformation interests in a series of
up to eight limited partnerships to be formed ("PDC 1996-1997 Drilling
Program") is being offered in 2,500 Units of $20,000 per Unit to
prospective investors who meet the suitability standards set forth below. 
Interests in the Program will be offered over a two-year period with
interests in the partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership"
being offered only during 1996 and interests in the partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" being offered only during
1997.  The managing general partner of each Partnership will be Petroleum
Development Corporation, a publicly-owned Nevada corporation (the
"Managing General Partner").  The Managing General Partner in its
discretion may accept subscriptions for less than full Units.  The minimum
subscription is one-quarter Unit ($5,000).  In the event an investor
purchases Units on more than one occasion during the offering period of a
Partnership, the minimum purchase on each occasion is $5,000 (one-quarter
Unit).  Units will not be sold to tax-exempt investors or to foreign
investors.  Upon the sale of at least the minimum number of Units in a
Partnership (50 Units aggregating $1,000,000    ; 75 Units aggregating
$1,500,000 with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D
Limited Partnership     ) and upon termination of the offering of Units in
that Partnership, the Managing General Partner will form a limited
partnership under the laws of West Virginia.  At that time the units of
preformation general partnership interest and preformation limited
partnership interest will become Units of general partnership interest and
Units of limited partnership interest, respectively, in the particular
Partnership.  There is no restriction on the composition of the type of
partnership interests with respect to any Partnership.

     If the minimum required aggregate subscription amount of $1,000,000
    (or $1,500,000, as the case may be)      is not realized in the
offering of Units of any Partnership, that Partnership will not be funded,
and the Escrow Agent will promptly return all subscription proceeds with
respect to that Partnership to the respective subscribers in full with any
interest earned thereon and without any deduction therefrom.  The Managing
General Partner may not complete a sale of Units to any investor until at
least five business days after the date the investor has received a final
prospectus.  In addition, the Managing General Partner will send to each
investor a confirmation of the purchase.

                                    - 20 -<PAGE>
     Subscribers may elect to purchase Units as an Additional General
Partner or as a Limited Partner.  Additionally, a subscriber may purchase
Units of general partnership interest and Units of limited partnership
interest.

     The Partnerships will be designated as PDC 1996-A Limited
Partnership, PDC 1996-B Limited Partnership, PDC 1996-C Limited
Partnership, and PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership with respect to the
Partnerships to be offered during 1996 and PDC 1997-A Limited Partnership,
PDC 1997-B Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-C Limited Partnership, and PDC
1997-D Limited Partnership with respect to the Partnerships to be offered
during 1997.  The maximum Subscription of any Partnership will be the
lesser of $10,000,000     ($15,000,000 with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited
Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)      or the remaining
unsold units based  on the $50,000,000 aggregate registration.

     The Subscription period for all Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_
Limited Partnership" will terminate on December 31, 1996, whereas the
Subscription period for all Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited
Partnership" will terminate on December 31, 1997, unless earlier 
terminated or withdrawn by the Managing General Partner.  Although the
Managing General Partner may terminate an offering of Units in any
Partnership at any time, the Managing General Partner anticipates that the
respective offering periods for         PDC 1996-B Limited Partnership
will terminate on September 13, 1996, PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership will
terminate on November 15, 1996, and PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership, will
terminate on December 31, 1996.  Additionally, the Managing General
Partner anticipates that the respective offering periods for PDC 1997-A
Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-B Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership, and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership will terminate on May 30,
1997, September 12, 1997, November 14, 1997, and December 31, 1997.  The
offering of any particular Partnership may extend beyond its anticipated
termination date by not more than sixty days or be terminated earlier;
however, no offering of Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" or Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership"
may extend beyond December 31, 1996 or December 31, 1997, respectively. 
Except as otherwise stated below, the offering of Units in subsequent
Partnerships         (PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership or PDC 1996-D Limited
Partnership, PDC 1997-A Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-B Limited
Partnership, PDC 1997-C Limited Partnership, or PDC 1997-D Limited
Partnership, as the case may be) will not commence until the Subscription
of Units in prior Partnerships         (PDC 1996-B Limited Partnership,
PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership, PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-A
Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-B Limited Partnership or PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership, as the case may be) has reached the minimum of at least
$1,000,000 or that prior offering has terminated.  The Managing General
Partner may choose to offer the Units of PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership
and PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership (or PDC 1997-C Limited Partnership and
PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership) at the same time until the offering of
Units in PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership (or PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership) has been terminated, in order that investors be allowed to
diversify their investments in the two Partnerships, if they
so choose.  Once the offering with respect to a particular Partnership has
been closed, no additional Units will be offered or sold with respect to
that Partnership.  The Managing General Partner may determine to terminate
the offering of Units with respect to any particular Partnership at any
time before or after the minimum Subscriptions have been obtained.  At or
about the time of funding of a particular Partnership, it is anticipated
that this Prospectus will be supplemented or amended to reflect the
results of the offering of such Partnership.  No operations by a
particular Partnership will commence until termination of its offering
period.
                                    - 21 -<PAGE>
     Each Partnership will be funded promptly following the termination of
its respective offering period, provided that such Partnership has
Subscriptions aggregating at least $1,000,000 (50 Units)   ($1,500,000 or
75 Units with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D
Limited Partnership)     .  The Managing General Partner may accelerate or
delay the funding of any particular Partnership.  However, the Managing
General Partner will not delay the funding of any Partnership beyond
December 31, 1996 or December 31, 1997, with respect to Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" or "PDC 1997-_ Limited
Partnership," respectively.  No Units in a Partnership will be offered or
sold after the close of its offering period and its funding.  As its
Capital Contribution, the Managing General Partner will invest an
amount    in cash     equal to not less than 21-7/8% of the aggregate
contributions by the Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner is
obligated to pay for all Leases and tangible drilling Costs in addition to
intangible drilling costs ("IDC") in excess of the IDC paid by the Capital
Contributions of the Investor Partners with respect to each Partnership
organized; therefore, the Managing General Partner will make such
additional contributions in cash to the Partnership equal to such
additional Costs.

     The Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates may, in their sole
and absolute discretion, purchase Units at a price equal to the offering
price set forth herein, net of commissions.  In such event the Managing
General Partner and/or its Affiliates will be entitled to the same ratable
interest in the Partnership as other Investors.  The purchase of Units by
the Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates may permit the
Partnership to satisfy its requirements to sell the minimum number of
Units in order to close the offering.  The Managing General Partner and/or
its Affiliates have no present intention to purchase any Units; the
Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates are not permitted to
purchase more than 10% of the Units subscribed by the Investor Partners in
any Partnership; and not more than $50,000 of any Units purchased by the
Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates will be applied to
satisfying the $1,000,000 minimum.  Any Units purchased by the Managing
General Partner and/or its Affiliates will be made for investment purposes
only and not with a view toward redistribution or resale.  The Managing
General Partner and/or its Affiliates will be prohibited from voting with
respect to any Unit so purchased.

     Subscriptions for Units are payable $20,000 in cash per Unit
purchased upon subscription.  Subscription proceeds of each Partnership
will be held in a separate interest-bearing escrow account at PNC Bank,
N.A. located at Fifth Avenue and Wood Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 
15222 (the "Escrow Agent"), during the offering period of such
Partnership.           The Escrow Agent is required by the escrow
agreement to invest escrowed funds upon receipt and is forbidden to
disburse funds except upon deposit of checks representing at least the
minimum subscriptions and upon written instructions from the Managing
General Partner and dealer manager.  At that time the Escrow Agent will
disburse in accordance with such instructions.  In the event that the
minimum subscriptions have not been collected, the Escrow Agent will
promptly return the escrowed funds to the subscribers.

     As disclosed under "Risk Factors -- Special Risks of the Partnerships
- - - Irrevocable Subscriptions; Escrow of Subscription Funds," escrowed
Subscriptions of Partnerships not closed by the sixtieth day following the
anticipated offering termination date        (September 13, 1996 for PDC
1996-B Limited Partnership; May 30, 1997 for PDC 1997-A Limited

                                    - 22 -
<PAGE>
Partnership and September 12, 1997 for PDC 1997-B Limited Partnership)
will be promptly returned to the respective investor of that Partnership. 
If the respective offering of Units in PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership or
PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership has not closed on or before December 31,
1996 or if the respective offering of Units in PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership or PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership has not closed on or before
December 31, 1997, the escrowed funds of that particular Partnership will
be promptly returned to those investors.  Subscriptions will not be
commingled with the funds of the Managing General Partner or its
Affiliates, nor will Subscriptions be subject to the claims of their
creditors.  Subscription proceeds will be invested during the offering
period only in short-term institutional investments comprised of or
secured by securities of the U.S. government.  The interest rate on the
escrow account is variable and is presently 4%.  Checks for Units should
be made payable to "PNC Bank, N.A. as Escrow Agent for PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" (or "PNC Bank, N.A. as Escrow Agent for PDC 1997-_ Limited
Partnership," as the case may be) and should be given to the subscriber's
broker for submission to the Dealer Manager and Escrow Agent.

     The execution of the Subscription Agreement by a subscriber or in the
case of fiduciary accounts by his authorized representative constitutes a
binding offer to buy Unit(s) in a Partnership and an agreement to hold the
offer open until the Subscription is accepted or rejected by the Managing
General Partner.  Once an investor subscribes for Units, he or she will
not have any revocation rights, unless otherwise provided by state law. 
The Managing General Partner may refuse to accept any Subscription without
liability to the subscriber.  The Managing General Partner may reject a
Subscription if, for example, the prospective investor does not satisfy
the suitability standards or if the Subscription is received after the
offering period has terminated.  The execution of the Subscription
Agreement and its acceptance by the Managing General Partner also
constitute the execution of the Partnership Agreement and an agreement to
be bound by the terms thereof as a Partner, including the granting of a
special power of attorney to the Managing General Partner appointing it as
the Partner's lawful representative to make, execute, sign, swear to, and
file a Certificate of Limited Partnership and any amendment thereof,
governmental reports, certifications, contracts, and other matters.

Activation of the Partnerships

     -   Each Partnership will be funded following termination of
         offering period.

     -   Each Partnership is a separate business and economic
         entity from each other Partnership.

     -   Partnerships will be formed under West Virginia law.

     Each Partnership will be formed pursuant to the Act and funded
promptly following the termination of its offering period.  However, a
Partnership will not be funded with less than minimum aggregate
Subscriptions of $1,000,000    ($1,500,000 with resepect to PDC 1996-D
Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)     .  The
Partnerships will not have any substantial assets or liabilities and will
not commence any drilling operations until after their respective funding.

     Each Partnership is and will be a separate and distinct business and
economic entity from each other Partnership.  Thus, the Investor Partners
in one Partnership will be Partners only of that Partnership in which they
specifically subscribe and will not have any interest in any of the other
Partnerships.  Therefore, they should consider and rely solely upon the

                                    - 23 -
<PAGE>
operations and success (or lack thereof) of their own Partnership in
assessing the quality of their investment.  The performance of one
Partnership will not be attributable to the performance of other
Partnerships.

     Upon funding of a Partnership, the Managing General Partner will
deposit the Subscription funds in interest-bearing accounts or invest such
funds in short-term highly-liquid securities where there is appropriate
safety of principal, in that Partnership's name until the funds are
required for Partnership purposes.  Interest earned on amounts so
deposited or invested will be credited to the accounts of the respective
Partnership whose funds earned the interest.  Interest accrued on
Subscription funds prior to closing of the offering and funding of a
Partnership will be paid to the respective Subscriber after closing.

     The Managing General Partner anticipates that within 12 months
following the formation of a Partnership all Subscriptions will have been
expended or committed for Partnership operations.  Any unexpended and/or
uncommitted Subscriptions at the end of such 12-month period will be
returned pro rata to the Investor Partners and the Managing General
Partner will reimburse such Partners for Organization and Offering Costs
and the Management Fee allocable to the return of capital.  The term
"uncommitted capital" shall be exclusive of any amounts set aside for
necessary operating capital reserves.

     The Managing General Partner will file a Certificate of Limited
Partnership and any other documents required to form the Partnerships with
the State of West Virginia and will elect for the Partnerships to be
governed by the West Virginia Uniform Limited Partnership Act.  The
Managing General Partner will also take all other actions necessary to
qualify the Partnerships to do business as limited partnerships or cause
the limited partnership status of the Partnerships to be recognized in any
other jurisdiction where the Partnerships conduct business.

Types of Units

     -   Investor may choose to be Limited Partner or Additional
         General Partner.

     An Investor Partner may purchase Units in a Partnership as a Limited
Partner or as an Additional General Partner.  Although income, gains,
losses, deductions, and cash distributions allocable to the Investor
Partners are generally shared pro rata based upon the amount of their
Subscriptions, there are material differences in the federal income tax
effects and the liability associated with these different types of Units.
Any income, gain, loss, or deduction attributable to Partnership    
activities      will generally be allocable to the Partners who bear the
economic risk of loss with respect to such     activities     .  Further,
Additional General Partners will generally be permitted to offset
Partnership losses and deductions against income from any source.  Limited
Partners will generally be allowed to offset Partnership losses and
deductions only against passive income.

     Units of partnership interest may be transferred or assigned in
accordance with Section 7.03 of the Partnership Agreement.  Transferees
seeking to become substituted Partners must also meet the suitability
requirements set forth in this Prospectus.  A substituted Additional
General Partner will have the same rights and responsibilities, including
unlimited liability, in the Partnership as every other Additional General
Partner.  See "Tax Considerations" and "Risk Factors -- Unlimited
Liability of Additional General Partners."

                                    - 24 -
<PAGE>
     An investor must indicate on the Investor Signature Page the number
of limited partnership Units or general partnership Units subscribed to
and fill in the appropriate line on the Subscription Agreement.  If a
subscriber fails to indicate on the Subscription Agreement a choice
between investing as a Limited Partner or as an Additional General
Partner, the Managing General Partner will not accept the Subscription but
will promptly return the Subscription Agreement and the tendered
subscription funds to the purported Subscriber.

     Limited Partners.  The Limited Partners will consist of the Initial
Limited Partner, Steven R. Williams, an officer and director of the
Managing General Partner, until such time as additional limited partners
become Partners, and each investor who purchases one or more Units being
offered hereby.  The liability of a Limited Partner of the Partnership for
the Partnership's debts and obligations will be limited to that Partner's
Capital Contributions, his share of Partnership assets, and the return of
any part of his Capital Contribution (a) for a period of one year
thereafter for the amount of his returned contribution (if a Limited
Partner has received the return of any part of his contribution without
violation of the Partnership Agreement or the Act), but only to the extent
necessary to discharge the Limited Partner's liabilities to creditors who
extended credit to the Partnership during the period the contribution was
held by the Partnership and (b) for a period of six years thereafter for
the amount of the contribution wrongfully returned (if a Limited Partner
has received the return of any part of his contribution in violation of
the Partnership Agreement or the Act).

     General Partners.  The General Partners will consist of the Managing
General Partner and each investor purchasing one or more Units of general
partnership interest (referred to herein as "Additional General
Partners").  As a general partner of a Partnership, each Additional
General Partner will be fully liable for the debts, obligations and
liabilities of the Partnership individually and as a group with all other
general partners as provided by the Act to the extent liabilities are not
satisfied from the proceeds of insurance, from the indemnification by the
Managing General Partner, or from the sale of Partnership assets.  See
"Risk Factors."  While the activities of the Partnership are covered by
substantial insurance policies and indemnification by the Managing General
Partner which are discussed herein, it is possible that the Additional
General Partners will incur personal liability (not covered by insurance,
Partnership assets, or indemnification) as a result of the activities of
the Partnership.

Conversion of Units by Additional General Partners 

     -   Additional General Partners may convert to become Limited
         Partners after         one year.         

     -   The Managing General Partner will convert all Units of general  
         partnership interest into Units of limited partnership interest
         upon completion of drilling.

     -   If there is a material change in a Partnership's insurance
         coverages, Additional General Partners may convert prior to
         such change.

     -   Liability for Investors will be limited after conversion.

     Upon written notice to the Managing General Partner, and except as
provided below and in the Partnership Agreement, Additional General
Partners of a Partnership have the right to convert their interests into

                                    - 25 -
<PAGE>
limited partnership interests of that Partnership at any time after
        one year following the closing of the offering of that Partnership
and the disbursement to that Partnership of the proceeds of the offering.
        In addition, the Managing General Partner will convert all Units
of general partnership interest of a particular Partnership into Units of
limited partnership interest upon completion of drilling of that
Partnership.  Upon conversion they will become Limited Partners of that
Partnership.  Additional General Partners may also convert their interests
into limited partnership interests at any time within the 30 day period
prior to any material change in the amount of the Partnership's insurance
coverage.  Effecting conversion is subject to the express requirements
that the conversion will not cause a termination of the Partnership for
federal income tax purposes and that the Additional General Partner
provides written notice to the Managing General Partner of such intent to
convert.

     Conversion of an Additional General Partner to a Limited Partner in
a particular Partnership will be effective upon the Managing General
Partner's filing an amendment to its Certificate of Limited Partnership. 
The Managing General Partner is obligated to file an amendment to its
Certificate at any time during the full calendar month after receipt by
the Managing General Partner of the required notice of the Additional
General Partner, provided that the conversion will not constitute a
termination of the Partnership for tax purposes.  A conversion made in
response to a material change in that Partnership's insurance coverage
will be made effective prior to the effective date of the change in
insurance coverage.  After the conversion of his general partnership
interest to that of a Limited Partner, each converting Additional General
Partner will continue to have unlimited liability regarding Partnership
liabilities arising prior to the effective date of such conversion, but
will have limited liability to the same extent as Limited Partners after
conversion to Limited Partner status is effected.

     The Managing General Partner is not entitled to convert its interests
into limited partnership interests.  Limited Partners do not have any
right to convert their Units into Units of general partnership interest. 
In the event Additional General Partners desire to convert to Limited
Partners due to a perceived increased risk of liability (e.g., loss of
insurance coverage) and such conversions would be permitted because it
would not result in termination of the Partnership for tax purposes, the
Partnership will cease drilling activities until all desired conversions
can be made.

Unit Repurchase Program

     -   Investors may tender Units for repurchase at any time 
         beginning with the third anniversary of the first cash
         distribution of the particular Partnership.

     -   Investors may, at their election, sell their Units to the
         Managing General Partner for not less than 3 times the
         most recent 12 months' cash distributions from production.

     -   The Managing General Partner is obligated to purchase in
         any calendar year such Units which aggregate         10% of
         the initial Subscriptions, subject to its financial ability
         to do so and certain opinions of counsel.

     Beginning with the third anniversary of the date of the first cash
distribution of the particular Partnership, Investor Partners may tender
their Units to the Managing General Partner for repurchase.  Investor

                                    - 26 -
<PAGE>
Partners are required to provide the Managing General Partner with written
notification of their intention to avail themselves of the repurchase
program.  Subject to its financial ability to effect repurchases and the
opinion of counsel referred to below, each year the Managing General
Partner will offer to repurchase for cash a minimum  of 10% of the Units
originally subscribed to in the particular Partnership.  The Managing
General Partner's offers to purchase Units will, however, be conditioned
on the receipt of an opinion of its counsel that the consummation of such
offer will not cause the Partnership to be treated as a "publicly traded
partnership" for purposes of Code Sections 469 and 7704 and on its
determination that the repurchases of a particular Investor Partner's
Units will not result in the termination of the Partnership for federal
income tax purposes.

     The Managing General Partner will not favor one particular
Partnership over another in the repurchase of Units.  Such offer will be
extended equally to all interest holders participating in an individual
Partnership, excluding interests held by the Managing General Partner. 
Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, if more than 10% of the Units from
a Partnership or more Units than the Managing General Partner is able to
purchase are tendered, Units will be purchased on a "first-come, first-
served" basis based on date of receipt by the Managing General Partner of
a letter of acceptance of the repurchase offer from the Investor Partner. 
To the extent that the Managing General Partner is unable to repurchase
all Units tendered, due to its financial condition or because of
limitations imposed by the Code or any loan banking agreement(s) to which
the Managing General Partner may be a party, a tendering Investor Partner
will be entitled to have his Units repurchased on a "first-come, first-
served" basis, regardless of Partnership, provided that the repurchase of
a particular Investor Partner's Units will not have the effect of causing
termination of his Partnership for tax purposes or of causing the
Partnership to be treated as a "publicly traded partnership."

     In order to initiate the process whereby the Managing General Partner
will repurchase the Units of Investor Partners, the Investor Partner is
required to provide the Managing General Partner written notification of
such Partner's intention to have the Managing General Partner purchase his
Units.  The Managing General Partner will provide the Investor Partner a
written offer of a specified price for purchase of the particular Units
within 30 days of the Managing General Partner's receipt of the written
notification.  Upon receipt of the repurchase price established by the
Managing General Partner, the Investor Partner, if in fact he elects to
accept the repurchase price, need notify the Managing General Partner in
writing that such price is acceptable.  The Managing General Partner will
promptly mail the Investor Partner a check for the proceeds of the
purchase.

     The minimum offer which the Managing General Partner may make will be
a cash amount equal to not less than three times cash distributions from
production of that particular Partnership for the 12 months prior to the
month preceding the date upon which the Managing General Partner has
received the written notification referred to above.  The Managing General
Partner may, in its sole and absolute discretion, increase the offer for
interests tendered for sale.

     Any offering price established by the Managing General Partner will
not necessarily represent the fair market value of the Units.  In setting
the offering price, the Managing General Partner will consider its
available funds and its desire to acquire production as represented by the
Unit and will take into account what it perceives to be its own best
interests (as a publicly-owned company) and its shareholders. 
Nevertheless, each Investor Partner is free to accept or not to accept any

                                    - 27 -<PAGE>
offering price from the Managing General Partner; no Investor Partner is
in any way obligated to accept the Managing General Partner's offer.  The
Managing General Partner will provide Investor Partners with detailed
information as to how the offer was calculated.  The Managing General
Partner will also provide each interest holder with a calculation of the
valuation of his interest, based on the most recent reserve evaluation
prepared by an independent expert in accordance with SEC Regulation S-X,
Article 4, Rule 4-10.  This calculation will take into account the
Managing General Partner's best estimate of anticipated production
declines or increases, known price increases or decreases, operating,
recompletion and plugging costs, and other relevant factors.

     To date, approximately 59 units (out of approximately 1500 eligible
units) of prior programs sponsored by the Managing General Partner have
been presented under the respective unit repurchase programs (which are
the same as that of the Partnership) for repurchase at prices ranging from
3 to 4.5 times the most recent 12 month cash distributions.  

Investor Suitability

     -   Investment in the Units involves a high degree of risk.

     -   Only qualified investors may purchase Units.

     -   Investment is suitable only for investors having substantial
         financial resources who understand the long-term nature, tax
         consequences, and risk factors associated with this investment.

     -   Minimum requirements are $225,000 net worth, or a net worth of
         $60,000 and taxable income of $60,000.

     -   States with more stringent requirements are set forth below.

     -   Transferees of Units must meet the suitability requirements set
         forth herein.

     It is the obligation of persons selling Units to make every
reasonable effort to assure that the Units are suitable for investors,
based on the investor's investment objectives and financial situation,
regardless of the investor's income or net worth.

     Units, including fractional Units, will be sold only to an investor
who shall have a minimum net worth of $225,000 or a minimum net worth of
$60,000 and had during the last tax year or estimates that he will have
during the current tax year "taxable income" as defined in Section 63 of
the Code of at least $60,000 without regard to an investment in Units. 
Net worth shall be determined exclusive of home, home furnishings and
automobiles.  In addition, Units will be sold only to an investor who
makes a written representation that he is the sole and true party in
interest and that he is not purchasing for the benefit of any other person
(or that he is purchasing for another person who meets all of the
conditions set forth herein).

     Additional suitability requirements are applicable to residents of
certain states where the offer and sale of Units are being made as set
forth below.

     California residents generally may not transfer Units without the
consent of the California Commissioner of Corporations.

                                    - 28 -
<PAGE>
     Michigan     and Pennsylvania      investors are not permitted to
make an investment if the dollar amount of the investment is equal to    
or      more than 10% of their net worth.

     The Commissioner of Securities of Missouri classifies the Units as
being ineligible for any transactional exemption under the Missouri
Uniform Securities Act (Section 409.402(b), RSMo. 1969).  Therefore,
unless the Units are again registered, the offer for sale or resale of
Units by an Investor Partner in the State of Missouri may be subject to
the sanctions of the act.

     Purchasers of Limited Partnership Interest.  A resident of California
who subscribes for Units of limited partnership interest must (i) have net
worth of not less than $250,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and
automobiles) and expect to have gross income in 1996 (with respect to
investments in the PDC 1996 designated Partnerships) or in 1997 (with
respect to the PDC 1997 designated Partnerships) of $65,000 or more, or
(ii) have net worth of not less than $500,000 (exclusive of home,
furnishings, and automobiles), or (iii) have net worth of not less than
$1,000,000, or (iv) expect to have gross income in 1996 (with respect to
investments in the PDC 1996 designated Partnerships) or in 1997 (with
respect to the PDC 1997 designated Partnerships) of not less than
$200,000.

     A New Hampshire resident must have either:  (i) a net worth of not
less than $250,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and automobiles), or
(ii) a net worth of not less than $125,000 (exclusive of home,
furnishings, and automobiles), $50,000 in taxable income.

     A Michigan or North Carolina resident must have a net worth of not
less than $225,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and automobiles), or
(b) a net worth of not less than $60,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings,
and automobiles) and estimated 1996 (with respect to investments in the
PDC 1996 designated Partnerships) or in 1997 (with respect to the PDC 1997
designated Partnerships) taxable income as defined in Section 63 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 of $ 60,000 or more without regard to an
investment in a Partnership.

     A Pennsylvania resident must have either:  (i) a net worth of at
least $225,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and automobiles); or (ii)
a net worth of at least $60,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and
automobiles) and 1995 (for the PDC 1996 designated Partnerships; 1996 for
the PDC 1997 designated Partnerships) taxable income of or estimates that
his 1996 (for the PDC 1996 designated Partnerships; 1997 for the PDC 1997
designated Partnerships) taxable income, as defined in Section 63 of the
Code, of $60,000 or more, without regard to the investment in the Program;
or (iii) that he is purchasing in a fiduciary capacity for a person or
entity having such net worth or such taxable income.  

     Purchasers of General Partnership Interest.  A resident of Alabama,
Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts,
Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina,
Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas,
Vermont, or Wisconsin who subscribes for Units of general partnership
interest must represent that he (i) has an individual or joint minimum net
worth (exclusive of home, home furnishings and automobiles) with his or
her spouse of $225,000 or more, without regard to the investment in the
program and a combined minimum gross income of $100,000 ($120,000 for
Arizona residents) or more for the current year and for the two previous
years; or (ii) has an individual or joint minimum net worth with his or
her spouse in excess of $1,000,000, inclusive of home, home furnishings

                                    - 29 -
<PAGE>
and automobiles; or (iii) has an individual or joint minimum net worth
with his or her spouse in excess of $500,000, exclusive of home, home
furnishings and automobiles; or (iv) has a combined minimum gross income
excess of $200,000 in the current year and the two previous years.

     A resident of California who subscribes for Units of general
partnership interest must (i) have net worth of not less than $250,000
(exclusive of home, furnishings, and automobiles) and expect to have gross
income in 1996 (with respect to investments in the PDC 1996 designated
Partnerships) or in 1997 (with respect to the PDC 1997 designated
Partnerships) of $120,000 or more, or (ii) have net worth of not less than
$500,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and automobiles), or (iii) have
net worth of not less than $1,000,000, or (iv) expect to have gross income
in 1996 (with respect to investments in the PDC 1996 designated
Partnerships) or in 1997 (with respect to the PDC 1997 designated
Partnerships) of not less than $200,000.

     A resident of Washington who subscribes for Units of general
partnership interest must (i) have a net worth, or a joint net worth with
that person's spouse, of not less than $1,000,000 at the time of the
purchase or (ii) have an individual income in excess of $200,000 in each
of the two most recent years or joint income with that person's spouse in
excess of $300,000 in each of those years and have a reasonable
expectation of reaching the same income level in the current year.

     Miscellaneous.  Transferees of Units seeking to become substituted
Partners must also meet the suitability requirements discussed above, as
well as the requirements imposed by the Partnership Agreement, including
transfers of Units by a Partner to a dependent or to a trust for the
benefit of a dependent or transfers by will, gift or by the laws of
descent and distribution.

     Where any Units are purchased by an investor in a fiduciary capacity
for any other person (or for an entity in which such investor is deemed to
be a "purchaser" of the subject Units) all of the suitability standards
set forth above will be applicable to such other person. 

     Investors are required to execute their own subscription agreements.
The Managing General Partner will not accept any subscription agreement
that has been executed by someone other than the investor or in the case
of fiduciary accounts someone who does not have the legal power of
attorney to sign on the investor's behalf.

     For details regarding how to subscribe, see "Instructions to
Subscribers" attached hereto as Appendix C.

ASSESSMENTS AND FINANCING

     -   The Units of the Partnerships are not subject to assessments.

    -   The Partnership is not allowed to borrow funds on behalf of the
        Partnership or for Partnership activities.

     -   Operations for the drilling of wells by the particular
         Partnerships are expected to be funded through Subscription
         proceeds and capital contributed to the Partnerships by the
         Managing General Partner.  Over the term of a Partnership,
         additional funds may be required when, in the opinion of the
         Managing General Partner, such funds are deemed necessary to
         complete that Partnership's activities.


                                    - 30 -
<PAGE>
     The Managing General Partner intends to develop particular
Partnership interests in its Prospects only with the proceeds of
Subscriptions and its Capital Contributions.  However, such funds may not
be sufficient to fund all such costs and it may be necessary for a
Partnership to retain Partnership revenues for the payment of such costs,
or for the Managing General Partner to advance the necessary funds to a
Partnership.  No wells beyond the initial wells will be drilled. 
Additional development refers to work necessary or desirable to enhance
production from existing wells.  Payment for such development work will be
retained from Partnership proceeds in one of two methods:

         (a)  An AFE ("authority for expenditures") estimate will be
prepared by the Managing General Partner for the Partnership.  The
development work will be completed by the Operator at which time the
Partnership will be billed for the work performed; or

         (b)  An AFE estimate will be prepared by the Managing General
Partner for the Partnership.  The Partnership will retain revenues from
operations until sufficient funds have been accumulated to pay for the
development work, at which time the work will be commenced by the
Operator, and the Operator will be paid as the work is performed.

The choice of which option to use will be at the discretion of the
Managing General Partner, based on the amount of the anticipated
expenditure and the urgency of the necessary work.  Generally the Managing
General Partner will elect option (a) for emergency and expenditures of
less than $10,000 and option (b) for expenditures of $10,000 and greater.

     The Partnership is not permitted to borrow funds on behalf of the
Partnership or for Partnership activities.  See Section 6.03(a) of the
Partnership Agreement.

     Revenues allocated to the Investor Partners and applied to the
payment of capitalized costs may result in taxable income to the Investor
Partners to the extent not otherwise offset by Partnership losses and
deductions. To the extent not so offset, such revenues may result in the
Investor Partners being required to report taxable income without having
received cash distributions with which to pay the resulting tax liability. 
See "Tax Considerations."

               SOURCE OF FUNDS AND USE OF PROCEEDS

 Source of Funds

     Upon completion of the offering, the sole funds available to the
Partnerships will be the contributions of the Investor Partners 
($1,000,000 ranging to $50,000,000) and the contribution of the Managing
General Partner in cash ($218,750 ranging to $10,937,500) for a total
amount of $1,218,750 if 50 Units are sold ranging to $60,937,500 if 2,500
Units are sold.

Use of Proceeds

     A total of 2,500 Units is being offered to fund up to eight
Partnerships over a two-year period.  In order to fund any particular
Partnership, a minimum of 50 Units ($1,000,000)    (75 Units or $1,500,000
with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited
Partnership)     must be sold with respect to that Partnership.  The
following table presents information respecting the financing of a
Partnership in three different circumstances: (1) if 500 Units
($10,000,000) are sold, the maximum number of Units which can be sold for

                                    - 31 -
<PAGE>
any Partnership, (2) if 250 Units ($5,000,000) are sold, and (3) if the
minimum 50 Units ($1,000,000) are sold.  It is anticipated that
substantially all of the funds available to the Partnership will be
disbursed for the following purposes and in the following manner: 
<TABLE>
<S>             <S>            <S>       <S>      <S>         <S>     <S>     
<S> 

Entity
Receiving      Nature of    500 Units           250 Units           50 Units
Payment        Payment      Sold        %(1)    Sold        %(1)    Sold     %(1)

Total
Partnership
Capital                 $12,187,500    100%  $6,093,750   100%   $1,218,750  100%

LESS:  Public
 Offering Expenses:
Dealer         Dealer 
Manager (an    Manager's
Affiliate)     fee        1,050,000     8.6%    525,000   8.6%      105,000  8.6%
               and sales
               commission (2)(3)

LESS: 
 Management Fee:
Managing       Management
General        Fee          250,000     2.1%    125,000    2.1%      25,000  2.1%
Partner

Amount Available
 For Investment:
Operator      Capital 
(the          available
Managing      for opera-  $10,887,500  89.3% $5,443,750  89.3%  $1,088,750  89.3%
General       tions (4)
Partner)
<FN>
____________________
(1)  The percentage is based upon total Investor Partners' Capital
     Contributions and the Managing General Partner's Capital Contribution. 
     The comparable amounts which will be utilized for each particular
     purpose if all 2,500 Units were sold are as follows:  capital
     available for operations:  $54,437,500 (89.3%); management fee: 
     $1,250,000 (2.1%); dealer manager's fee and sales commissions,
     reimbursement of due diligence expenses, and wholesaling fees: 
     $5,025,000 (8.6%); and total:  $60,937,500 (100%);     and if 75 Units or
     $1,500,000 were sold:  capital available for operations:  $1,633,125
     (89.3%); management fee: $37,500 (2.1%); dealer manager's fee and sales
     commissions, reimbursement of due diligence expenses, and wholesaling fees: 
     $157,500 (8.6%); and total:  $1,828,125 (100%)    

(2)  PDC Securities Incorporated, an Affiliate of the Managing General
     Partner, may reallow in whole or in part up to $5,000,000 (if 2,500
     Units are sold) ranging to $100,000 (if the minimum number of Units
     is sold) for sales commissions, reimbursement of due diligence
     expenses, marketing support fees and other compensation payable to
     other NASD-licensed broker-dealers in connection with the sale of
     the Units.  PDC Securities will receive and retain wholesaling fees
     equal to 0.5% of Subscriptions; such fees will range from $5,000 if
     the minimum number of Units is sold ranging to $250,000 if the
     maximum number of Units is sold.  Such payments will be made in
     cash solely on the amount of initial Subscriptions.
                                    - 32 -<PAGE>
(3)  Organization and Offering Costs in excess of 10 1/2% of Subscriptions
     will be paid by the Managing General Partner, without recourse to the
     Partnership.

(4)  Included herein is the Cost to the Partnerships of acquiring
     Prospects, which may include Prospects acquired from the Managing
     General Partner.  Total lease costs of the Prospects acquired from the
     Managing General Partner and unaffiliated persons will not exceed 5%
     of capital available for operations.
</TABLE>

      In the event a Partnership closes for the minimum amount of subscription
units, the relative degree of risk of an investment in that Partnership will
increase in view of the lesser degree of diversification of drilling by that
Partnership.  Thus, a Partnership subscribed at the minimum level would be able
to participate in fewer Prospects, thereby increasing the effect upon the
Investor Partners' investment as a result of an unsuccessful well.

     As the Partnership size increases, the number of wells drilled will
increase, thereby increasing the diversification of the Partnership and
decreasing the effect upon the Investor Partners' investment of an unsuccessful
well.  However, if the Managing General Partner is unable to secure sufficient
attractive Prospects for a larger partnership, it is possible that the average
quality of the wells drilled could decline.  In addition, greater demands will
be placed on the management capabilities of the Managing General Partner in
larger Partnerships.

Subsequent Source of Funds

    As indicated above, it is anticipated that substantially all of the
Partnership's initial capital will be committed or expended following the
offering.  The Partnership Agreement does not permit the Partnership to borrow
any funds for its activities.  Consequently, any future requirements for
additional capital will have to be satisfied from Partnership production.  See
"Risk Factors -- Shortage of Working Capital."

                   PARTICIPATION IN COSTS AND REVENUES

     Profits and losses of a particular Partnership will be allocated and cash
available for distribution will be distributed between the Managing General
Partner and Investor Partners, as follows:
<TABLE>
<S>                       <S>                   <S>
                                             Managing
                      Investor Partners(1)   General Partner(1)

Throughout term of
Partnership             80%                    20%
<FN>
____________________

 (1)      The allocations and distributions to the Investor Partners and to the
Managing General Partner may vary during the first     ten      years of the
Partnership in view of the Partnership's preferred cash distribution policy.   
See "Revenues -- Preferred Cash Distributions," immediately below.
</TABLE>

         The foregoing allocation of profits and losses is an allocation of each
item of income, gain, loss, and deduction which, in the aggregate, constitute a
profit or a loss.

                                    - 33 -
<PAGE>
Revenues

         Natural Gas Revenues; Sales Proceeds.  Revenues from natural gas
production and gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of productive
wells, Leases and equipment will be allocated 80% to the Investor Partners and
20% to the Managing General Partner.  The revenues to be allocated are subject
to the "Preferred Cash Distributions," below. 

          Preferred Cash Distributions.  In order that the Investor Partners
might receive in each of the first     ten      years of Partnership operations
cash distributions equal to 10% of their Subscriptions on a cumulative basis,
the Partnership Agreement provides for a preferred cash distribution policy
for the Investor Partners by the subordination of a portion of the Managing 
General Partner's allotted cash distributions.   Starting with the first 
distribution of revenues, after all Partnership wells have been placed in
production, the Partnership is structured to provide preferred cash 
distributions to the Investor Partners so that they might receive cash
distributions equal to a minimum of 10% of their Subscriptions per year 
determined on a cumulative basis.  Historically with previous partnerships 
sponsored by the Managing General Partner, the first cash distribution after all
partnership wells have been placed in production has been made within
approximately nine months after the respective partnership has been funded.
In order that the Investor Partners might achieve this investment 
feature, the Managing General Partner will subordinate up to 50% of its share of
Partnership distributions.  The subordination will be determined on a cumulative
basis throughout the entire subordination period.  If at any time during the
initial     ten     year period of distributions from all Partnership wells the
cumulative cash returns average less than 10% on an annual basis, subsequent
distributions will be adjusted to increase the Investor Partners' interest in
distributions until such time as the cumulative average return in 10% or the
subordination period expires.     In addition to the foregoing subordination
provision if on any anniversary of the first distribution after all Partnership
wells have been placed in production, the cumulative distributions to the
Investor Partners have averaged less than 15% of their Subscriptions on an
annual basis and the distributions for the twelve months preceding the 
anniversary have totaled less than 10%, Managing General Partner shall
refund to the Partnership which shall thereupon distribute to the
Investor Partners an amount equal to the difference between the amount
distributed to Investor Partners during the preceding twelve month period and
the lesser of 10% of the Investor Partner Subscriptions or the amount the 
Investor Partners would have received had they been allocated 90% of the
Partnership's distributions during that twelve month period.  These
subordination provisions shall expire on the tenth anniversary of the first
distribution from all partnership wells.       There is no assurance the
Investor Partners will experience a 10%     or 15%      cumulative average
return.  The Managing General Partner anticipates that the Investor Partners 
will benefit from the subordination if the price of gas received by the 
Partnership and/or the results of the Partnership's drilling activities are 
unable to generate the specified return to the Investor Partners.   As a
result, the Investor Partners could receive up to 90% of Partnership 
distributions during the subordination period.  To the extent that preferred
cash distributions are paid in any particular year, the allocations of
revenues to the Investor Partners will increase accordingly and the
allocation of revenues to the Managing General
Partner will correspondingly decrease.     THE ABOVE-REFERENCED PREFERRED CASH
DISTRIBUTIONS AND SUBORDINATION POLICY IS NOT, AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED BY
ANY INVESTOR PARTNER TO BE, ANY FORM OF GUARANTEE OR ASSURANCE OF A RATE OF
RETURN ON AN INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP.  THE POLICY IS THE RESULT OF A
CONTRACTUAL AGREEMENT BY THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AS SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH
4.02 OF THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT.  THERE IS NO GUARANTEE OR ASSURANCE
WHATSOEVER THAT THE PARTNERSHIP WILL DRILL COMMERCIALLY SUCCESSFUL GAS WELLS OR 
THAT THE CASH DISTRIBUTIONS TO THE PARTNERS, INCLUDING ANY CASH DISTRIBUTIONS 
PURSUANT TO THE POLICY, WILL ACHIEVE A 10% RATE OF RETURN.    

                                    - 34 -
<PAGE>
         Interest Income.  Any interest earned on the deposit of Subscription
funds prior to the closing of the offering and funding of the respective
Partnership  will be credited 100% to the Investor Partners.  Interest earned on
the deposit of operating revenues and revenues from any other  sources shall be
allocated and credited in the same percentages that oil and gas revenues are 
then being allocated to the Investor Partners and the Managing General Partner.

     Sale of Equipment.  All revenues from sales of drilling equipment will be
allocated 100% to the Managing General Partner.

Costs

     Organization and Offering Costs.  Organization and Offering Costs, net of
the Dealer Manager commissions, discounts and due diligence expenses, and
wholesaling fees, of the Partnerships will be paid by the Managing General
Partner and not out of Partnership funds.  The Managing General Partner will pay
all legal, accounting, printing, and filing fees associated with the 
organization of the Partnerships and the offerings of Units.  The Investor 
Partners will pay all Dealer Manager commissions, discounts, and due diligence 
reimbursement and will be allocated 100% of these costs.  However, Organization 
and Offering Costs in excess of 10 1/2% of Subscriptions will be allocated and 
charged 100% to the Managing General Partner.

     Management Fee.  The nonrecurring Management Fee will be allocated 100% to
the Investor Partners and 0% to the Managing General Partner.

     Lease Costs, Drilling and Completion, and Gathering Line Costs.  The Costs
of Leases, tangible Drilling and Completion Costs and gathering line Costs will
be allocated 0% to the Investor Partners and 100% to the Managing General
Partner.

     The Managing General Partner will contribute and/or pay for all Leases,
tangible Drilling and Completion Costs, and gathering line Costs. 

      Intangible Drilling Costs.  Intangible Drilling Costs and recapture of
Intangible Drilling Costs will be allocated 100% to the Investor Partners and 0%
to the Managing General Partner.  Recapture, if any, attributable to intangible
drilling and development costs will be allocable on the same percentage basis as
intangible drilling and development costs were allocated.

     Investor Partners will pay all intangible expenses.  If the Capital
Contributions of the Investor Partners are insufficient to pay the Intangible
Drilling Costs, the Managing General Partner will pay the additional amount of
such costs.

     Operating Costs.  Operating Costs of Partnership wells will be allocated
and charged 80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing General
Partner.

     Direct Costs.  Direct Costs of the Partnerships will be allocated and
charged 80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing General Partner.

    Administrative Costs.  The Administrative Costs of the Partnerships will be
borne by and allocated 100% to the Managing General Partner.

     The table below summarizes the participation of the Managing General
Partner and the Investor Partners, taking account of the Managing General
Partner's Capital Contribution, in the costs and revenues of the 
Partnerships.  See "Glossary of Terms," "Participation in Costs and Revenues,"
and the Partnership Agreement, Exhibit A hereto.


                                    - 35 -
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>                                            <S>        <S>
                                                       Managing
                                            Investor    General
                                            Partners    Partner 

Partnership Costs

Broker-dealer Commissions and Expenses(1)      100%      0%
Management Fee . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100%      0%
Undeveloped Lease Costs. . . . . . . . . . . .   0%    100%
Drilling and Completion Costs. . . . . . . . .   0%    100%
Tangible Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   0%    100%
Intangible Drilling and Development Costs      100%      0%
Operating Costs(2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80%     20%
Direct Costs(3). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80%     20%
Administrative Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . .   0%    100%

      Partnership Revenues

Sale of Oil and Gas Production(4). . . . . . .  80%     20%
Sale of Productive Properties(5) . . . . . . .  80%     20%
Sale of Equipment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   0%    100%
Sale of Undeveloped Leases . . . . . . . . . .  80%     20%
Interest Income. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  80%     20%

<FN>
(1)        Organization and Offering Costs, net of the Dealer Manager
           commissions, discounts, due diligence expenses, and wholesaling
           fees, of the Partnerships will be paid by the Managing General
           Partner and not from Partnership funds.  In addition, Organization
           and Offering Costs in excess of 10 1/2% of Subscriptions will be
           paid by the Managing General Partner, without recourse to the
           Partnerships.

(2)        Represents Operating Costs incurred after the completion of
           productive wells, including monthly per-well charges paid to the
           Managing General Partner.

(3)        The Managing General Partner will receive monthly reimbursement from
           the Partnerships for their Direct Costs incurred by the Managing
           General Partner on behalf of the Partnerships.

(4)        See "Participation in Costs and Revenues -- Revenues -- Preferred
           Cash Distributions."

(5)        In the event of the sale or other disposition of a productive well,
           a Lease upon which such well is situated, or any equipment related
           to any such Lease or well, the gain from such sale or disposition
           shall be allocated and credited to the Partners as oil and gas
           revenues are allocated.  The term "proceeds" above does not include
           revenues from a royalty, overriding royalty, Lease interest
           reserved, or other promotional consideration reserved by a
           Partnership in connection with any sale or disposition, which
           revenues shall be allocated to the Investor Partners and the
           Managing General Partner in the same percentages that oil and gas
           revenues are allocated.
</TABLE>

      The Managing General Partner estimates that Direct Costs allocable to the
Investor Partners for the initial 12 months of their operations will 

                                    - 36 -<PAGE>
be approximately $8,000 if minimum Subscriptions ($1,000,000) are received 
(representing 0.7% of aggregate Partnership capital); and approximately $88,000
if maximum Subscriptions ($50,000,000) are received (representing 0.2% of
aggregate Partnership capital).  The following table sets forth the components
of these estimated charges to the Investor Partners during the first year after
a Partnership is formed, assuming the minimum and maximum Subscriptions are
obtained:
<TABLE>
<S>                                                   <S>            <S> 
                                                    Minimum        Maximum
                                                 Subscriptions  Subscriptions
                                                 (50 Units)     (2,500 Units)

Administrative Costs(1). . . . . . . . . . . . .      $ -0-      $ -0-  

        Total Administrative Costs . . . . . . .      $ -0-      $ -0-  

Direct Costs:
    Audit and Tax Preparation. . . . . . . . . .      $5,000     $40,000
    Independent Engineering Reports. . . . . . .       2,000      36,000
    Materials, Supplies and Other. . . . . . . .       1,000      12,000

        Total Direct Costs . . . . . . . . . . .      $8,000     $88,000
</TABLE>
___________________
(1)  The Managing General Partner will bear all Administrative Costs of
     the Partnerships; however, the financial statements of the
     Partnerships will reflect these costs, since generally accepted
     accounting principles require that all costs of doing business be
     included in the historical financial statements.

     The following table presents for each partnership formed by the
Managing General Partner in the last three years the dollar amount of
direct costs and administrative costs incurred by the particular
partnership in each year and the percentage of subscriptions raised
reflected thereby.
   
<TABLE>
<S>            <S>       <S>       <S>      <S>                <S>         <S> 
                                Direct Costs
                1993              1995                   1995
Partnership           % of                % of                       % of
Name         Amount   Subscrip-  Amount   Subscrip-      Amount    Subscrip-
                        tions                tions                  tions

PDC 1990-A    6,114     0.43%     7,068      0.50%        5,231      0.37%
PDC 1990-B    9,075     0.41%     7,781      0.35%        8,182      0.37%
PDC 1990-C   11,350     0.33%     9,397      0.27%        8,461      0.24%
PDC 1990-D   12,080     0.33%    10,614      0.29%        8,878      0.24%
PDC 1991-A    9,249     0.34%     8,182      0.30%       11,530      0.42%
PDC 1991-B    6,378     0.34%     6,556      0.35%        5,906      0.32%
PDC 1991-C   10,525     0.38%     7,399      0.27%        7,147      0.26%
PDC 1991-D   23,708     0.45%    11,784      0.22%       11,796      0.22%
PDC 1992-A    7,127     0.25%     7,198      0.25%        7,338      0.25%
PDC 1992-B   13,069     0.44%     7,314      0.25%        7,414      0.25%
PDC 1992-C   18,228     0.29%    14,668      0.23%       12,419      0.19%
PDC 1993-A    9,715     0.32%     9,866      0.33%        7,063      0.23%
PDC 1993-B   15,185     0.62%     8,787      0.36%        6,465      0.27%
PDC 1993-C   16,235     0.53%     9,130      0.30%        7,234      0.24%
PDC 1993-D   16,066     0.55%     9,245      0.32%        6,898      0.24%
PDC 1993-E   22,947     0.31%    17,113      0.23%       17,106      0.23%
PDC 1994-A       -        -      10,622      0.52%        6,973      0.34%
                                    - 37 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1994-B         -          -        11,950      0.44%  8,046      0.30%
PDC 1994-C         -          -        11,750      0.50%  8,064      0.34%
PDC 1994-D         -          -        12,750      0.17% 17,674      0.23%
PDC 1995-A         -          -          -           -    8,145      0.56%
PDC 1995-B         -          -          -           -    8,945      0.48%
PDC 1995-C(1)      -          -          -           -    9,634      0.46%
PDC 1995-D(2)      -          -          -           -   13,013      0.16%

                               Administrative Costs

                   1993                 1994              1995

Partnership              % of                 % of                   % of
Name            Amount   Subscrip-  Amount  Subscrip-   Amount   Subscrip-
                          tions              tions                  tions
PDC 1990-A         $  0   0.00%   $  0       0.00%       $  0       0.00%
PDC 1990-B            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1990-C            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1990-D            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1991-A            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1991-B            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1991-C            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1991-D            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1992-A            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1992-B            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1992-C            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1993-A            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1993-B            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1993-C            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1993-D            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1993-E            0   0.00%      0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1994-A            -     -        0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1994-B            -     -        0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1994-C            -     -        0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1994-D            -     -        0       0.00%          0       0.00%
PDC 1995-A            -     -        -       -              0       0.00%
PDC 1995-B            -     -        -       -              0       0.00%
PDC 1995-C(1)         -     -        -       -              0       0.00%
PDC 1995-D(2)         -     -        -       -              0       0.00%
___________________
<FN>
(1)  Partnership funded in November 1995.

(2)  Partnership funded in December 1995.
</TABLE>
    

Allocations Among Investor Partners; Deficit Capital Account Balances

      The revenues and costs of a Partnership allocated to the Investor
Partners will be allocated among them in the proportion in which the
amount of each Investor Partner's Capital Contribution bears to the
aggregate of the Capital Contributions of all Investor Partners in the
Partnership.

      To avoid the requirement of restoring a deficit Capital Account
balance, no losses will be allocated to an Investor Partner to the extent
such allocation would create or increase a deficit in the Capital Account
(adjusted for certain liabilities, as provided in the Partnership
Agreement).

Cash Distribution Policy

                                    - 38 -<PAGE>
     -   Distributions of Partnership cash are planned to be made on a monthly
         basis, but will be made no less often than quarterly, to the extent
         there are funds available for distribution.

     -   Cash distributions will be made 80% to the Investor Partners and 20%
         to the Managing General Partner throughout the term of the
         Partnership, but may increase for Investor Partners in view of the
         preferred cash distribution policy.

     -   The level or amounts of cash distributions from the Program cannot
         presently be predicted.

     The Managing General Partner intends to distribute substantially all of
the Partnerships' available cash flow on a monthly basis; however, the
Managing General Partner will review the accounts of each Partnership at
least quarterly for the purpose of determining the Distributable Cash
available for distribution.  The ability of the Partnerships to make or
sustain a constant level of cash distributions will depend upon numerous
factors.  No assurance can be given that any level of cash distributions
to the Investor Partners will be attained, that cash distributions will
equal or approximate cash distributions made to investors in prior
drilling programs sponsored by the Managing General Partner or its
Affiliates, or that any level of cash distributions can be maintained. 
See "Prior Activities."

     In general, the volume of production from producing properties declines
with the passage of time.  The cash flow generated by each Partnership's
activities and the amounts available for distribution to a Partnership's
respective Partners will, therefore, decline in the absence of significant
increases in the prices that the Partnerships receive for their respective
oil and gas production, or significant increases in the production of oil
and gas from Prospects resulting from the successful additional
development of such Prospects.

     In general, cash distributions will be made 80% to the Investor Partners
and 20% to the Managing General Partner throughout the term of the
Partnership. However, Investor Partners will be entitled to receive
preferred cash distributions so that their cash distributions per year
might equal a minimum of 10% of the Subscriptions on a cumulative basis
for the first     ten      years of Partnership well operations.  The Managing
General Partner will subordinate up to 50% of its share of Partnership
distributions during the     ten     year subordination period.     In addition
to the foregoing subordination provision, if on any anniversary of the first
distribution after all Partnership wells have been placed in production, the
cumulative distributions to the Investor Partners have averaged less than 15%
of their Subscriptions on an annual basis, and the distributions for the twelve
months preceding the anniversary have totaled less than 10%, Managing General
Partner shall refund to the Partnership which shall thereupon distribute to the
Investor Partners an amount equal to the difference between the amount
distributed to Investor Partners during the preceding twelve month period, and
the lesser of 10% of the Investor Partner Subscriptions or the amount the
Investor Partners would have received had they been allocated 90% of the
Partnership's distributions during that twelve month period.  These
subordination provisions shall expire on the tenth anniversary of the first
distribution from all partnership wells.      See "Revenues --Preferred Cash
Distributions," above.     THE ABOVE-REFERENCED PREFERRED CASH DISTRIBUTIONS AND
SUBORDINATION POLICY IS NOT, AND SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED BY ANY INVESTOR
PARTNER TO BE, ANY FORM OF GUARANTEE OR ASSURANCE OF A RATE OF RETURN ON AN
INVESTMENT IN THE PARTNERSHIP.  THE POLICY IS THE RESULT OF A CONTRACTUAL 
AGREEMENT BY THE

                                    - 39 -

<PAGE>
MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AS SET FORTH IN PARAGRAPH 4.02 OF THE PARTNERSHIP
AGREEMENT.  THERE IS NO GUARANTEE OR ASSURANCE WHATSOEVER THAT THE PARTNERSHIP
WILL DRILL COMMERCIALLY SUCCESSFUL GAS WELLS OR THAT THE CASH DISTRIBUTIONS TO
THE PARTNERS, INCLUDING ANY CASH DISTRIBUTIONS PURSUANT TO THE POLICY, WILL
ACHIEVE A 10% RATE OF RETURN.      Cash will be distributed to the Managing
General Partner and Investor Partners as a return on capital in the same
proportion as their interest in the net income of the Partnership.  However,
no Investor Partner will receive distributions to the extent such would
create or increase a deficit in that Partner's Capital Account.

     For a fuller discussion of Capital Accounts and tax allocations, see
"Tax Considerations -- Partnership Allocations."

Termination

     Upon termination and final liquidation of a Partnership, the assets of
the Partnership will be distributed to the Partners based upon their
Capital Account balances.  If the Managing General Partner has a deficit
in its Capital Account, it will be required to restore such deficit;
however, no Investor Partner will be obligated to restore his deficit, if
any.

Amendment of Partnership Allocation Provisions

     -   The Managing General Partner is allowed to amend the Partnership
         Agreement without investor approval, if necessary for partnership
         allocations to be recognized for federal tax purposes.

     The Managing General Partner is authorized to amend the Partnership
Agreement, if, in its sole discretion based on advice from its legal
counsel or accountants, an amendment to revise the cost and revenue
allocations is required for such allocations to be recognized for federal
income tax purposes either because of the promulgation of Treasury
Regulations or other developments in the tax law.  Any new allocation
provisions provided by an amendment are required to be made in a manner
that would result in the most favorable aggregate consequences to the
Investor Partners as nearly as possible consistent with the original
allocations described herein.  See Section 11.09 of the Partnership
Agreement.

COMPENSATION TO THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER AND AFFILIATES

     The following is a tabular presentation of the items of compensation
discussed more fully below:
<TABLE>
<S>                      <S>                     <S>

Recipient           Form of Compensation    Amount

Managing General    Partnership interest    20% interest(1)
Partner

Managing General    Management fee          2.5% of Subscriptions
Partner                                     (nonrecurring fee)(2)

Managing General    Sale of Leases to       Cost, or fair market
Partner             Partnership             value if materially
                                            less than Cost(3)

Managing General    Contract drilling rat   Competitive industry
Partner                                     rates(3)

                                    - 40 -
<PAGE>
Managing General    Operator's Per-Well C   $300 per well per
Partner                                     month

Managing General    Direct Costs            Cost(3)
Partner

Managing General    Payment for equipment   Competitive prices(3)
Partner and         supplies, gas    marketing,
Affiliates          and other services(4)    

Affiliate           Brokerage sales commi    10.5% of Subscriptions
                    reimbursement of due     $105,000 ranging to
                    diligence and marketing  $5.25 million   (5)    
                    support expenses;
                    wholesaling fees
<FN>
_____________________

(1)   The Managing General Partner will contribute to each Partnership an
      amount equal to at least 21-7/8% of the aggregate contributions of
      the Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner's share of
      operating profits in each Partnership will be 20%.  The interests of
      the Managing General Partner and the Investor Partners may vary in view
      of the preferred cash distribution policy, discussed above.

(2)   The one-time fee will range from $25,000 if the minimum number of Units is
      sold to $1,250,000 if the maximum number of Units is sold.

(3)   Cannot be quantified at the present time.

(4)       Some of the gas produced by the Partnership will be marketed by Riley
      Natural Gas Company ("Riley"), a subsidiary of the Managing General
      Partner.  The Managing General Partner acquired Riley in April, 1996.    

(5)   PDC Securities Incorporated, an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner,
      will receive as Dealer Manager of the offering sales commissions,
      reimbursement of due diligence and marketing support expenses and
      wholesaling fees payable from the Subscriptions of the Investor Partners
      of $5,250,000 if the maximum number of Units is sold ranging to $105,000
      if the minimum number of Units is sold.  PDC Securities Incorporated may,
      as Dealer Manager, reallow such commissions and due diligence and
      marketing support expenses in whole or in part to NASD licensed broker-
      dealers for sale of the Units, reimbursement of due diligence and
      marketing support expenses, and other compensation, but will retain the 
      wholesaling fees of 0.5% of Subscriptions, ranging from $250,000 if the 
      maximum number of Units is sold to $5,000 if the minimum number of 
      Units is sold.

</TABLE>
      For a tabular presentation of payments to the Managing General Partner
and Affiliates made by previous partnerships sponsored by the Managing
General Partner, see "Conflicts of Interest -- Certain Transactions,"
below.  The categories of compensation set forth above are comparable to
the corresponding categories of compensation for other partnerships
sponsored by the Managing General Partner disclosed in the "Certain
Transactions" table below, except with respect to the management fee which
was not a feature of the 1993 partnerships sponsored by the Managing
General Partner.




                                    - 41 -
<PAGE>
      Upon completion of the offering with respect to each Partnership and
upon funding of that Partnership, the Managing General Partner will
receive a one-time Management Fee of 2.5% of total contributions of the
Investor Partners to the Partnership, an amount equal to $25,000 if the
minimum number of Units is sold ranging to $1,250,000 if the maximum
number of Units is sold.  Since a maximum of    $15     million of Units can be
sold in any individual Partnership, the maximum amount of the Management
Fee with respect to any individual Partnership would be    $375,000     .

      The Managing General Partner will be reimbursed for all documented out-
of-pocket expenses incurred on behalf of the Partnership; however, there
will be no reimbursement of Administrative Costs.

      The Managing General Partner will sell (at the lower of fair market
value on the date of purchase or the Managing General Partner's Cost of
such Prospects) sufficient undeveloped Prospects to the Partnership to
drill the Partnership's wells.  Fair market value for Leases and Prospects
transferred from the Managing General Partner's inventory will be based on
the Cost at which similarly situated Leases and Prospects are available or
traded from or between other unaffiliated companies operating in the same
geographic area.  The Cost of the Prospects will include a portion of the
Managing General Partner's reasonable, necessary and actual expenses for
geological, geophysical, engineering, interest expense, drafting, legal,
and other like services allocated to the Partnership's properties.  The 
Managing General Partner will not retain any overriding royalty for
itself from such Prospects (see "Proposed Activities -- Acquisition of
Prospects").

      Each Partnership will enter into a drilling contract with the Managing
General Partner to drill and complete Partnership wells.  The Managing
General Partner intends to use certain of its own personnel and equipment
during the drilling and completion phase of operations.  These services
will be billed at rates not to exceed those charged for similar services
and equipment by other non-affiliated operators in the Partnership area of
operations.  To the extent that the contract prices exceed the Managing
General Partner's actual costs of drilling and completion, the Managing
General Partner will be deemed to have received compensation.  The amount
of compensation which the Managing General Partner could earn as a result
of these arrangements is dependent upon many factors, including the actual
cost of wells and the number of wells drilled.  The Managing General
Partner estimates that it would need to drill approximately 50-60 wells to
absorb fully existing technical, supervisory, and management costs.

      The Partnership will pay the Managing General Partner, as Operator for
drilling and completing the Partnership's wells, for each well completed
and placed into production a fee based upon the depth of the well at its
deepest penetration.  For each well which the Partnership elects to
complete, the fee will be an amount equal to $60 per foot for the first
2,200 feet of well depth plus $16 per foot for each additional foot below
2,200 feet to the deepest penetration of the well, plus the actual extra
completion costs of zones completed in excess of the cost of the first
zone and the actual costs for directional drilling services, if required. 
For each well which the Partnership elects not to complete, the
Partnership will pay the Managing General Partner as Operator an amount
equal to $33 per foot for the first 2,200 feet of well depth plus $9 per
foot for each additional foot below 2,200 feet to the deepest penetration
of the well plus the actual costs for directional drilling services, if
required.  In the event the foregoing rates exceed competitive rates
available from other persons in the area engaged in the business of
providing comparable services or equipment, the foregoing rates will be
adjusted to an amount equal to that competitive rate, but not less than

                                    - 42 -
<PAGE>
the Cost of providing such services or equipment.  In the event that the
competitive industry rates in the area and the costs of the Managing
General Partner in providing these drilling and completion services are in
excess of the Managing General Partner's contract drilling and completion
rates, the Managing General Partner will be bound by contract with the
Partnership to furnish the contracted services at the contract rates.  The
Managing General Partner reviews on an ongoing basis the rates of
unaffiliated driller/operators to determine competitive rates in the
geographic area.  Rates will be adjusted at the commencement of drilling
operations of each partnership formed, but no less frequently than semi-
annually.  Rates will be comparable to those charged by other operators in
the prospect area for equivalent services.  Comparable rates from a
minimum of two other unaffiliated operators will be acquired from one of
the following sources:  offering memoranda or prospectuses for private or
public drilling programs, quoted rates, or competitive bids.  In utilizing
outside contractors for drilling and completion operations (rather than
performing these services itself), the Managing General Partner will
receive an overhead payment for services as defined in the Copas
Accounting Procedure -  Joint Operations equal to the most recently
published average monthly drilling overhead rate for gas wells in the
Appalachians as published by Ernst & Young in their Survey of Combined
Fixed Rate Overhead Charges for Oil and Gas Producers, and actual cost for
any direct costs associated with drilling and completion operations.  That
monthly overhead rate is currently $4,050 per well per month for wells up 
to 5,000 feet in depth and $8,343 per well per month for wells 5,000 feet
to 10,000 feet in depth.  The total cost per well for wells drilled by
unaffiliated operators, including direct and overhead charges, may exceed
the footage rates listed in this prospectus.

      During the production phase of operations, the Operator will receive a
monthly fee of $225 per well for operations and field supervision and $75
per well for accounting, engineering, management, and general and
administrative expenses for producing wells.  Non-routine operations will
be billed to the Partnership at their Costs.  See "Proposed Activities --
Drilling and Completion Phase -- Drilling and Operating Agreement."

      The Partnerships will reimburse the Managing General Partner for Direct
Costs incurred by the Managing General Partner on behalf of the
Partnerships.

      The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may enter into other
transactions with the Partnerships for services, supplies and equipment,
and will be entitled to compensation at competitive prices and terms as
determined by reference to charges of unaffiliated companies providing
similar services, supplies and equipment.      The Managing General Partner
intendeds to market some of the gas produced through Riley, its subsidiary.
     See "Conflicts of Interest."

      PDC Securities Incorporated, an Affiliate of the Managing General
Partner, will receive as sales commissions, for reimbursement of due
diligence and marketing support expenses and wholesaling fees $5,250 ,000
if the maximum number of Units is sold ranging to $105,000 if the minimum
number of Units is sold.  PDC Securities Incorporated may, as Dealer
Manager, reallow such sales commissions and due diligence and marketing
support expenses in whole or in part to NASD licensed broker-dealers for
sale of the Units, reimbursement of due diligence and marketing support
expenses, and other compensation, but will retain the wholesaling fees of
$5,000 ranging to $250,000.




                                    - 43 -
<PAGE>
                         PROPOSED ACTIVITIES

Introduction

      -    The primary purpose of the Partnerships will be drilling,
           completing, and producing gas from development wells.

      -    Limited exploratory activities are allowed.

      -    Partnerships will acquire between 51% and 100% of the Working
           Interest of each Prospect, subject to royalty interests.

      -    Each Partnership will be a separate business entity.

      -    Investors in one Partnership will have no interest in any of the
           other Partnerships.

      The Partnerships will be formed to drill, complete, own and operate
natural gas wells in West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvania.  The Managing
General Partner may conduct Partnership operations in New York, Kentucky,
Michigan and/or     Indiana      as it may deem advisable.  The Partnerships
intend to apply all of the Capital Contributions available for participation
in drilling and completion activities to comparatively lower risk Development
Wells but may apply up to 10% to comparatively higher risk Exploratory Wells.
Risks will be spread to a limited extent by participating in drilling
operations on a number of different Prospects.  Until the amount of funds 
to be available for a Partnership's drilling activities is determined, the
precise number of Prospects cannot be determined and the drilling budget
cannot be formulated.  The Managing General Partner has no authority to
engage in any Roll-Up without the approval of at least 66 2/3% in interest
of the Investor Partners.  See "Glossary of Terms" for the definition of
"Roll-Up" and Section 5.07(m) of the Partnership Agreement.

      The Partnership's principal business objectives will be:

      (1)  to preserve and protect the Partnership capital by investing in
eight or more natural gas wells to provide diversification and to reduce
the adverse impact of dry holes and substandard wells;

      (2)  to provide tax deductions for the Investor Partners in the year
of their investment in the Partnership equal to 87-89.5% of the investor's
investment.  For a one Unit investment of $20,000, a deduction of $17,400
- - $17,900 will be generated, which could be used against ordinary income
by Additional General Partners and against passive income by Limited
Partners.

      (3)  to generate cash flow to the Investor Partners from the sale of
natural gas commencing within six months from the closing date of the
Partnership; to provide monthly cash distributions so that the Investor
Partners will receive cash distributions equal to a minimum of 10% of
their Subscriptions on a cumulative basis for each of the first five years
of Partnership life after the initial cash distribution;

      (4)  to develop long-lived natural gas reserve in areas where the
average  economic life of successful wells is expected to be twenty years
or more; and

      (5)  to distribute investor K-1 tax information during the first week
of February of each year.


                                    - 44 -
<PAGE>
      The Investor Partners should be aware that distributions after the
first twelve months of distributions will decrease due to the declining
rate of production from wells.  Changes in gas prices will decrease or
increase cash distributions.  Distributions will be partially sheltered by
the percentage depletion allowance.  See "Risk Factors -- Special Risks of
the Partnerships," "-- Risks Pertaining to Oil and Gas Investments," and
"-- Tax Status and Tax Risks," "Prior Activities," and "Tax Considerations
- -- Summary of Conclusions," "-- Intangible Drilling and Development
Costs," "-- Depletion Deduction," "--Partnership Distributions," and "--
Partnership Allocations."

      The attainment of the Partnership's business objectives will depend
upon many factors, including the ability of the Managing General Partner
to select productive Prospects, the drilling and completion of wells in an
economical manner, the successful management of such Prospects, the level
of natural gas prices in the future, the degree of governmental regulation
over the production and sale of natural gas, the future economic
conditions in the United States (and the world), and changes in the
Internal Revenue Code.  Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the
Partnership will achieve its business objectives.  Moreover, because each
Partnership will constitute a separate and distinct business and economic 
entity from each other Partnership, the degree to which the business
objectives are achieved will vary among the Partnerships.

      Various of the activities and policies of the Partnership discussed
throughout this section and elsewhere in the prospectus are defined in and
governed by the Partnership Agreement (the amendment of which requires the
affirmative vote of a majority of the then outstanding Units), including
that at least 90% of the net offering proceeds will be used to drill
Development Wells; the requirements relating to the acquisition of
Prospects and the payment of royalties; the amount of the Managing General
Partner's Capital Contribution to the Partnership; the guidelines with
respect to well pricing and the cost of services furnished by the Managing
General Partner and/or Affiliates; the states where the Partnership's
wells will be drilled; assessment and borrowing policies; voting rights of
Investor Partners; the term of the Partnership; and compensation of the
Managing General Partner.  Other policies and restrictions upon the
activities of the Managing General Partner and the Partnership are not set
forth in the Partnership Agreement, but instead reflect the current
intention of the Managing General Partner and thus are subject to change
at its discretion.  For these later activities, the Managing General
Partner, in making a change, will utilize its reasonable business judgment
as manager of the Partnership and will exercise its judgment consistent
with its obligations as a fiduciary to the Investor Partners.

      Upon the successful completion of the offering, the Partnership will
effect the following transactions, each of which is more fully described
below:

      (a)  The Managing General Partner will assign to the Partnership
between 51% and 100% of the Working Interest in the Prospects (although
the first and last wells of the Partnership may be less than a 51%
interest); and

           (b)        The Partnership will enter into a drilling and operating
agreement with the Managing General Partner or with unaffiliated persons
as Operator, providing (i) for the drilling and completion of Partnership
wells and (ii) for the subsequent supervision of field operations with
respect to each producing well.


                                    - 45 -
<PAGE>
Drilling Policy

      -    Most wells will be direct offsets to producing wells.

      Each Partnership will invest in a number of Prospects, consistent with
the objective of maintaining a meaningful interest in the wells to be
drilled.  The Partnerships will not acquire any interest in currently or
formerly producing gas wells.  Most wells to be drilled by the
Partnerships will be direct offsets to producing wells ("proved
undeveloped prospects").  Therefore, it is unlikely that a well on a
Prospect will have the effect of proving up any additional acreage outside
of the Prospect.  For this reason, the Partnerships are expected to
acquire only spacing units on which wells are to be drilled without also
acquiring any surrounding acreage.  Nevertheless, if drilling on a
Partnership Prospect proves up an adjoining spacing unit owned by the
Managing General Partner, or if there is reliable evidence that there
would be material drainage of a Partnership Prospect by an adjoining
spacing unit in which the Managing General Partner owns an interest, the
Managing General Partner will assign to the Partnership a proportionate
interest in such spacing unit.

Acquisition of Undeveloped Prospects

      -    The Managing General Partner will select undeveloped Prospects.

      -    No Prospects have yet been selected for any of the Partnerships.

      -    Selection of Prospects for a Partnership will occur after that
           Partnership has been funded.

      -    At least 90% of Prospects will be development wells.

      -    Prospects will be acquired by the Partnerships at the lesser of Cost
           or fair market value.

      -    Average royalty and overriding royalty burden will not exceed
           16.125%.

      -    The Managing General Partner will not retain overriding royalty
           interests.

      The Managing General Partner will select undeveloped Prospects
sufficient to drill the Partnerships' wells.  No Prospects have been pre-
selected by the Managing General Partner.  Most Prospects to be selected
for the Partnerships are expected to be single well proved undeveloped
prospects.  A Prospect may be generally defined as a contiguous oil and
gas leasehold estate, or lesser interest therein, upon which drilling
operations may be conducted.

      Depending on its attributes, a Prospect may be characterized as an
"exploratory" or "development" site. Generally speaking, exploratory
drilling involves the conduct of drilling operations in search of a new
and yet undiscovered pool of oil and gas (or, alternatively, drilling
within a discovered pool with the hope of greatly extending the limits of
such pool), whereas development drilling involves drilling to a known
producing formation in a previously discovered field.

      The Partnership intends to conduct development drilling operations in
one or more of the following areas:  North Central West Virginia to
develop Benson, Riley and     other shallow Upper Devonian and
Mississippian      Formations;        ; Southern West Virginia to develop

                                    - 46 -
<PAGE>
Ravencliff through Gordon Formations as well as the Devonian Shale; Southern
and Central Pennsylvania to develop Upper Mississippian through Upper Devonian
Reservoirs, and western Pennsylvania to develop the Medina and Whirlpool
reservoirs.  The Managing General Partner reserves the right
to conduct Partnership operations in New York, Kentucky, Michigan, and/or
   Indiana     and/or to such other formations as it may, in its sole and
absolute discretion, deem advisable, provided that such locations and/or
formations are, in the Managing General Partner's opinion, of comparable
quality and character to those described herein.

      Wells in the intended area of operations are usually given a fracture
treatment in which fluids are pumped into the potential zone in an attempt
to create additional fractures and widen present fractures.  It is
anticipated that gas will be produced from the subject wells, although
there could be some oil and brine production.

      The Prospects will be acquired pursuant to an arrangement whereby the
Partnership will acquire between 51% and 100% of the Working Interest,
subject to landowners' royalty interests and other royalty interests
payable to unaffiliated third parties in varying amounts, provided that
the weighted average for all Prospects of a particular Partnership will
not exceed 16.125%.  In its discretion the Managing General Partner may
acquire less than 51% of the Working Interest with respect to the first
and last wells drilled.  The Partnership Agreement forbids the Managing
General Partner or any Affiliate from acquiring or retaining any
overriding royalty interest in the Partnership's interest in the
Prospects.  The Partnerships will generally acquire less than 100% of the
Working Interest in each Prospect in which they participate.  In order to
comply with certain conditions for the treatment of Additional General
Partners' interests in the Partnership as not passive activities (and
thereby not subjecting the Additional General Partners to limitation on
the deduction of Partnership losses attributable to such Additional
General Partners to income from passive activities), the Managing General
Partner has represented that the Partnerships will acquire and hold only
operating mineral interests and that none of the Partnership's revenues
will be from non-working interests.  The Managing General Partner, for its
sole benefit, may sell or otherwise dispose of Prospect interests not
acquired by the Partnerships or may retain a Working Interest in such
Prospects and participate in the drilling and development of the Prospect
on the same basis as the Partnerships.

      In acquiring interests in Leases, the Partnerships may pay such
consideration and make such contractual commitments and agreements as the
Managing General Partner deems fair, reasonable and appropriate.  While it
is expected that a substantial portion of the Leases and interest therein
to be developed by the Partnerships will be acquired by assignment from
the Managing General Partner, the Partnerships may also purchase Leases
directly from unaffiliated persons.  All Leases which are transferred to
the Partnerships from the Managing General Partner will be transferred at
its Cost, unless the Managing General Partner has reason to believe that
Cost is materially more than the fair market value of such property in
which case the price will not exceed the fair market value of such
property.  Total lease costs of Prospects acquired from the Managing
General Partner and unaffiliated persons will not exceed 5% of total
capital available for operations.  The Managing General Partner will
obtain an appraisal from a qualified independent expert with respect to
sales of properties of the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates to
the Partnerships.

      The actual number, identity and percentage of Working Interests or
other interests in Prospects to be acquired by the Partnerships will
depend upon, among other things, the total amount of Capital Contributions

                                    - 47 -<PAGE>
to a Partnership, the latest geological and geophysical data, potential
title or spacing problems, availability and price of drilling services,
tubular goods and services, approvals by Federal and state departments or
agencies, agreements with other Working Interest owners in the Prospects,
farm-ins, and continuing review of other Prospects that may be available.

Title to Properties

      -    Record title to Leases will be held in the name of the Partnership.

      Prior to the drilling of any Partnership well, the Managing General
Partner will assign the Partnership interest in the Lease to the
Partnership.  Leases acquired by each Partnership may initially and
temporarily be held in the name of the Managing General Partner, as
nominee, to facilitate joint-owner operations and the acquisition of
properties.  The existence of the unrecorded assignments from the record
owner will indicate that the Leases are being held for the benefit of each
particular Partnership and that the Leases are not subject to debts,
obligations or liabilities of the record owner; however, such unrecorded
assignments may not fully protect the Partnerships from the claims of
creditors of the Managing General Partner.

       Investor Partners must rely on the Managing General Partner to use its
best judgment to obtain appropriate title to Leases.  Provisions of the
Partnership Agreement relieve the Managing General Partner from any
mistakes of judgment with respect to the waiver of title defects.  The
Managing General Partner will take such steps as it deems necessary to
assure that title to Leases is acceptable for purposes of the
Partnerships.  The Managing General Partner is free, however, to use its
own judgment in waiving title requirements and will not be liable for any
failure of title to leases transferred to the Partnerships.  Further,
neither the Managing General Partner nor its Affiliates will make any
warranties as to the validity or merchantability of titles to any Leases
to be acquired by the Partnerships.

PDC Prospects

      It is anticipated that all prospects will be evaluated by PDC's three
geologists (see "Management--Petroleum Development Corporation" for their
resumes), utilizing data provided by PDC's library of over 10,000 well
logs, production records from PDC's and others' wells, and such other
information as may be available and useful.  Specific criteria for
prospects election vary depending upon well depth and estimated cost;
however, generally prospects are selected which are estimated to generate
after-tax pay back to investors in a four-to six-year time period based on
historical production from similar formations.  The stratigraphic nature
of the prospects in the area is best developed by subsurface mapping based
on data from surrounding wells.  As a result, nearly all wells drilled by
the Partnership will be direct offsets to existing producing wells, at a
distance of about 1,500 feet.  Where multiple zone potential exists, as it
frequently does in the proposed area of operations, the geologists attempt
to optimize well locations to create wells with two or more productive
horizons.








                                    - 48 -
<PAGE>
      As of     May 31, 1996    , PDC had acreage available as listed in the
following table within the prospect area.
<TABLE>
              <S>                      <S>                <S>
                                                       No.of
           County                     Leases           Acreage

     West Virginia
           Barbour Co.                 45               3,993
           Doddridge Co.               29               3,451
           Harrison Co.                16               1,280
           Lewis Co.                   23               2,500
           Marion Co.                  38               4,677
           McDowell Co.                 2               9,349
           Monongalia Co.              20               1,690
           Taylor Co.                 125              13,381
           Preston Co.                  1                  54
           Upshur Co.                   6                 602
           Randolph Co.                 2                 200
           Gilmer Co.                   1                 759

Pennsylvania
           Clearfield Co.               6                3,400
           Fayette Co.                  9                  820

Ohio
           Athens Co.                  10                  700
           Washington Co.               8                  798

                                      Total            341    47,654
</TABLE>

      In addition, PDC expects to acquire additional acreage on an ongoing
basis throughout 1996 and 1997 and beyond for the Program and future
partnerships. 

Prospect Areas Geology

      Northern West Virginia.  Northern West Virginia is part of the Plateau
Province of the Appalachian Basin, a region characterized by thick
Paleozoic sediments and gentle northeast trending folds.  Upper Devonian
and Mississippian sands have accounted for virtually all gas and oil
production to date in this area.  Approximately twenty thousand feet of
sediments underlie the area.  The deepest fifteen thousand feet of this
stratigraphic section consist of Cambrian through Middle Devonian aged
rocks which have not produced major amounts of hydrocarbons in the region
excepting the areas where the Oriskany/Huntersville formations are
productive.  The Upper Devonian and Mississippian Formations that are the
targets for wells drilled in this area were deposited as part of the
Acadian Clastic Wedge of the Central Appalachian Basin.  These rocks were
deposited in a geosynclinal basin located westward of the Acadian Orogenic
Uplift along the eastern margin of the North American Plate.  These coarse
grained sediments are part of the Catskill and Price Deltas that prograded
westward across the prospect area.

      The deepest target reservoirs are the Elk, Benson and Riley Sandstones
of the Upper Devonian Chemung Formation.  These rocks exhibit
characteristics common to offshore marine deposits ranging from distal
submarine fan turbidities to nearshore storm deposits of the shallow shelf
environment.  These reservoirs are pure stratigraphic traps, whose gas

                                    - 49 -
<PAGE>
accumulations are unrelated to structural features, although higher fluid
saturations are commonly found in the structurally lower areas of the
reservoirs.  Commercial production is generally limited to those areas in
which the sand is four feet thick or greater with porosity greater than
8%.  These zones are found in narrow belts 1500 to 6000 feet wide. 
Thickness ranges from 4 to 12 feet in the inner channel facies of the
reservoir with peak porosity varying from 8% to 18% or more.  Permeability
ranges from 0.01 to 2.0 millidarcies.  The Balltown and Speechley
Sandstones, located at depths from 2500 to 3500 feet, are interpreted as
shallow shelf deposits and are the transitional sands from the marine
rocks below to the marine/fluvial rocks of the Hampshire Group above. 
These reservoirs are typically offshore bars or other related deposits and
are somewhat thicker, cleaner and more coarse grained than the older
deeper water marine rocks.  Thickness ranges from 5 to 30 feet or more
with average porosities from 6% to 12% with peak porosities as high as 20%
or more.

      The Upper Devonian and Mississippian Sands (Fifth through Keener)
represent the core of the coarse grained sediments of the Catskill and
Price Deltas.  The lowermost sands represent the nearshore and shoreline
environment while the upper sands exhibit the geometry of the fluvial
reservoirs of the delta plain environment.  During deposition of these
sands sea level fluctuated causing a wide range of sand types to be
deposited throughout the prospect area.  Grain size ranges from coarse to
pebbly.  Most of the rocks were deposited in a high energy environment and
are very clean and well sorted.  Thickness ranges from 5 to 50 feet with
porosity varying from 6% to 25% or more.

Southern West Virginia.  Wells drilled in McDowell County will target
three potential gas-bearing reservoirs.  The shallowest pays are the upper
and lower Ravencliff Sandstones (upper Hinton Formation), followed by the
upper and lower Maxton Sandstone (lower Hinton Formation) and the Union
member of the Big Lime (Greenbrier Limestone).  Any combination of one to
all three of these zones may be commercial in any given well.  The most
prolific wells in the immediate prospect area are those wells that
encounter pay quality sand in both the Ravencliff and Maxton.

      The upper and lower Ravencliff Sandstone pays range from 10 to 80 feet
in gross sand thickness with net porous sand of 5 to 50 feet (feet of sand
with porosity greater than 8%).  Geologically the Ravencliff is part of
the upper Hinton Formation of the Mississippian aged Mauch Chunk Group. 
In southern West Virginia there is substantial record of marine
sedimentation at the beginning of Mauch Chunk time; however the remainder
of the period was dominated by non-marine clastic sedimentation
deposition.  Basal Mauch Chunk units are of mixed carbonate and sandstone
composition and represent shallow nearshore marine deposits.  These units
grade upward into deltaic and coastal sandstones, siltstones and shales. 
The uppermost Mauch Chunk units are generally red coastal and alluvial
plain sediments.  Sand bodies range from lenticular channel fills to sheet
type deposits of near shore marine origin.  In Southern West Virginia, the
Ravencliff is typically a series of northeast-southwest trending channel
fill sandstones than can be a singe channel fill or multiple stacked
channel fill sequences (the lower and upper Ravencliff as well as a third
unnamed sand).  In the immediate prospect area both the lower and upper
Ravencliff are productive.  

      The Maxton Sandstone is the drillers' term for the lower Hinton channel
sandstones in the area.  These sands are very similar to the Ravencliff in
terms of geologic origin as they are potentially very thick lenticular
channel fill deposits representative of a deltaic progressive sequence. 
In the immediate prospect area both the lower and upper Maxton are
productive.
                                    - 50 -<PAGE>
      The third potential pay in the prospect area is an oolitic limestone
within the Union Member of the Big Lime (Greenbrier Limestone).  These
porous and permeable zones found laterally to dense limestones are
buildups of individual ooliths.  Ooliths are formed in high energy calcite
rich waters by precipitation of calcite around a small fragment of shell,
sand or other material.  The grains are held in suspension by water energy
and calcite precipitation forms concentric bands around the particle. 
Continual growth may generate coarse grain size balls.  Banks or bars made
up ooliths form when individual ooliths drop out of suspension around pre-
existing topographic highs or are carried offshore and laid down in
elongate tidal bars adjacent to tidal channels.  Tidal currents move back
and forth through the channels allowing for preservation of the adjacent
bars.  Across the prospect area and to the northeast, these bars may be
traced through older, established gas fields.  The individual oolitic
tidal bars are oriented northwest-southeast, perpendicular to the paleo-
shoreline, average 4500 feet in width, 10 to 40 feet thick and up to 20
miles in length.  The non-productive tidal channels separating these bars
average 1.5 miles in width.  Oolitic pay zones in the prospect area range
from a few feet in thickness to 20 feet or more with porosity in the 6%
range.  Permeability in this reservoir is good but dolomitization of
portions of the reservoir may enhance or destroy original reservoir
character.

West Central Pennsylvania.  Wells to be drilled in this area     are     
located in Clearfield     Fayette      Counties, part of the Plateau
Province of the Appalachian Basin.  The geology of this area is very
similar to that of northern West Virginia with Devonian and Mississippian
rocks accounting for the majority of the production.  Production in the local
prospect area will come from the Bradford Group (Bradford, Balltown, Tiona,
Speechley and Warren sandstones).  These upper Devonian reservoirs are
interpreted to be shallow water marine sandbars and channel fill deposits
are similar to Upper Devonian reservoirs in northern West Virginia.

      The primary drilling targets in the area are the First, Second and
Third Bradford sands.  Each of these reservoirs contains upper and lower
members and production will typically come from 3 or 4 sands in any given
well.  In addition to these reservoirs, other mappable primary targets
will include the Balltown, Tiona, Speechley and Warren sandstones. 
Secondary targets in portions of the prospect area are the Fifth and
Bayard sandstones.  Sand thickness for the primary target reservoirs
ranges from 5 to 25 feet for any individual zone.  Cumulative net sand
thickness per well ranges from 40 to 100 feet.  Porosity ranges from 5% to
15% with permeability of 0.1 millidarcies or less, classifying these
reservoirs as "tight" sandstones.  Typical natural shows from these
reservoirs range from a show to 100 Mcfd and reflect the nature of the
reservoir.

   
Western, Pennsylvania.  Prospects to be drilled in Mercer County, Pennsylvania
will target gas reserves contained in the Silurian aged Medina and Whirlpool
Reserviors.  The dominant gas reserviors in the are are the uppermost sands of
the Medina Group, the Thorold and Grimsby Sandstones.  The Whirlpool Sand,
located at the base of the Medina Group, is considered a secondary objective.  
Occaisionally,  gas reserves may be found in the Cabot Head Sand but this
reservior is not well developed in the local prospect area.  Several hundred
successful wells have been drilled to the south of the prospect area by Atlas
Resources, Inc., and to the north by Vista Resources, Quaker State, Douglas Oil
& Gas and others.  Mitchell Energy and Mark Resources drilled several wells in
the immediate prospect area confirming the presence of commerical gas reserves
from Medina reserviors very similar to those found to the north and south.

                                    - 51 -
<PAGE>
The Medina and Whirlpool Sandstones are Lower Silurian in age and were 
deposited approximately 420 million years ago.  The Lower SIlurian section is
an excellent example of a transgressive-regressive deltaic system within the 
relatively stable craton.  Low angle shelf slopes in cratonic basins produce 
river dominated delta systems.  Wave and tidal processes are unable to 
redistribute sediments at the mouths of distributary channels.  These 
channels frequently change course as older channels become clogged with 
sediment, resulting in stacked repetitive sequences over a wide area.

The Silurian environment of western Pennsylvania is marked in the geologic
record by an unconformity on the Ordovician Queenston Shale.  Immediately 
overlying the Queenston is the Whirlpool Sandstone.  This sand is a fine 
grained light gray sandstone.  The Whirlpool is interpreted to be strand 
plain or beachline deposit parallel to paleoshoreline and perpendicular to 
the direction of sedimentation to the southeast.  The Whirlpool was deposited
atop the Queenston uncomformity. Post Whirlpool sea level transgression was
responsible for the deposition of prodelta mudstones of the Cabot Head Shale
above the Whirlpool.  South of the prospect area there is some development of
a sandy member at the top of this unit.  As sediment load increased from the
east and southeast, sea level began retreating to teh west and northwest. 
Delta systems began to creep into the prospect area from the southeast and
east and are responsible for the deposition of the Grimsby Sandstone.
The Grimsby Sandstone is a delta front deposit and is generally a thin
bedded, tight sandstone unit that is cut by porous channel sequences in
some areas.  This sand is light gray to red and the uppermost portion of
this unit is one of the primary pays in the prospect area.  As the
delta systems continued to move west-southwest, delta plain deposits were laid
down over the delta front.  The Thorold (Red Medina) Sandstone is evidence of
the aerially exposed sands and shales fo this sequence.  The Red Medina in the
prospect are is thourght to be channel type deposits although some case can be
made for bar related features as well.  Isopach mapping of the Red Medina in the
prospect area shows a general southeast-northeast trend for overall sand
thickness.

The general trend of the Medina in the prospect area is southeast to northwest. 
The sand is deposited over a wide area with maximum thickness reaching 50 feet
or more.  Average porosity values in the pay section ranges from 6% to 10%. 
Although the features are large and generally continuous, there are locally very
abrupt changes in reservior quality.  Successful wells can be drilled by staying
within the productive trends as identified by log analysis and isopach mapping
and offsetting productive wells.    

Drilling and Completion Phase

      -    Most Partnership wells are expected to be development wells 3,000 to
           5,500 feet deep.

      -    The Partnership will drill all wells prior to March    31,     1997
           for all Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and
           prior to March     31,     1998 for all Partnerships designated
           "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership."

      -    Partnership wells will be drilled near pipelines, gathering systems,
           or end users.

      -    The Partnership will sell production on a competitive basis at the
           best available price.

      General:  It is anticipated that most wells will be drilled to the
3,000 to 5,500 depth to target gas production.  Some shallower or deeper
development Prospects may be drilled.  Thereafter, the  Operator will
complete each well deemed by the Operator to be capable of production of
oil or gas in commercial quantities.  Exploratory wells may be drilled to

                                    - 52 -<PAGE>
depths exceeding the proposed developmental well depths indicated above. 
In the event the funds allocated for exploratory wells are not used to
drill exploratory wells, such funds together with unexpended completion
funds will be used to drill additional development wells.  The Operator
intends to drill all of the Partnerships' wells prior to March    31,    
1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and
prior to March    31,     1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership."

      The Operator, in its sole and absolute discretion, will determine the
depth to which a particular well is drilled based on geologic and other
information available to it.  No representations are given herein as to
the depths and formations to be encountered in each Partnership's wells,
except that it is anticipated that most wells will be drilled at least to
a depth of approximately 2,000 feet per gas well.  The Managing General
Partner may substitute another operator or operators to perform the duties
of the Operator, on terms and conditions substantially the same as those
discussed herein.  The Managing General Partner will supervise the
operations of non-affiliated drilling contractors and subcontractors.  In
such case the cost of drilling to the Partnership will be the actual cost
of third-party drilling, plus the Managing General Partner's costs of
supervision, engineering, geology, accounting, and other services
provided, as well as monthly overhead specified in "Compensation to the
Managing General Partner and Affiliates," above.

      The Managing General Partner will represent each Partnership in all
operations matters, including the drilling, testing, completion and
equipping of wells and the sale of each Partnership's oil and gas
production from wells of which it is the operator.  The Managing General
Partner expects to be the operator of all wells in which the Partnerships
own an interest.

      The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates will, in some cases,
provide equipment and supplies, and will perform salt water disposal
services and other services for the Partnerships, provided that all such
transactions will be at competitive prices and upon competitive terms. 
The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may sell equipment to the
Partnerships as needed in the drilling or completion of Partnership wells. 
All such equipment will be sold at prices competitive in the area of
operations.

      Gas Pipeline and Transmission:  The Partnership's wells will be drilled
in the vicinity of transmission pipelines, gathering systems, and/or end
users.  The Managing General Partner believes that there are sufficient
transmission pipelines, gathering systems, and end users for the
Partnership's production, subject to some seasonal curtailment.  The
Partnership will bear the expense of hook-up and/or gathering charges
between the gas wells and the transmission pipelines.

      Sale of Production:  Each Partnership will sell the oil and gas
produced from its Prospects on a competitive basis at the best available
terms and prices.     The Managing General Partner intends to utilize the
services of Riley, its subsidiary, in marketing the gas produced by the
Partnership wells.      The Managing General Partner will not make any
commitment of future production that does not primarily benefit the
Partnerships.  Generally, purchase contracts for the sale of oil are
cancelable on 30 days' notice, whereas purchase contracts for the sale of
natural gas usually have a term of a number of years and may require the
dedication of the gas from a well for the life of its reserves.


                                    - 53 -
<PAGE>
      Each Partnership will sell natural gas discovered by it at negotiated
prices based upon a number of factors, such as the quality of the gas,
well pressure, estimated reserves, prevailing supply conditions and any
applicable price regulations promulgated by the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission.  The Partnership expects to sell oil discovered and sold by it
at free market prices.  See "Competition, Markets and Regulation."

      Drilling and Operating Agreement.

      -    The Managing General Partner will be operator of and have full
           control over the Partnerships' wells.

      -    The operator must commence drilling wells within 180 days after
           funding of the Partnership, but not later than March    31,    
           1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership"
           and March    31,     1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
           Limited Partnership."

      -    With respect to completed wells, the Partnerships will pay drilling
           fees of $60 per foot for the first 2,200 feet of well depth plus $16
           per foot for each additional foot below 2,200 feet to the deepest
           penetration of the well; for each well which the Partnerships
           determine not to complete, an amount equal to $33 per foot for the
           first 2,200 feet of well depth, plus $9 per foot for each additional
           foot below 2,200 feet to the deepest penetration of the well.

      -    The operator will charge the Partnerships $225 per well per month
           for production operations on completed wells and $75 per well per
           month for accounting, engineering, management, and general and
           administrative expenses.

      Upon funding of each Partnership, the particular Partnership will enter
into the Drilling and Operating Agreement (herein, the "Agreement") with
the Managing General Partner as operator (herein, the "Operator").  The
Agreement (filed as Exhibit 10(a) to the Registration Statement) provides
that the Operator will conduct and direct and have full control of all
operations on the Partnership's Prospects.  The Operator will have no
liability as operator to the Partnership for losses sustained or
liabilities incurred, except as may result from the Operator's negligence
or misconduct.

      The Partnership will pay a proportionate share of lease, development,
and operating costs, and will be entitled to receive a proportionate share
of production subject only to royalties and overriding royalties.  Each
Partnership will be responsible only for its obligations and will be
liable only for its proportionate share of the costs of developing and
operating the Prospects; and, in the event of the default of another
party, the Managing General Partner has agreed to indemnify the
Partnership and its Partners for the obligations of such party.  If any
party fails or is unable to pay its share of expense within 60 days after
rendition of a statement therefor by the Managing General Partner, the
Managing General Partner will pay the unpaid amount in the proportion that
the interest of each such party bears to the interest of all such parties.

      In the event not all participants in a well wish to participate in a
completion attempt, the parties desiring to do so may pay all costs of the
completion attempt including the cost of necessary well equipment and a
gathering pipeline, and such parties will receive all income and pay all
operating costs from the well until they have received an amount equal to
300% of the completion and connection costs, after which time the non-
consenting parties will have the right to receive their original interest
in further revenues and expenses.

                                    - 54 -<PAGE>
      The Operator is obligated to commence drilling the wells on each
Prospect within 180 days of the date of the funding of the Partnership,
but in no case later than March    31,     1997 for Partnerships designated
"PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and March    31,     1998 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership."  The Operator's duties include
testing formations during drilling, and completing the wells by installing
such surface and well equipment, gathering pipelines, heaters, separators,
etc., as are necessary and normal in the area in which the Prospect is
located.  The Managing General Partner will pay the drilling and
completion costs of the Operator as incurred, except that the Managing
General Partner is permitted to make advance payments to the Operator
where necessary to secure tax benefits of prepaid drilling costs and there
is a valid business reason.  In order to comply with conditions to
securing tax benefits of prepaid drilling costs, the Operator under the
terms of the Agreement will not refund any portion of amounts paid in the
event actual costs are less than amounts paid but will apply any such
amounts solely for payment of additional drilling services to the
Partnership.  If the Operator determines that the well is not likely to
produce oil and/or gas in commercial quantities, the Operator will plug
and abandon the well in accordance with applicable regulations.

      Each Partnership will bear its proportionate share of the cost of
drilling and completing or drilling and abandoning its wells as follows:

      1)   The Cost of the Prospect, as defined; and

      2)   For intangible well Costs:

           (a)  For each well completed and placed in production, an amount
                equal to the depth of the well in feet at its deepest
                penetration as recorded by the drilling contractor multiplied
                by $60 per foot for the first 2,200 feet of well depth plus
                $16 per foot for each additional foot below 2,200 feet to the 
                deepest penetration of the well, plus the actual extra 
                completion cost of zones completed in excess of the cost of
                the first zone and actual additional costs for work required
                by state law in the event an intermediate or third string of
                surface casing is run, plus the actual costs for directional
                drilling services, if required; or

           (b)  For each well which the Partnership elects not to complete, an
                amount equal to $33 per foot for the first 2,200 feet of well
                depth plus $9 per foot for each additional foot below 2,200
                feet to the deepest penetration of the well, as specified
                above and actual additional costs for work required by state
                law in the event an intermediate or third string of surface
                casing is run, plus the actual costs for directional drilling
                services, if required; and 

      3)   The tangible Costs of drilling and completing the Partnership wells
           and of gathering pipelines necessary to connect the well to the
           nearest appropriate sales point or delivery point.

To the extent that a Partnership acquires less than 100% of a Prospect,
its Drilling and Completion Costs of that Prospect will be proportionately
decreased.

      In the event the foregoing rates exceed competitive rates available
from other non-affiliated persons in the area engaged in the business of
rendering or providing comparable services or equipment, the foregoing
rates will be adjusted to an amount equal to that competitive rate.

                                    - 55 -<PAGE>
      The Agreement provides that the Partnership will pay the Operator the
Prospect Cost and the Dry Hole Cost for each planned well prior to the
Spud date, and the balance of the completed well Costs when the well is
completed and ready for production, in the case of a completed well.

      The Operator will provide all necessary labor, vehicles, supervision,
management, accounting, and overhead services for normal production
operations, and will deduct from Partnership revenues a monthly charge of
$225 per well for operations and field supervision and a monthly charge of
$75 per well for accounting, engineering, management, and general and
administrative expenses.  Non-routine operations will be billed to the
Partnership at their Cost.

      The Partnership will have the right to take in kind and separately
dispose of its share of all oil and gas produced from its Prospects,
excluding its proportionate share of production required for lease
operations and production unavoidably lost.  Initially the Partnership
will designate the Operator as its agent to market such production and
authorize the Operator to enter into and bind the Partnership in such
agreements as it deems in the best interest of the Partnership for the
sale of such oil and/or gas.  If pipelines which have been built by the
Managing General Partner are used in the delivery of natural gas to
market, the Operator may charge a gathering fee not to exceed that which
would be charged by a non-affiliated third party for a similar service.

      The production and accounting charges may be adjusted annually
beginning January 1, 1998 with respect to Partnerships designated "PDC
1996-_ Limited Partnership" and January 1, 1999 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership," to an amount equal to the
rates initially established by the Agreement, multiplied by the ratio of
the then current average weekly earnings of Crude Petroleum and Gas
Production workers to the average weekly earnings of Crude Petroleum and
Gas Production workers for 1991, as published by the United States
Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, provided that the charge
may not exceed the rate which would be charged by the comparable operators
in the area of operations.

      The Agreement will continue in force so long as any such well or wells
produce, or are capable of production, and for an additional period of 180
days from cessation of all production.

Production Phase of Operations

      -  Gas will be sold to industrial users, gas brokers, interstate
         pipelines, or local utilities, subject to market sensitive contracts
         whereby the price of gas sold will vary as a result of market forces.

      -  Contracts for sale of gas will not be completed until after wells
         have been drilled.

      General.  Once the Partnership's wells are "completed" (i.e., all
surface equipment necessary to control the flow of, or to shut down, a
well has been installed, including the gathering pipeline), production
operations will commence.

      The Partnership intends to sell gas production from the Partnership's
wells to industrial users, gas brokers, interstate pipelines or local
utilities.     The Managing General Partner intends to utilize the
services of Riley, its subsidiary, in marketing the gas produced by the
Partnership wells.       The Managing General Partner is currently in
negotiations with various parties to obtain gas purchase contracts.  Due

                                    - 56 -<PAGE>
to rapidly changing market conditions and normal contracting procedures,
final terms and contracts will not be completed until after the wells have
been drilled.  In recent programs the Managing General Partner has sold
most of the gas from prior programs' wells to Hope Gas, Inc. or to spot
market purchasers on the CNG Transmission system.  While this practice has
resulted in favorable pricing and sales results in the short term, this
market concentration also creates certain risks.  See "Risk Factors --
Competition, Markets and Regulations," above and "Competition and
Markets," below.  As a result of effects of weather on costs, the
Partnership results may be affected by seasonal factors.  In addition,
both sales volumes and prices tend to be affected by demand factors with
a significant seasonal component.

      Expenditure of Production Revenues.  The Partnership's share of
production revenue from a given well will be burdened by and/or subject to
royalties and overriding royalties, monthly operating charges, and other
operating costs.

      The above items of expenditure involve amounts payable solely out of,
or expenses incurred solely by reason of, production operations.  The
Partnership's only source of revenues will be from production operations,
because the Partnership is not permitted to borrow any funds it may
require to meet operation expenditures (see "Risk Factors -- Shortage of
Working Capital" and "Source of Funds and Use of Proceeds -- Subsequent
Source of Funds").  It is the practice of the Managing General Partner to
deduct operating expenses from the production revenue for the
corresponding period.

Interests of Parties

      The Managing General Partner,  Investor Partners, and unaffiliated
third parties (including landowners) share revenues from production of gas
from wells in which the Partnership has an interest.  The following chart
expresses such interest of gross revenues derived from the wells. For the
purpose of this chart, "gross revenues" is defined as the "Well Head Gas
Price" paid by the gas purchaser.  In the event the Partnership acquires
less than a 100% Working Interest, the percentages available to the
Partnership will decrease proportionately.
<TABLE>
<S>                   <S>                     <S>              <S>
                                   Program Revenue Sharing
                                                 Partnership
                                  Third Party    Working Interest
Entity           Interest         Royalties:   If 12.5% /If 16.125%(1)
_________________________
Managing        20% Partnership
General         Interest (2)                  17.50%         16.775%
Partner

Investor        80% Partnership 
Partners        Interest (2)                  70.00%         67.100%
   
Third           Landowners and Over- 
Parties         riding Royalties              12.50%         16.125%

                                             100.0%         100.0%
____________________
<FN>
(1)        Landowner and other royalty interests payable to unaffiliated third
           parties may vary, provided that the weighted average for all
           Prospects of a Partnership shall not exceed 16.125%.

                                    - 57 -<PAGE>
(2)        The revenues to be distributed are subject to the preferred cash
           distribution policy.
</TABLE>
Insurance

      -    The Managing General Partner will carry public liability insurance
           of not less than $10 million during drilling operations and will
           maintain other insurance as appropriate.

      -    The Managing General Partner has a good faith duty to provide
           insurance coverage, sufficient, in its judgment, to protect the
           Investors against the foreseeable risks of drilling.

      -    Increasing cost of insurance could reduce Partnership funds
           available for drilling.

      The Managing General Partner, in its capacity as operator, will carry
blowout,        , pollution, public liability and workmen's
compensation insurance, but such insurance may not be sufficient to cover
all liabilities.  Each Unit held by the Additional General Partners
represents an open-ended security for unforeseen events such as blowouts,
lost circulation, stuck drillpipe, etc. which may result in unanticipated
additional liability materially in excess of the per Unit Subscription
amount.

      The Managing General Partner has obtained various insurance policies,
as described below, and intends to maintain such policies subject to its
analysis of their premium costs, coverage and other factors.  The Managing
General Partner may, in its sole discretion, increase or decrease the
policy limits and types of insurance from time to time as it deems
appropriate under the circumstances, which may vary materially.  The
following types and amounts of insurance have been obtained and are
expected to be maintained.  The Managing General Partner is the
beneficiary under each policy and pays the premiums for each policy,
except the Managing General Partner and the Partnership are co-insured and
co-beneficiaries with respect to the insurance coverage referred to in #2
and #5 below.

      1.   Workmen's compensation insurance in full compliance with the laws
           for the States of West Virginia and Pennsylvania; this insurance
           will be obtained for any other jurisdictions where a Partnership
           conducts its business;

      2.   Operator's bodily injury liability and property damage liability
           insurance, each with a limit of $1,000,000;

      3.   Employer's liability insurance with a limit of not less than
           $1,000,000;

      4.   Automobile public liability insurance with a limit of not less than
           $1,000,000 per occurrence, covering all automobile equipment; and

      5.   Operator's umbrella liability insurance with a limit of $19,000,000.

      Petroleum Development Corporation ("PDC"), as Managing General Partner
and Operator, has determined in good faith, in the exercise of its
fiduciary duty as Managing General Partner and as Operator, that adequate
insurance has been obtained on behalf of the Partnerships to provide the
Partnership with such coverage as PDC believes is sufficient to protect
the Investor Partners against the foreseeable risks of drilling.  The
Managing General Partner will obtain and maintain public liability

                                    - 58 -<PAGE>
insurance, including umbrella liability insurance, of at least two times
the Partnership's capitalization, but in no event less than $10 million
during drilling operations.  In the event that PDC participates in
drilling activities other than with respect to those of the Partnership
and as a result of which PDC will have unlimited liability with respect to
those activities, PDC will prior to its participation in such other
drilling activities cause the Partnership to obtain such two-times
insurance coverage whereby the Partnership will be the sole beneficiary
under such insurance.  In the event that two Partnerships are conducting
drilling activities simultaneously, as provided for under "Proposed
Activities -- Introduction" above, and the investor capital of such
Partnerships is in excess of $10 million in the aggregate, the Managing
General Partner will obtain additional liability insurance coverage during
drilling in order to provide the above-referenced two-times insurance
coverage (with respect to the total capitalization of those Partnerships
which are conducting simultaneous drilling activities).  The Managing
General Partner will maintain such two-times insurance coverage during
such drilling activities.  PDC will review the Partnership insurance
coverage prior to commencing drilling operations and periodically evaluate
the sufficiency of insurance.  PDC will obtain and maintain such insurance
coverage as it determines to be commensurate with the level of risk
involved.  In more than 25 years of operations, drilling more than 1,200
wells in Tennessee, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia, PDC's largest
insurance claim has been less than $80,000.

      Upon completion of drilling of a particular Partnership, the Managing
General Partner will convert all Units of general partnership interest of
that Partnership into Units of limited partnership interest of that
Partnership.

      The annual cost of such insurance to the Partnership is estimated to be
approximately $625 per well in the year that it is drilled and
approximately $140 per each producing well for the Partnership liability
and other insurance coverages.  The costs of insurance are allocated based
primarily upon the level of natural gas operations.  The costs of
insurance have increased significantly in recent years and have currently
stabilized, although insurance premiums may materially increase in the
future.  The primary effect of increasing premiums cost is to reduce funds
otherwise available for Partnership drilling operations.

      The Managing General Partner will notify all Additional General
Partners at least 30 days prior to any material change in the amount of
such insurance coverage.  Within this 30-day period and otherwise after
the expiration of one year following the closing of the offering with
respect to a particular Partnership, Additional General Partners have the
right to convert their Units into Units of limited partnership interest by
giving written notice to the Managing General Partner and will have
limited liability for any Partnership operations conducted after the
conversion date as a Limited Partner effective upon the filing of an
amendment to the Certificate of Limited Partnership of a Partnership.
At any time during this 30-day period, upon receipt of the required
written notice from the Additional General Partner of his intent to
convert, the Managing General Partner will amend the Partnership
Agreement and will file such amendment with the State of West Virginia
prior to the effective date of the change in insurance coverage and thereby
effectuate the conversion of the interest of the former Additional General
Partner to that of a Limited Partner.  Effecting conversion is subject to
the express requirement that the conversion will not cause a termination of
the Partnership for federal income tax purposes.  However, even after an
election of conversion, an Additional General Partner will continue to

                                    - 59 -
<PAGE>
have unlimited liability regarding Partnership activities arising prior
to the effective date of such conversion.  See "Terms of the Offering."

The Managing General Partner's Policy Regarding Roll-Up Transactions

     Although the Managing General Partner has no intention of engaging the
Partnership in a "roll-up" transaction, it is possible at some
indeterminate time in the future that the Partnership will become so
involved.  In general, a roll-up means a transaction involving the
acquisition, merger, conversion, or consolidation of the Partnership with
or into another partnership, corporation or other entity (the "Roll-Up
Entity") and the issuance of securities by the Roll-Up Entity to Investor
Partners in cases where there is also a significant adverse change in the
voting rights of the Partnership, the term of existence of the
Partnership, the compensation of the Managing General Partner, or the
investment objectives of the Partnership.  The determination of
"significant adverse change" will be made solely by the Managing General
Partner in the exercise of its reasonable business judgment as manager of
the Partnership and consistent with its obligations as a fiduciary to the
Investor Partners.

      The Partnership Agreement provides various policies in the event that
a Roll-Up should occur in the future.  These policies include:

     (1)  An appraisal of all Partnership assets will be obtained from a
          competent independent expert, and a summary of the appraisal will
          be included in a report to the Investor Partners in connection
          with a proposed Roll-Up;

     (2)  Any participant who votes "no" on the proposal will be offered a
          choice of:

          (i)   accepting the securities of the Roll-Up Entity offered in the
                proposed Roll-Up; or

          (ii)  either (A) remaining an Investor Partner in the Partnership and
                preserving his interests in the Partnership on the same terms
                and conditions as existed previously, or (B) receiving cash in
                an amount equal to his pro-rata share of the appraised value of
                the Partnership's net assets;

     (3) The Partnership will not participate in a proposed Roll-Up (i)
         which would result in the diminishment of an Investor Partner's
         voting rights under the Roll-Up Entity's chartering agreement;
         (ii) in which the Investor Partners' right of access to the
         records of the Roll-Up Entity would be less than those provided by
         the Partnership Agreement; or (iii) in which any of the costs of
         the transaction would be borne by the Partnership if the proposed
         Roll-Up is not approved by the Investor Partners.

The Partnership Agreement further provides that the Partnership will not
participate in a Roll-Up transaction unless the Roll-Up transaction is
approved by at least 66 2/3% in interest of the Investor Partners.  See
Section 5.07(m) of the Partnership Agreement.  Congress is currently
considering legislation to address various problems engendered by Roll-
Ups.  At the present time, it is impossible to predict what proposals, if
any, will be enacted by Congress.

                       COMPETITION, MARKETS AND REGULATION

     -    Competition is intense in all phases of the oil and gas industry,
          including the acquisition of Prospects and the sale of production.

                                    - 60 -<PAGE>
     -    Competition for equipment and services is keen and can adversely
          affect drilling costs and the timing of drilling.

     -    Excess supplies and competition have depressed current gas prices,
          and there is no way to predict when more favorable conditions may
          return.

     -    The Partnership expects to sell its gas subject to market sensitive
          contracts, whereby the price of gas sold will vary as a result of
          market forces.

Competition and Markets

     Competition is keen among persons and companies involved in the
exploration for and production of oil and gas.  The Partnership will
encounter strong competition at every phase of its business including
acquiring properties suitable for exploration and development and
marketing of oil and gas.  It will compete with entities having financial
resources and staffs substantially larger than those available to the
Partnership.  There are thousands of oil and gas companies in the United
States, and over 200 in West Virginia.  Petroleum Development Corporation
produces approximately 2.5% of the gas produced in West Virginia.  The
national supply of natural gas is widely diversified, with no one entity
controlling over 5%.  As a result of this competition and Federal Energy
Regulatory Commission ("FERC") and Congressional deregulation of the
natural gas industry and gas prices, prices tend to be determined by
competitive forces.  Within its area of operations Petroleum Development
Corporation is one of the larger operations.  In addition, it operates
gathering systems which make development of some areas more economic for
it than for other competitors.  There will also be competition among
operators for drilling equipment, tubular goods, and drilling crews.  Such
competition may affect the ability of each Partnership to acquire Leases
suitable for development by the Partnerships and to develop expeditiously
such Leases once they are acquired.

     The marketing of any oil and gas  produced by the Partnership will be
affected by a number of factors which are beyond the Partnership's control
and whose exact effect cannot be accurately predicted.  These factors
include crude oil imports, the availability and cost of adequate pipeline
and other transportation facilities, the marketing of competitive fuels
(such as coal and nuclear energy), and other matters affecting the
availability of a ready market, such as fluctuating supply and demand. 
Moreover, in 1992 FERC issued Order No. 636 which requires pipelines to
separate their storage, sales and transportation functions.  Order No. 636
established an industry-wide structure for "open-access" transportation
service under which pipelines must provide third parties non-discriminatory
access to transportation service on their systems.  The effect of Order No.
636 has been to restructure the natural gas industry and increase its
competitiveness.  In recent years, crude oil and natural gas prices declined
due, among several factors, to an oversupply in the world markets.  Oil and
gas prices have also been affected, in part, by decreased demand.
Legislation which may be considered by Congress in some respects emphasizes
decreasing demand for, rather than increasing the supply of, oil and gas.
Such legislation could decrease the demand for the Partnerships' production
in the future.  (See "Risk Factors -- Competition, Markets and Regulation.")
The free trade agreement between Canada and the United States has eased
restrictions on imports of Canadian gas to the United States.  Additionally,
the passage in November 1993 of the North American Free Trade Agreement 
("NAFTA") will have some impact on the American gas industry, by eliminating
trade and investment barriers in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.  In

                                    - 61 -
<PAGE>
addition, a number of new pipeline projects has been proposed to the FERC
which could substantially increase the availability of Canadian gas to certain
U.S. markets.  Such imports could have an adverse effect on both the price and
volume of gas sales from Partnership wells.

     The accelerating deregulation of natural gas and electricity
transmission has caused, and will continue to cause, a convergence of the
gas and electric industries.  Demand for natural gas by the electric power
sector is expected to increase modestly through the next decade. 
Increased competition in the electric industry, coupled with the
enforcement of stringent environmental regulations, may lead to an
increased reliance on natural gas by the electric industry.

     Members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries establish
prices and production quotas for petroleum products from time to time with
the intent of reducing the current global oversupply and maintaining or
increasing certain price levels.  The Managing General Partner is unable
to predict what, if any, effect such actions will have on the amount of or
the prices received for oil and gas produced and sold from the
Partnerships' wells.

     Various parts of the prospect area are crossed by pipelines belonging
to Hope Gas, Equitable Gas, CNG Transmission, and Equitrans.  These
companies have all traditionally purchased substantial portions of their
supply from West Virginia or Pennsylvania producers.  In addition, all are
subject to regulations which require them to transport gas for other end
users under certain conditions, mandated by either the West Virginia
Public Service Commission, Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission, or
the FERC.  Transportation on these systems generally requires that gas
delivered meet certain quality standards and that a tariff be paid for
quantities transported.

     Adverse market conditions generally have reduced from prior levels the
current revenues and the present value of future revenues from oil and gas
production.

     The Partnership expects to sell gas from its wells to Hope Gas,
Equitable Gas, CNG Transmission, as well as local distribution companies
("LDCs"), or on the spot market via open access transportation
arrangements through CNG Transmission, Hope Gas, Eastern American Energy,
or Equitrans.  While in the past these purchases were generally made on
the spot market, Order No. 636         Under FERC Order No. 636,
interstate gas pipelines must separate their merchant activities from their
transportation activities.  LDCs are required to take a much more active
role in acquiring their own gas supplies under Order No. 636.  Many are
buying gas directly from gas marketers and are buying their own reserves.
At the same time, state regulatory commissions are reviewing LDC procurement
practices more carefully.  These LDCs have attempted to minimize their risks
by forgoing spot purchases and entering into longer-term gas supply contracts,
and by diversifying their supplies.

     Moreover, FERC     has required pipelines to develop electronic bulletin
boards ("EBBs") in order to ensure that the gas industry is more competitive. 
Through EBBs, pipelines provide standardized access to information concerning
capacity and prices.  The industry also is developing companies which can
access and integrate all of the information available on all pipelines' EBBs
and arrange gas supplies and transportation on behalf of purchasers from
large regions of the country, in order to create a national market.  LDCs and
marketers are also working to develop companies, which can access and integrate
all of the information available on all pipelines' EBBs and arrange gas
supplies and transportation on behalf of purchasers from large regions of the

                                    - 62 -
<PAGE>
country, in order to create a national market.  These systems, and the
development of information service companies, will allow rapid consummation of
natural gas transactions.  Gas purchased in West Virginia, could, for example,
be used in Seattle.  Although this system may initially lower prices due to
increased competition, it is anticipated to increase natural gas markets
and the reliability of the markets.

     The Partnership anticipates that it will sell the gas from its wells
subject to market sensitive contracts, the price of which will increase or
decrease with market forces beyond the control of the Managing General
Partner.  In recent years, the Managing General Partner has sold
approximately 70% of the gas produced by its wells to Hope Gas or CNG
Transmission, both subsidiaries of Consolidated Natural Gas.  None of
these companies is affiliated with the Managing General Partner.  While
these markets have provided above average prices and sales in the past,
this substantial concentration could result in increased risk of shut-in
wells and/or lower prices in the future.

Regulation

     -  Federal and state laws and regulations have a significant impact on
        drilling and production operations.

     -  Environmental protection regulations may necessitate significant
        capital outlays by the Partnership.

     Production of Partnership oil and gas will also be affected by Federal
and state regulations.  In most areas of operations the production of oil
is regulated by conservation laws and regulations, which set allowable
rates of production and otherwise control the conduct of oil operations.

     The Partnership's drilling and production operations will also be
subject to environmental protection regulations established by Federal,
state, and local agencies which in turn may necessitate significant
capital outlays which would materially affect the financial position and
business operations of the Partnership (see "Risk Factors -- Environmental
Hazards and Liabilities").

     Certain states control production through regulations establishing the
spacing of wells, limiting the number of days in a given month during
which a well can produce and otherwise limiting the rate of allowable
production.  Through regulations enacted to protect against waste,
conserve natural resources and prevent pollution, local, state and Federal
environmental controls will also affect Partnership operations.  Such
regulations could affect Partnership operations and could necessitate
spending funds on environmental protection measures, rather than on
drilling operations.  If any penalties or prohibitions were imposed on a
Partnership for violating such regulations, that Partnership's operations
could be adversely affected.

     In prior programs, expenses associated with compliance with
environmental regulations have represented approximately 10-15% of the
cost of drilling and completing wells, and it is expected that similar
costs will be incurred in this program.  These costs are included in the
footage-based rates described at "Proposed Activities -- Drilling and
Operating Agreement," above.

Natural Gas Pricing




                                    - 63 -
<PAGE>
     -    The Managing General Partner anticipates that the Partnerships' gas
          will be derived primarily from Devonian Shale, that the prices of the
          Partnerships' gas will be deregulated, and that the gas will be sold
          at fair market value.

     Sale of natural gas by the Partnerships will be subject to regulation
of production, transportation and pricing by governmental regulatory
agencies.  Generally, the regulatory agency in the state where a producing
gas well is located supervises production activities and, in addition, the
transportation of gas sold into intrastate markets.  The FERC regulates
the rates for interstate transportation of natural gas but, pursuant to
the Wellhead Decontrol Act of 1989, FERC may not regulate the price of
gas.  Such deregulated gas production may be sold at market prices
determined by supply, demand, Btu content, pressure, location of wells,
and other factors.

     The Managing General Partner anticipates that all of the gas produced
by Partnership wells will be considered price decontrolled gas and that
the Partnerships' gas will be sold at fair market value.
     
Proposed Regulation

     Various legislative proposals are being considered in Congress and in
the legislatures of various states, which, if enacted, may significantly
and adversely affect the petroleum and natural gas industries.  Such
proposals involve, among other things, the imposition of price controls on
all categories of natural gas production, the imposition of land use
controls (such as prohibiting drilling activities on certain Federal and
state lands in roadless wilderness areas) and other measures.  At the
present time, it is impossible to predict what proposals, if any, will
actually be enacted by Congress or the various state legislatures and what
effect, if any, such proposals will have on the Partnerships' operations.

MANAGEMENT

General Management

     The Managing General Partner of the Partnership is Petroleum Development
Corporation ("PDC"), a publicly-owned Nevada corporation organized in
1955.  Since 1969, PDC has been engaged in the business of exploring for,
developing and producing oil and gas primarily in the Appalachian Basin
area of West Virginia, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and Ohio.  As of 
    
    May
31, 1996,     PDC had approximately 70 employees.  PDC will make available
to Investor Partners, upon request, audited financial statements of PDC for
the most recent fiscal year and unaudited financial statements for interim
periods.

     The Managing General Partner will actively manage and conduct the
business of the Partnerships, devoting such time and talents to such
management as it shall deem reasonably necessary.  The Managing General
Partner will have the full and complete power to do any and all things
necessary and incident to the management and conduct of each Partnership's
business.  The Managing General Partner will be responsible for
maintaining Partnership bank accounts, collecting Partnership revenues,
making distributions to the Partners, delivering reports to the Partners,
and supervising the drilling, completion, and operation of the
Partnerships' gas wells.

Experience and Capabilities as Driller/Operator

     PDC (the "Company" or the "Managing General Partner") will act as
driller/operator for the Program wells.  Since 1969 the Company has

                                    - 64 -<PAGE>
drilled over 1,200 wells in West Virginia, Tennessee, Ohio, and
Pennsylvania.  The Company currently operates approximately    850     wells.

     The Company employs three geologists who develop Prospects for drilling
by the Company and who help oversee the drilling process.  In addition,
the Company has an engineering staff of four who are responsible for well
completions, pipelines, and production operations.  The Company employs a
drilling subcontractor, a completion subcontractor, and a variety of other
subcontractors in the performance of the work of drilling contract wells. 
In addition to technical management, the Company may provide services, at
competitive rates, from one of four Company-owned service rigs, a water
truck, frac tanks, roustabouts, and other assorted small equipment.  The
Company may lay short gathering lines, or may subcontract all or part of
the work where it is more cost effective for a partnership.  The Company
employs full-time welltenders and supervisors to operate its wells.  In
addition, the engineering staff evaluates reserves of all wells at least
annually and reviews well performance against expectations.  All services
provided by the Managing General Partner are provided at rates less than
or equal to prevailing rates for similar services provided by unaffiliated
persons in the area.

Petroleum Development Corporation

     The executive officers, directors and key technical personnel of PDC,
their principal occupations for the past five years and additional
information are set forth below:

<TABLE>
<S>                       <S>                 <S>                 <S>
                                       Positions and         Held Current
Name                      Age          Offices Held         Position Since

James N. Ryan             64           Chairman, Chief      November 1983
                                       Executive Officer
                                       and Director

Steven R. Williams        44           President and        March 1983
                                       Director

Dale G. Rettinger         51           Executive Vice       July 1980
                                       President, Treasurer
                                       and Director

Roger J. Morgan           68           Secretary and        November 1969
                                       Director

Vincent F. D'Annunzio     42           Director             February 1989

Jeffrey C. Swoveland      40           Director             March 1991
   
Thomas E. Riley           43           Vice President
                                       Marketing and
                                       Aquisitions          April 1996     

Ersel Morgan              52           Vice President       April 1995
                                       Production

Eric Stearns              37           Vice President       April 1985
                                       Exploration and
                                       Development

Alan Smith                37           Senior Geologist     April 1980

Jeff Stevens              38           Senior Engineer      May 1981

Bob Williamson            41           Geologist            February 1991

</TABLE>
      James N. Ryan has served as President and Director of PDC from 1969 to
1983 and was elected Chairman and Chief Executive Officer in March 1983.

      Steven R. Williams has served as President and Director of PDC since
March 1983.  Prior to joining the Company, Mr. Williams was employed by
Exxon until 1979 and attended Stanford Graduate School of Business,
graduating in 1981.  He then worked with Texas Oil and Gas until July
1982, when he joined Exco Enterprises, an oil and gas investment company,
as manager of operations.

      Dale G. Rettinger has served as Vice President and Treasurer of PDC
since July 1980. Mr. Rettinger was elected Director in 1985.  Previously,
Mr. Rettinger was a partner with Main Hurdman, Certified Public
Accountants, having served in that capacity since 1976.

      Roger J. Morgan has been a member of the law firm of Young, Morgan &
Cann, Clarksburg, West Virginia, for more than the past five years.  Mr.
Morgan is not active in the day-to-day business of PDC, but his law firm
provides legal services to PDC.

      Vincent F. D'Annunzio has for the past five years served as president
of Beverage Distributors, Inc., located in Clarksburg, West Virginia.  Mr.
D'Annunzio is a director of West Union Bank, West Union, West Virginia.

      Jeffrey C. Swoveland has been Director of Finance with Equitable
Resources, Inc. since September 1994.  Prior thereto, he was a lending
officer with Mellon Bank N.A. since July 1989.  Mr. Swoveland was Senior
Planning Analyst with Consolidated Natural Gas in 1988 and 1989.  Mr.
Swoveland received an MS degree in finance from Carnegie Mellon
University.

      Thomas Riley has served as Vice President - Gas Marketing and
Acquisitions of PDC since April of 1996.  Prior to joining PDC, Mr. Riley
was president of Riley Natural Gas (RNG) a natural gas marketing company
from its inception in 1987.  PDC acquired RNG in April, 1996, and Mr.
Riley continues to serve as president of the wholly owned subsidiary.

      Ersel Morgan was elected Vice President-Production in April 1995.
He joined PDC as a landman in 1980.

      Eric Stearns was elected Vice President-Exploration and Development
in April 1995.  Mr. Stearns joined PDC in 1985 after working as a mudlogger
for Hywell, Incorporated logging wells in the Appalachian Basin between
1982 and 1985, and for Petroleum Consultants, Inc. between 1984 and 1985. 
Since joining PDC, Mr. Stearns has also worked on the development and
drilling of Benson prospects.  Mr. Stearns has a BS degree in geology from
Virginia Tech.

      Alan Smith joined  PDC in April 1980 as a geologist in the Tennessee
Division.  He has a BS degree in geology from Tennessee Technological
University.  As a senior geologist he has been responsible for the
development of Benson prospects and drilling operations since 1983.

      Jeff Stevens joined PDC full time in May of 1981 after receiving his BS
degree in petroleum engineering and mining from West Virginia University. 
Prior to that, he had worked part time for PDC as student engineer.  Mr.

                                    - 66 -
<PAGE>
Stevens' responsibilities include designing and managing pipe strings,
cement and completions, as well as with production operations.

      Bob Williamson joined PDC on February 1, 1991, as a geologist.  Mr.
Williamson received a B.S. degree in geology from West Virginia University
in 1980.  Prior to joining PDC, he worked as a geologist for Ramco in
Belpre, Ohio, for nearly nine years on projects in West Virginia,
Kentucky, Kansas, and Oklahoma.

Certain Shareholders of Petroleum Development Corporation

      The following table sets forth information as of    May 31, 1996,    
with respect to the common stock of PDC owned by each person who owns
beneficially 5% or more of the outstanding voting common stock, by all
directors individually, and by all directors and officers as a group.
   
<TABLE>
          <S>                     <S>               <S>
                              Amount              Percent
      Name                    Beneficially        of Class
                              Owned(1)
      Fidelity Management      1,102,500          10.6
      James N. Ryan            1,102,362(2)       10.2
      Steven R. Williams         668,394(3)        6.2
      Dale G. Rettinger          625,834(3)        5.8
      Roger J. Morgan            107,554(4)        1.0
      Vincent D'Annunzio          53,600(5)        0.5
      Jeffrey C. Swoveland        23,550(6)        0.2
      All Directors and Officer
       as a Group (10 persons) 2,969,165(7)       25.0
<FN>
____________________

(1)        The nature of the beneficial ownership for all the shares is sole
           voting and investment power.

(2)       Includes options to purchase 401,000 shares exercisable within 60
           days.

(3)        Includes options to purchase 391,000 shares exercisable within 60
           days.

(4)        Includes options to purchase 77,500 shares exercisable within 60
           days.

(5)        Includes options to purchase 43,600 shares exercisable within 60
           days.

(6)        Includes options to purchase 23,550 shares exercisable within 60
           days.

(7)        Includes options to purchase 1,432,650 shares exercisable within 60
           days.  Until exercised, these options cannot be voted.  All
           directors and officers as a group own in the aggregate a total of
           1,536,515 shares or approximately 14.7% of the total of 10,445,220
           shares of common stock issued and outstanding.
</TABLE>
    
                                    - 67 -
<PAGE>
Remuneration

      No officer or director of the Managing General Partner will receive any
direct remuneration or other compensation from the Partnerships.  Such
persons will receive compensation solely from PDC.  Information as to
compensation paid by the Managing General Partner to its directors and
executive officers may be obtained from publicly available reports filed
by the Managing General Partner with the Securities and Exchange
Commission pursuant to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Legal Proceedings

      The Managing General Partner as driller/operator is subject to certain
minor legal proceedings arising from the normal course of business.  Such
legal actions are not considered material to the operations of the
Managing General Partner or the Partnership.  

                          CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

      -    The Managing General Partner currently manages and in the future
           will sponsor and manage natural gas drilling programs similar to the
           Partnerships.

      -    The Managing General Partner decides which Prospects each
           Partnership will acquire.

      -    The Managing General Partner will act as operator of the
           Partnerships; the terms of the drilling and operating agreement have
           not been negotiated by non-affiliated persons.

      -    The Managing General Partner will furnish drilling and completion
           services with respect to Partnership wells.

      -    The Managing General Partner is general partner of numerous other
           partnerships, and owes duties of good-faith dealing to such other
           partnerships.

      -    The Managing General Partner and affiliates engage in significant
           drilling, operating, and producing activities for other
           partnerships.

      The Partnerships are subject to various conflicts of interest arising
out of their relationship with the Managing General Partner.  These
conflicts include, but are not limited to, the following:

      Future Programs by Managing General Partner and Affiliates.  The
Managing General Partner has the right, and expects to continue, to
organize and manage oil and gas drilling programs in the future similar to
the subject Partnerships, and to conduct operations now and in the future,
jointly or separately, on its own behalf or for other private or public
investors.  Affiliates of the Managing General Partner also intend to
conduct such activities on their own behalf.  Officers, directors and
employees of the Managing General Partner have participated, and will
participate in the future, at cost, in Working Interests in wells in which
the Managing General Partner and its partnerships participate.  To the
extent Affiliates of the Managing General Partner invest in the
Partnerships or other partnerships sponsored by the Managing General
Partner, conflicts of interest will arise.



                                    - 68 -
<PAGE>
      Fiduciary Responsibility of the Managing General Partner.  The Managing
General Partner is accountable to the Partnership as a fiduciary and
consequently has a duty to exercise good faith and to deal fairly with the
investors in handling the affairs of the Partnership.  While the Managing
General Partner will endeavor to avoid conflicts of interest to the extent
possible, such conflicts nevertheless may occur and, in such event, the
actions of the Managing General Partner may not be most advantageous to
the Partnership and could fall short of the full exercise of such
fiduciary duty.  In the event the Managing General Partner should breach
its fiduciary responsibilities, an Investor Partner would be entitled to
an accounting and to recover any economic losses caused by such breach.

      Independent Representation in Indemnification Proceeding.  Counsel to
the Partnership and to the Managing General Partner in connection with
this offering are the same.  Such dual representation will continue in the
future.  However, in the event of an indemnification proceeding between
the Managing General Partner and the Partnership, the Managing General
Partner will cause the Partnership to retain separate and independent
counsel to represent its interest in such proceeding.

      Due Diligence Review.  PDC Securities Incorporated, the Dealer Manager
of the offering, is an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner and its
due diligence examination concerning this offering cannot be considered to
be independent.  See "Plan of Distribution."

      Managing General Partner's Interest.  Although the Managing General
Partner believes that its interest in Partnership profits, losses, and
cash distributions is equitable (see "Participation in Costs and
Revenues"), such interest was not determined by arm's-length negotiation.

      Transactions between the Partnership and Operator. The Managing General
Partner will also act as Operator. Accordingly, although the Managing
General Partner believes the terms of the Drilling and Operating Agreement
will be equitable, it will not be the subject of arm's-length
negotiation.  Furthermore, the Managing General Partner may be confronted
with a continuing conflict of interest with respect to the exercise and
enforcement of the rights of the Partnership under such Operating
Agreement.  See "Transactions with the Managing General Partner or
Affiliates Thereof," below.

      Conflicting Drilling Activities.  Affiliates of the Managing General
Partner have engaged in significant drilling and producing activities for
the accounts of affiliated partnerships related to previous drilling
programs.  In addition, the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates
manage and operate gas properties for investors in such other drilling
programs.  Although the Partnership Agreement attempts to minimize any
potential conflicts, the Managing General Partner will be in a position to
decide whether a gas property will be retained or acquired for the account
of the Partnership or other drilling programs which the Managing General
Partner or its Affiliates may presently operate or operate in the future.

      Conflicts with Other Programs.  The Managing General Partner realizes
that its conduct and the conduct of its Affiliates in connection with the
other drilling programs could give rise to a conflict of interest between
the position of PDC as Managing General Partner of the Partnership and the
position of PDC or one of its Affiliates as general partner or sponsor of
such additional programs.  In resolving any such conflicts, each
Partnership will be treated equitably with such other partnerships on a
basis consistent with the funds available to the partnerships and the time
limitations on the investment of funds.  However, no provision has been
made for an independent review of conflicts of interest.  The Managing

                                    - 69 -
<PAGE>
General Partner believes that the possibility of conflicts of interest
between the Partnership and prior programs is minimized by the fact that
substantially all the funds available to prior drilling programs in which
the Managing General Partner or an Affiliate serves as general partner
have been committed to a specific drilling program.

      The Managing General Partner follows a policy of developing next what
it judges to be the best available Prospect.  Acquisition of new Leases
and information derived from wells already drilled result in a constant
change in this assessment.  Only one investor-financed partnership may
participate in each well, except for the first and final partnership well
if funds with respect to the last well do not exist for the purchase of a
majority working interest.  The Managing General Partner anticipates that
generally only one Partnership will be actively engaged in drilling at any
time.  However, in the event more than one Partnership has funds available
for drilling, the Partnerships will alternate drilling of wells based on
the "best available prospect" format.  The determination of the "best
available Prospect" is based on the Managing General Partner's assessment
of the economic potential of a Prospect and its suitability to a
particular partnership, and considers various factors including estimated
reserves, target geological formations, gas markets, geological and gas
market diversification within the partnership, royalties and overrides on
the Prospect, estimated lease and well costs, and limitations imposed by
the prospectus and/or partnership agreements.

      The Partnership Agreement authorizes the Managing General Partner to
cause the Partnership to acquire undivided interests in natural gas
properties, and to participate with other parties, including other
drilling programs heretofore or hereafter conducted by the Managing
General Partner or its Affiliates, in the conduct of exploration and
drilling operations thereon.  Because the Managing General Partner must
deal fairly with the investors in all of its drilling programs, if
conflicts between the interest of the Partnership and such other drilling
programs do arise, they may not in every instance be resolved to the
maximum advantage of the Partnership.

      From time to time, the Managing General Partner may cause Partnership
Prospects to be enlarged or contracted on the basis of geological data to
define the productive limits of any pool discovered.  The Partnership is
not required to expend additional funds for the acquisition of property
unless such acquisition can be made from the Capital Contributions.  In
the event such property is not acquired by the Partnership, the
Partnership may lose a promising Prospect.  Except as otherwise provided
by the Partnership Agreement, such Prospect might be acquired by the
Managing General Partner or an Affiliate thereof or other drilling
programs conducted by them.

      In addition, subject to the restrictions set forth below, the Managing
General Partner in its sole discretion decides which Prospects and what
interest therein to transfer to the Partnership.  This may result in
another drilling program sponsored by the Managing General Partner
acquiring property adjacent to Partnership property.  Such other program
could gain an advantage over the Partnership by reason of the knowledge
gained through the Partnership's prior experience in the area or if such
other drilling program were the first to discover or develop a productive
pool of oil or natural gas.

      Acquisition of Prospects.  The Managing General Partner has discretion
in selecting leases to be acquired by the Partnership from the Managing
General Partner or its Affiliates or third parties and the location and
type of operations which the Partnership will conduct on such leases. 

                                    - 70 -
<PAGE>
Certain of such leases may be part of the Managing General Partner's
existing inventory, although no leases have been designated for inclusion
in the Partnership at the present time.  Neither the Managing General
Partner nor any Affiliate will retain undeveloped acreage adjoining a
Partnership Prospect in order to use Partnership funds to "prove up" the
acreage owned for its own account.

      Whenever the Managing General Partner sells, transfers or conveys an
interest in a Prospect to a particular Partnership, it must, at the same
time, sell to the Partnership an equal proportionate interest in all of
its Leases in the same Prospect (except any interests in producing wells). 
If the Managing General Partner or an Affiliate (except another affiliated
limited partnership in which the interest of the Managing General Partner
or its Affiliates is identical or less than their interest in the
Partnerships) subsequently proposes to acquire an interest in a Prospect
in which a Partnership possesses an interest or in a Prospect abandoned by
the Partnership within one year preceding such Prospect acquisition, the
Managing General Partner or such Affiliate will offer an equivalent
interest therein to the Partnership; and, if cash or financing is not
available to such Partnership to enable it to consummate a purchase of an
equivalent interest in such property, neither the Managing General Partner
nor any of its Affiliates will acquire such interest or property, but the
term "Affiliate" will not include another partnership where the Managing
General Partner's or its Affiliates' interest is identical to, or less
than, their interest in the subject Partnerships.  The term "abandon"
means the termination, either voluntarily or by operation of the Lease or
otherwise, of all of a Partnership's interest in the Prospect.  These
limitations will not apply after the lapse of five years from the date of
formation of a Partnership.

      A sale, transfer or conveyance to the Partnership of less than all of
the Managing General Partner's or its Affiliates' interest in any Prospect
is prohibited unless the interest retained by the Managing General Partner
or its Affiliates is a proportionate Working Interest, the respective
obligations of the Partnership and the Managing General Partner or its
Affiliates are substantially the same immediately after the sale of the
interest, and the Managing General Partner's or its Affiliates' interest
in revenues does not exceed an amount proportionate to the retained
Working Interest.  Neither the Managing General Partner nor its Affiliates
will retain any Overriding Royalty Interests or other burdens on the Lease
interests conveyed to the Partnerships, and will not enter into any
Farmout arrangements with respect to its retained interest, except to
nonaffiliated third parties.

      The Partnerships will acquire only those Leases reasonably expected to
meet the stated purposes of the Partnerships.  The Partnerships will not
acquire any Lease for the purpose of a subsequent sale or farmout unless
the acquisition is made after a well has been drilled to a depth
sufficient to indicate that such an acquisition would be in the
Partnerships' best interest.  The Managing General Partner expects that
the Partnership will develop substantially all of its Leases and will farm
out few, if any, Leases.  The Partnerships will not farm out, sell or
otherwise dispose of Leases unless the Managing General Partner,
exercising the standard of a prudent operator, determines that:  (a) a
Partnership lacks sufficient funds to drill on the Lease and cannot obtain
suitable alternative financing; (b) downgrading subsequent to a
Partnership's acquisition has rendered drilling undesirable; (c) drilling
would concentrate excessive funds in one location creating undue risk to
a Partnership; or (d) the best interests of a Partnership, based on the
standard of a prudent operator, would be served by such disposition.  In
the event of a Farmout, the Managing General Partner will retain for the

                                    - 71 -
<PAGE>
Partnerships such economic interests and concessions as a reasonably
prudent operator would retain under the circumstances.  The Managing
General Partner will not farm out a Lease for the primary purpose of
avoiding payments of its Partnership share of costs of drilling thereon. 
However, the decision with respect to making Farmouts and the terms
thereof involve conflicts of interest because the Managing General Partner
may benefit from cost savings and reduction of risk, and in the event of
a Farmout to an affiliated limited partnership or other Affiliate, the
Managing General Partner or its Affiliates will represent both related
entities.

      Transactions with the Managing General Partner or Affiliates Thereof. 
The Managing General Partner will furnish drilling and completion services
with respect to all of the Partnership wells.      A subsidiary of the
Managing General Partner will market gas produced from Partnership wells.     
In addition, the Managing General Partner will act as operator for the
producing wells of the Partnership.  The prices to be charged the
Partnership for such supplies and services will be competitive with the 
prices of other unaffiliated persons in the same geographic area engaged in
similar businesses.  The Managing General Partner expects to earn a profit
for such services.

      Neither the Managing General Partner nor any Affiliate thereof will
render to the Partnership any gas field, equipage or other services nor
sell or lease to the Partnership any equipment or related supplies unless
such person is engaged, independently of the Partnership and as an
ordinary and ongoing business, in the business of rendering such services
or selling or leasing such equipment and supplies to a substantial extent
to other persons in the gas industry in addition to partnerships in which 
the Managing General Partner or its Affiliate has an interest, or, if
such person is not engaged in such a business then such compensation,
price or rental will be the cost of such services, equipment or supplies
to such person or the competitive rate which could be obtained in the
area, whichever is less.  Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary,
the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may not profit by drilling
in contravention of their fiduciary obligations to the Investor Partners. 
Any services not otherwise described in this Prospectus for which the
Managing General Partner or any of its Affiliates are to be compensated
will be embodied in a written contract which precisely describes the
services to be rendered and the compensation to be paid.

      All benefits from marketing arrangements or other relationships
affecting the property of the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates
and the Partnerships will be fairly and equitably apportioned according to
the respective interests of each.

      Partnership funds will not be commingled with those of any other
entity.

      No loans may be made by the Partnership to the Managing General Partner
or any Affiliate thereof.

      The Managing General Partner or any Affiliate, other than other
programs sponsored by the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates, may
not purchase the Partnerships' producing properties.

      Conflict in Establishing Unit Repurchase Price.  Under the Managing
General Partner's Unit Repurchase Program (See "Terms of the Offering --
Unit Repurchase Program" above), the Managing General Partner, once it has
received a request from an Investor Partner that the Managing General
Partner repurchase that Partner's Units, will establish an offering price. 
An offering price established by the Managing General Partner will be

                                    - 72 -
<PAGE>
arbitrarily determined by the Managing General Partner and will not
necessarily represent the fair market value of the Units.  The Managing
General Partner in setting the price will consider its available funds and
its desire to acquire production as represented by the Units.  A conflict
will arise in that the price to be set will be that which the Managing
General Partner considers to be in its own best interest (and thereby keep
the repurchase price as low as possible) and not necessarily in the best
interest of the Investor Partner who is presenting the Units for
repurchase.
   
Certain Transactions

      As of May 31, 1996, previous limited partnerships sponsored by
the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates had made payments to the
Managing General Partner or its Affiliates as follows:

<TABLE>
<S>            <S>      <S>         <S>          <S>           <S>          <S> 
                                              Footage
                                              and
                                              Daywork
                                              Drilling      General
                                              Contracts,    and
              Non-                Turnkey     Services,     Admini-
              recurring           Drilling    Chemicals,    strative
Name          Manage-             and         Supplies      Opera-     Expense
of             ment    Sales      Completion  and           tor's      Reimburse-
Partnership     Fee    of Leases  Contracts   Equipment     Charges    ment  

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984    $61,556     $46,250    $   --   $1,824,938    $187,119  $   --

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group
 1985-A        58,125      43,400        --    1,829,937     187,334      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1986-A        29,605      22,400        --      873,847      89,624      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987          35,395      24,850        --    1,062,332     108,718      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B        30,461      21,350        --      913,794      93,514      --

PDC 1987       14,079       8,715       459,153      --        --         --

PDC 1988       23,842      17,150        --      708,200      72,534      --

PDC 1988-B     26,053      16,450        --      779,587      79,604      --

PDC 1988-C     41,052      26,250     1,361,857      --        --         --

PDC 1989-P     47,171      34,230        --    1,445,275     143,875      --

PDC 1989-A     30,250      57,137        --    1,085,641       --         --

                                    - 73 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1989-B     92,750     175,194     3,328,695      --        --         --

PDC 1990-A     35,150      62,209        --    1,265,680       --         --

PDC 1990-B     55,525      72,100        --    2,025,511       --         --

PDC 1990-C     86,950     117,215        --    3,167,563       --         --

PDC 1990-D     92,138     137,225     3,343,524     --         --         --

PDC 1991-A     68,475      75,193        --    2,511,640       --         --

PDC 1991-B     46,587      62,209        --    1,697,764       --         --

PDC 1991-C     68,400      70,235        --    2,513,765       --         --

PDC 1991-D    131,463     153,721     4,812,667      --        --         --

PDC 1992-A     72,717      77,319        --    2,669,888       --         --

PDC 1992-B     74,478      58,829        --    2,754,778       --         --

PDC 1992-C    159,722     149,657        --    5,884,302       --         --

PDC 1993-A      --        101,335        --    2,840,609       --         --

PDC 1993-B      --         80,470        --    2,286,886       --         --

PDC 1993-C      --         96,248        --    2,849,439       --         --

PDC 1993-D      --         94,098        --    2,724,096       --         --

PDC 1993-E      --        272,730     6,930,264     --         --         --

PDC 1994-A     51,387     110,084        --    2,248,204       --         --

PDC 1994-B     67,245      85,240        --    2,921,974       --         --

PDC 1994-C     58,647      63,548        --    2,545,795       --         --

PDC 1994-D    188,719     232,410     8,024,046     --         --         --

PDC 1995-A     36,640      36,389        --    1,566,615       --         --

PDC 1995-B     46,441      59,044        --    1,972,759       --         --

PDC 1995-C(1)  52,862      35,768        --    2,276,962       --         --

PDC 1995-D(2) 203,927     293,036     8,628,760     --         --         --
____________________
<FN>
(1)  Partnership funded in November 1995.

(2)  Partnership funded in December 1995.
</TABLE>

             FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY OF THE MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER

      -    The Managing General Partner is accountable to the Partnerships as
           a fiduciary and must exercise good faith respecting the
           Partnerships.

                                    - 74 -
<PAGE>
      -    The Partnership Agreement includes provisions indemnifying the
           Managing General Partner against liability for losses suffered by
           the Partnership resulting from actions by the Managing General
           Partner.

      The Managing General Partner is accountable to the Partnerships as a
fiduciary and consequently must exercise utmost good faith and integrity
in handling Partnership affairs.  Under West Virginia law, the Managing
General Partner will owe the Investor Partners a duty of utmost good
faith, fairness, and loyalty.  In this regard, the Managing General
Partner is required to supervise and direct the activities of the
Partnership prudently and with that degree of care, including acting on an
informed basis, which an ordinarily prudent person in a like position
would use under similar circumstances.  Moreover, the Managing General
Partner must act at all times in the best interests of the Partnership and
the Investor Partners.  Since the law in this area is rapidly developing
and changing, investors who have questions concerning the responsibilities
of the Managing General Partner should consult their own counsel.  Where
the question has arisen, courts have held that a limited partner may
institute legal action on behalf of himself and all other similarly
situated limited partners (a class action) to recover damages for a breach 
by a general partner of his fiduciary duty, or on behalf of the
partnership (a partnership derivative action) to recover damages from
third parties.  In addition, limited partners may have the right, subject
to procedural and jurisdictional requirements, to bring partnership class
actions in Federal courts to enforce their rights under the Federal
securities laws.  Further, limited partners who have suffered losses in
connection with the purchase or sale of their interests in a partnership
may be able to recover such losses from a general partner where the losses
result from a violation by the general partner of the antifraud provisions
of the Federal securities laws.  The burden of proving such a breach, and
all or a portion of the expense of such lawsuit, would have to be borne by
the limited partner bringing such action.  In the event of a lawsuit for
a breach of its fiduciary duty to the Partnership and/or the Investor
Partners, the Managing General Partner, depending upon the particular
circumstances involved, might be able to avail itself under West Virginia
law of various defenses to the lawsuit, including statute of limitations,
estoppel, laches, and doctrines such as the "clean hands" doctrine.

      The Partnership Agreement provides for indemnification of the Managing
General Partner against liability for losses arising from the action or
inaction of the Managing General Partner, if the Managing General Partner,
in good faith, determined that such course of conduct was in the best
interests of the Partnership and such course of conduct did not constitute
negligence or misconduct of the Managing General Partner.  The Managing
General Partner may not be indemnified for any such liability arising out
of a breach of its duty to the Partnership or the negligence, fraud, bad
faith or misconduct of the Managing General Partner in the performance of
its fiduciary duty.  The Partnership Agreement provides for
indemnification of the Managing General Partner by the Partnership for any
losses, judgments, liabilities, expenses and amounts paid in settlement of
any claims sustained by it in connection with the Partnership, provided
that the same were not the result of negligence or misconduct on the part
of the Managing General Partner.  Nevertheless, the Managing General
Partner shall not be indemnified for liabilities arising under Federal and
state securities laws unless (1) there has been a successful adjudication
on the merits of each count involving securities law violations or (2)
such claims have been dismissed with prejudice on the merits by a court of
competent jurisdiction or (3) a court of competent jurisdiction approves
a settlement of such claims against a particular indemnitee and finds that
indemnification of the settlement and the related costs should be made,

                                    - 75 -
<PAGE>
and the court considering the request for indemnification has been advised
of the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission and of the
position of any state securities regulatory authority in which securities
of the Partnership were offered or sold as to indemnification for
violations of securities laws; provided, however, the court need only be
advised of the positions of the securities regulatory authorities of those
states (i) which are specifically set forth in the Prospectus and (ii) in
which plaintiffs claim they were offered or sold Partnership Units.  A
successful claim for indemnification would deplete Partnership assets by
the amount paid.  As a result of such indemnification provisions, a
purchaser of Units may have a more limited right of legal action than he
would have if such provision were not included in the Partnership
Agreement.  To the extent that the indemnification provisions purport to
include indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act
of 1933 (the "Securities Act"), in the opinion of the Securities and
Exchange Commission, such indemnification is against public policy as
expressed in the Securities Act, and is, therefore, unenforceable.

      The Partnership Agreement also provides that the Partnership shall not
incur the cost of the portion of any insurance which insures any party 
against any liability as to which such party is prohibited from being
indemnified.

                             PRIOR ACTIVITIES

Prior Partnerships

      Petroleum Development Corporation ("PDC"), as general partner, has
previously sponsored ten private and six public drilling programs which
have raised a total of $101,792,953.  PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program (the
"Program") is the seventh public drilling program sponsored by PDC as
general partner.

      Each of the prior programs has had as its objective the drilling,
completion, and production of oil and natural gas from development wells. 
The 1984 and 1985 partnerships split investment between shallow oil wells
located in Pennsylvania, and gas wells located in the area of operations
in which the Program's wells will be located.  All of the partnerships
since and including 1986 were targeted at shallow development gas wells
located within the area in which the Program's wells will be drilled.  All
funds raised for previous partnerships were spent according to plans as
described in the respective private placement memorandum or prospectus. 
All of the partnerships continue in operation, with monthly cash
distributions to investors in all programs continuing.  All of the
previous programs realized the anticipated tax benefits, and to date the
IRS has neither audited any partnership nor challenged any deductions or
credits claimed by investors, to the best of the Managing General
Partner's knowledge.

      FOR SEVERAL REASONS, INCLUDING THE UNPREDICTABILITY OF NATURAL GAS
DEVELOPMENT AND PRICING AND DIFFERENCES IN PROPERTY LOCATIONS, PROGRAM
SIZE, AND ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, OPERATING RESULTS OBTAINED BY THESE PRIOR
PARTNERSHIPS SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED AS INDICATIVE OF THE OPERATING
RESULTS OBTAINABLE BY THE PARTNERSHIPS.  IT SHOULD NOT BE ASSUMED THAT
INVESTOR PARTNERS IN THE OFFERING COVERED BY THIS PROSPECTUS WILL
EXPERIENCE RETURNS, IF ANY, COMPARABLE TO THOSE EXPERIENCED BY INVESTORS
IN PRIOR PROGRAMS.


     The following table is presented to indicate certain sale
characteristics concerning previous gas limited partnerships sponsored by
the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates.

                                    - 76 -<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>                  <S>       <S>           <S>   <S>         <S>         <S> 
                                          Number
               Date of      Date of       of              Subscrip-     Previous
               Partnership  First Revenue Units  Price    tions from    Assess-
Partnership    Formation    Distribution  Sold  Per Unit  Participants  ment
                               (1)                   
Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984        12/84    4/85          32.83  $75,000   $2,462,500      --

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1985-A      11/85    3/86          31.00   75,000    2,325,000      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1986-A           11/86    4/87          15.00   75,000    1,125,000      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987              8/87    1/88          67.25   20,000    1,345,000      --

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B           11/87    4/88          57.875  20,000    1,157,500      --

PDC 1987          12/87    6/88          26.75   20,000      535,000      --

PDC 1988           7/88   12/88          45.30   20,000      906,000      --

PDC 1988-B        11/88    4/89          49.50   20,000      990,000      --

PDC 1988-C        12/88    6/89          78.00   20,000    1,560,000      --

PDC 1989-P         6/89   12/89          89.625  20,000    1,792,500      --

PDC 1989-A        10/89    4/90          60.50   20,000    1,210,000      --

PDC 1989-B        12/89    6/90         185.50   20,000    3,710,000      --

PDC 1990-A         6/90   11/90          70.30   20,000    1,406,000      --

PDC 1990-B         9/90    1/91         111.05   20,000    2,221,000      --

PDC 1990-C        11/90    5/91         173.90   20,000    3,478,000      --

PDC 1990-D        12/90    6/91         184.275  20,000    3,685,500      --

PDC 1991-A         3/91   11/91         136.95   20,000    2,739,000      --

PDC 1991-B         9/91    2/92          93.175  20,000    1,863,500      --

PDC 1991-C        11/91    4/92         136.80   20,000    2,736,000      --

PDC 1991-D        12/91    6/92         262.925  20,000    5,258,500      --

PDC 1992-A         5/92   11/92         145.435  20,000    2,908,700      --

PDC 1992-B         9/92    1/93         148.955  20,000    2,979,100      --

                                    - 77 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1992-C        11/92    4/93         319.444  20,000    6,388,900      --

PDC 1993-A        12/92    6/93         151.30   20,000    3,026,000      --

PDC 1993-B         5/93   11/93         121.75   20,000    2,435,000      --

PDC 1993-C         9/93    2/94         152.34   20,000    3,046,700      --

PDC 1993-D        11/93    4/94         145.45   20,000    2,909,000      --

PDC 1993-E        12/93    7/94         367.94   20,000    7,358,800      --

PDC 1994-A         5/94   11/94         102.775  20,000    2,055,500      --

PDC 1994-B         9/94    2/95         134.49   20,000    2,689,804      --

PDC 1994-C        11/94    4/95         117.294  20,000    2,345,870      --

PDC 1994-D        12/94    6/95         377.438  20,000    7,548,761      --

PDC 1995-A         5/95   10/95          73.28   20,000    1,465,603      --

PDC 1995-B         9/95    1/96          92.88   20,000    1,857,648      --

PDC 1995-C        11/95    4/96(2)      105.72   20,000    2,114,496      --

PDC 1995-D        12/95     -  (3)      407.854  20,000    8,157,071      --

_____________________
<FN>
(1)  Cash distribution made each month since date of first distribution.

(2)  Partnership closed on November 15, 1995.  Wells were drilled in
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996.

(3)  Partnership closed on December 29, 1995.  Wells were drilled in
     the first quarter of 1996.

</TABLE>























                                    - 78 -
<PAGE>
Previous Drilling Activities

      The following table reflects the drilling activity of previous limited
partnerships sponsored by the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates
as of May 31, 1996.  All of the wells drilled were Development Wells,
except as otherwise noted.
<TABLE>
<S>               <S>      <S>        <S>        <S>        <S>         <S>    
     
                                  Productive Well Table
                                      May 31, 1996

                Gross Wells(1)                             Net Wells(2) 
Partnership     Oil        Gas        Dry        Oil        Gas        Dry

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984      27         13         -          27          5.5        -

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1985-A    14         13         1          14          7.8       .6

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1986-A         -           8         2          -           5.4      1.0

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987           -           9         1(3)       -           7.1       .1(3)

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B         -           9         1          -           5.5       .6

PDC 1987        -           7         -          -           2.6        -

PDC 1988        -           5         1          -           4.1       .8

PDC 1988-B      -           5         -          -           4.7        -

PDC 1988-C      -           9         1          -           7.0       .8

PDC 1989-P      -           8         1          -           7.8       .9

PDC 1989-A      -           6         1          -           5.5       .9

PDC 1989-B      -          19         2          -          17.0      1.8

PDC 1990-A      -           7         1          -           6.0       .9

PDC 1990-B      -          11         -          -          10.3        -

PDC 1990-C      -          15         2          -          14.4      2.0

PDC 1990-D      -          16         1          -          15.8      1.0

PDC 1991-A      -          13         -          -          12.0        -

PDC 1991-B      -           8         2          -           7.2      2.0


                                    - 79 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1991-C      -          12         2          -          11.2      1.5

PDC 1991-D      -          21         5          -          20.4      4.4

PDC 1992-A      -          12         2          -          11.0      2.0

PDC 1992-B      -          14         1          -          12.3      .5

PDC 1992-C      -          26         3          -          24.8      2.5

PDC 1993-A      -          16         1          -          14.7      1.0

PDC 1993-B      -          13         2          -          12.4      2.0

PDC 1993-C      -          15         2          -          13.8      2.0

PDC 1993-D      -          11         4          -          10.8      4.0

PDC 1993-E      -          34         2          -          33.3      2.0

PDC 1994-A      -           9         1          -           8.9      1.0

PDC 1994-B      -          13         1          -          12.4      1.0

PDC 1994-C      -          12         1          -          11.1      1.0

PDC 1994-D      -          39         4          -          35.4      4.0

PDC 1995-A      -           8         1          -           7.1      1.0

PDC 1995-B      -           9         2          -           8.1      2.0

PDC 1995-C(4)   -          13         1          -           9.6      1.0

PDC 1995-D(5)   -          41         2          -          37.2      2.0

 Total ......  41         499        54         41         440.2     48.3

_____________________
<FN>
(1)  Gross wells include all wells in which the partnerships owned a
     Working Interest.

(2)  Net wells are the number of gross wells multiplied by the percentage
     Working Interest owned by the partnerships in the gross wells.

(3)  The dry hole indicated represents an exploratory well.

(4)  Partnership funded in November 1995.  Wells were drilled during
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996.

(5)  Partnership funded in December 1995.  Wells were drilled during 
     first quarter of 1996.
</TABLE>








                                    - 80 -
<PAGE>
Payout and Net Cash Tables

The following tables provide information concerning the operating results
of previous limited partnerships sponsored by the Managing General Partner
and its Affiliates as of May 31, 1996.
<TABLE>
<S>             <S>              <S>        <S>            <S> 
                Participants' Payout Table

                       May 31, 1996

                                             Revenues Before Deducting
                                             Operating Costs(3)
 
                              Total
                              Expendi-    
              Investors'      tures       Total         During Three
              Funds           Including   As of         Months Ended
              Invested(1)     Operating    May             May 
                              Costs(2)    31, 1996      31, 1996
Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984    $2,093,125     $3,070,862  $1,967,783    $ 16,550

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1985-A   1,976,250      2,873,530   1,471,743      26,291

Petrowest
Gas Group
1986-A           956,250      1,417,891     833,827      15,320

Petrowest
Gas Group
1987           1,143,250      1,707,566   1,238,781      18,986

Petrowest
Gas Group
1987-B           983,875      1,383,989     648,449      11,601

PDC 1987         454,750        663,727     432,128       7,453

PDC 1988         770,100      1,157,801     909,214      18,596

PDC 1988-B       841,500      1,186,991     445,728      11,749

PDC 1988-C     1,326,000      1,884,956     868,442      23,386

PDC 1989-P     1,523,625      2,167,941   1,346,749      33,957

PDC 1989-A     1,028,500      1,496,507     984,257      29,449

PDC 1989-B     3,153,500      4,310,431   2,002,136      69,031

PDC 1990-A     1,195,100      1,581,405     553,527      13,549

PDC 1990-B     1,887,850      2,556,482   1,132,963      34,122

PDC 1990-C     2,956,300      3,974,232   1,454,900      76,220

PDC 1990-D     3,132,674      4,166,352   1,559,965      79,355

                                    - 81 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1991-A     2,328,150      3,111,660   1,480,467      58,867

PDC 1991-B     1,583,975      2,073,433     788,233      36,590

PDC 1991-C     2,325,600      3,063,085   1,177,998      62,209

PDC 1991-D     4,469,725      5,772,046   1,547,672      93,309

PDC 1992-A     2,472,396      3,131,760     638,644      29,893

PDC 1992-B     2,532,246      3,262,746   1,160,487      87,113

PDC 1992-C     5,430,563      7,035,026   2,654,467     282,393

PDC 1993-A     2,647,750      3,536,058   2,288,893     204,899

PDC 1993-B     2,130,620      2,609,826     645,020      68,292

PDC 1993-C     2,665,865      3,248,102     623,458      81,227

PDC 1993-D     2,545,375      3,070,226     595,142      89,699

PDC 1993-E     6,438,950      7,797,468   1,336,888     185,090

PDC 1994-A     1,798,563      2,187,651     359,475      52,880

PDC 1994-B     2,353,579      2,797,750     440,212     109,996

PDC 1994-C     2,052,636      2,417,845     325,702      62,785

PDC 1994-D     6,605,166      7,734,353     888,475     255,790

PDC 1995-A     1,282,403      1,505,989     181,745      72,459

PDC 1995-B     1,625,442      1,876,005     114,440      40,933

PDC 1995-C(4)  1,850,184      2,126,070      82,999      17,402

PDC 1995-D(5)  7,137,437      7,137,437         -           -

_____________________
<FN>
(1)  Total Subscriptions, less commissions, management fee, and offering costs.

(2)  Includes the total of the subscriptions, assessments, funds advanced by
     the Managing General Partner to the general or limited partnerships,
     inclusive of operating costs.  None of the partnerships has borrowed
     any funds.

(3)  Represents the accrued gross revenues credited to the participants
     from oil and gas revenues net of royalties to landowners, Overriding
     Royalty Interest, and other burdens, excluding interest income.

(4)  Partnership funded in November 1995; wells were drilled during
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996; first revenue
     distribution commenced in April 1996.

(5)  Partnership funded in December 1995; wells were drilled during the first
     quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution to commence in June 1996.
</TABLE>


                                    - 82 -
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>         <S>         <S>          <S>       <S>       <S>      <S>        <S>
                               Participants' Net Cash Table
                                       May 31, 1996

                                     Total Revenues
                                     After Deducting        Cash 
                                     Operating Costs(3)   Distributions(4)

                       Total                 Three               Three    Aggre-
          Investors'   Expendi-    Total     Months     Total    Months    gate
Partner-  Funds        tures, Net  As of     Ended      As of    Ended     Sect-
ship      Invested     of Operat-  May       May        May      May      ion 29
                       ing Costs   31, 1996  31, 1996  31, 1996  31, 1996  Tax 
           (1)          (2)                                               Credit

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group
1984    $2,093,125  $2,462,500 $1,359,421  $  2,972 $1,289,919  $ 2,972  $455,492

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group
1985-A   1,976,250   2,325,000    923,213    10,226    879,941   10,226   518,847

Petrowest
Gas Group
1986-A     956,250   1,125,000    540,937     5,011    514,167    5,011   389,445

Petrowest
Gas Group
1987     1,143,250   1,345,000    876,215     6,630    833,595    6,630   419,640

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B    983,875   1,157,500    421,961     2,144    395,591    2,144   310,673

PDC 1987   454,750     535,000    303,401     1,247    285,829    1,247   195,650

PDC 1988   770,100     906,000    657,413     7,430    620,524    7,430   396,330

PDC
 1988-B    841,500     990,000    248,737     2,950    224,897    2,950   204,287

PDC
 1988-C  1,326,000   1,560,000    543,487     6,543    500,431    6,543   387,972

PDC
 1989-P  1,523,625   1,792,500    971,308    16,850    893,423   16,850   620,832

PDC
 1989-A  1,028,500   1,210,000    697,750    18,159    654,666   18,159   418,600

PDC
 1989-B  3,153,500   3,710,000  1,401,706    46,300  1,296,070   46,300   598,052

PDC 
1990-A   1,195,100   1,406,000    378,122     4,901    317,909    4,901   103,482

PDC
 1990-B  1,887,850   2,221,000    797,481    18,098    759,721    18,098  474,072

                                    - 83 -<PAGE>
PDC
 1990-C  2,956,300   3,478,000    958,668    51,756    889,430    51,756  444,836

PDC
 1990-D  3,132,674   3,685,500  1,079,113    54,680  1,018,246    54,680  599,078

PDC
 1991-A  2,328,150   2,739,000  1,107,807    40,407  1,004,342    40,407  634,626

PDC
 1991-B  1,583,975   1,863,500    578,300    25,203    549,425    25,203  352,667

PDC
 1991-C  2,325,600   2,736,000    850,912    43,403    764,312    43,403  509,033

PDC
 1991-D  4,469,725   5,258,500  1,034,126    62,182    961,114    62,182  632,335

PDC
 1992-A  2,472,396   2,908,700    415,583    19,700    336,859    19,700  238,513

PDC
 1992-B  2,532,246   2,979,100    876,841    65,459    815,784    65,459  510,320

PDC
 1992-C  5,430,563   6,388,900  2,008,341   225,687  1,886,227   225,687  924,151

PDC
 1993-A  2,647,750   3,026,000  1,778,835   169,259  1,584,659   169,259   73,834

PDC 
 1993-B  2,130,620   2,435,000    470,194   48,657    411,287   48,657    --

PDC
 1993-C  2,665,865   3,046,700   422,056    56,110    365,670   56,110     --

PDC
 1993-D  2,545,375   2,909,000   433,916    69,703    392,678   69,703     --

PDC
 1993-E  6,438,950   7,358,800   898,220   123,763    749,272  123,763     --

PDC
 1994-A  1,798,563   2,055,500   227,324    33,403    187,354   33,403     --

PDC
 1994-B  2,353,579   2,689,804   332,266    92,529    277,008   92,529     __

PDC
 1994-C  2,052,636   2,345,870   253,727    50,973    197,290   50,973     --

PDC
 1994-D  6,605,166   7,548,761   702,883   214,742    516,028  214,742     --

PDC
 1995-A  1,282,403   1,465,603   141,359    58,109     93,300   58,109     --

PDC
 1995-B  1,625,442   1,857,648     96,082    32,627     40,074  32,627     --


                                    - 84 -
<PAGE>
PDC
 1995-C
 (6)     1,850,184   2,114,496     71,424    14,627     14,627  14,627    --

PDC
 1995-D  7,137,437   8,157,071        --        --         --      --     --
 (7)
_____________________
<FN>
(1)  Total Subscriptions, less commissions, management fee, and offering costs.

(2)  Includes the total of the subscriptions, assessments, funds advanced by 
     the Managing General Partner to the general or limited partnerships,
     exclusive of operating costs.  None of the partnerships has borrowed any
     funds.

(3)  Represents the accrued gross revenues credited from oil and gas production,
     excluding operating costs, Landowners' Royalty Interests, Overriding
     Royalty Interests, and other burdens.

(4)  Represents the net cash distributed to the partnerships.  All cash
     distributions to the partners were made from operations and constituted
     ordinary income.

(5)  Wells drilled after December 31, 1992 will not qualify for the credit.

(6)  Partnership funded in November 1995; wells were drilled during fourth
     quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution
     commenced in April 1996.

(7)  Partnership funded in December 1995; wells were drilled during the 
     first quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution to commence in June 1996.

</TABLE>


























                                    - 85 -
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>                   <S>                 <S>           <S>                    
               Managing General Partner's Payout Table
                             May 31, 1996
                                         Revenues Before Deducting
                                         Operating Costs(2) 
                         Total           Total         During Three
                      Expenditures       As of         Months Ended
                       Including         May 31, 1996  May 31, 1996
Partnership        Operating Costs(1)

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984           $  156,566        $251,132         $ 1,540

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 
1985-A                  145,061         194,946           2,214

Petrowest
Gas Group
1986-A                   74,620         131,534           2,732

Petrowest
Gas Group
1987                     89,871         188,572           3,150

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B                  72,841          98,913           1,941

PDC 1987                 34,933          66,369           1,258

PDC 1988                 60,922         146,309           3,164

PDC 1988-B               62,475          72,714           2,011

PDC 1988-C              100,208         136,048           3,919

PDC 1989-P              114,095         207,180           5,644

PDC 1989-A              182,562         243,899           7,362

PDC 1989-B              481,230         476,599          17,258

PDC 1990-A              170,478         125,050           3,386

PDC 1990-B              289,903         273,277           8,531

PDC 1990-C              435,817         328,903          19,057

PDC 1990-D              446,500         334,211          19,839

PDC 1991-A              341,799         355,293          14,716

PDC 1991-B              219,607         187,273           9,147

PDC 1991-C              331,216         280,172          15,552

PDC 1991-D              598,543         340,349          23,168

                                    - 86 -<PAGE>
PDC 1992-A              296,250          85,543             -0-

PDC 1992-B              340,625         278,519          21,087

PDC 1992-C              732,235         605,922          55,907

PDC 1993-A              390,687         493,999          43,106

PDC 1993-B              268,822         135,049          13,531

PDC 1993-C              330,603         115,643          10,687

PDC 1993-D              312,425         115,965          14,185

PDC 1993-E              799,886         270,597          30,485

PDC 1994-A              480,834          86,666          12,408

PDC 1994-B              615,024         109,135          26,581

PDC 1994-C              531,102          81,357          15,628

PDC 1994-D            1,697,690         222,118          63,946

PDC 1995-A              330,697          45,436          18,115

PDC 1995-B              410,950          28,610          10,233

PDC 1995-C(3)           465,440          20,749           4,350

PDC 1995-D(4)         1,784,359            --              --
_____________________
<FN>
(1)  Includes Managing General Partner share of drilling costs.

(2)  Represents the accrued gross revenues credited to the managing
     general partner(s).

(3)  Partnership funded in November 1995; wells were drilled during
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996; first revenue
     distribution commenced April 1996.

(4)  Partnership funded in December 1995; wells were drilled during
     first quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution to commence in
     June 1996.
</TABLE>
















                                    - 87 -
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>              <S>       <S>         <S>          <S>          <S>         <S> 
                                    Managing General Partner's Net Cash Table
                                                 May 31, 1996

                            Total Revenues
                            After Deducting         Cash
                            Operating Costs(2)      Distributions(4)
               Total                                                     Aggre-
               Expendi-                Three                    Three    gate
               tures, Net  Total       Months       Total       Months   Sec-
               of Operat-  As of       Ended        As of       Ended    tion 29
               ing         May 31,     May 31,      May 31,     May 31,   Tax
Partnersip     Costs(1)    1996        1996         1996        1996     Credits
                                                                            (4)

Pennwest
Petroleum
Group 1984    $ 129,605    $224,171    $ 1,308    $220,513  $  1,308     $23,974

Pennwest 
Petroleum
Group
1985-A          122,368     172,253      2,087     169,976     2,087      27,308

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1986-A          59,210     116,124      2,084     111,684     2,084      20,497

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987            70,789     169,490      2,499     163,278     2,499      22,086

Petrowest
Gas Group
 1987-B          60,921      86,993      1,444      82,618     1,444      16,351

PDC 1987         28,158      59,594        931      56,950       931      10,297

PDC 1988         47,684     133,071      2,578     127,522     2,578      20,859

PDC 1988-B       52,105      62,344      1,548      57,737     1,548      10,752

PDC 1988-C       82,105     117,945      3,032     110,628     3,032      20,420

PDC 1989-P       94,342     187,426      4,745     174,038     4,745      32,675

PDC 1989-A      114,278     175,615      4,579     164,844     4,579     104,650

PDC 1989-B      350,389     345,758     11,621     319,349    11,621     149,513

PDC 1990-A      132,789      87,361      1,225      72,308     1,225      25,870

PDC 1990-B      209,761     193,135      4,545     183,695     4,545     118,518

PDC 1990-C      328,478     221,564     12,954     204,254    12,954     111,209

PDC 1990-D      348,075     235,786     13,712     220,569    13,712     149,770

PDC 1991-A      258,683     272,177     10,149     246,311    10,149     158,657

PDC 1991-B      175,997     143,663      6,350     137,888     6,350      88,167

                                    - 88 -<PAGE>
PDC 1991-C      258,400     207,356     10,904     185,706    10,904     127,258

PDC 1991-D      496,639     238,445     15,466     220,192    15,466     158,084

PDC 1992-A      274,711      64,004        -0-      44,323       -0-      59,628

PDC 1992-B      281,361     219,254     16,355     207,043    16,355     127,580

PDC 1992-C      603,396     477,083     46,405     452,661    46,405     231,038

PDC 1993-A      294,194     397,506     36,261     354,882    36,261      16,208

PDC 1993-B      236,736     102,964     10,392      90,033    10,392          --

PDC 1993-C      296,207      81,247      7,906      68,870     7,906          --

PDC 1993-D      282,819      86,359     11,821      77,307    11,821          --

PDC 1993-E      715,438     186,149     22,184     153,453    22,184          --

PDC 1994-A      449,641      55,473      8,110      46,699     8,110          --

PDC 1994-B      588,395      82,506     22,572      68,691    22,572          --

PDC 1994-C      513,159      63,414     12,726      49,305    12,726          --

PDC 1994-D    1,651,292     175,720     53,685     129,006    53,685          --

PDC 1995-A      320,601      35,340     14,527      23,325    14,527          --

PDC 1995-B      406,361      24,020      8,157      10,018     8,157          --

PDC 1995-C(5)   462,546      17,856      3,657       3,657     3,657          --

PDC 1995-D(6) 1,784,359        --         --          --        --            --
<FN>
_____________________
(1)  Includes Managing General Partner share of drilling costs, exclusive
     of operating costs.

(2)  Represents the accrued gross revenues credited from oil and gas
     production, excluding operating costs, landowners' royalty
     interests, Overriding Royalty Interests, and other burdens.

(3)  Represents the net cash received from the partnerships' cash
     distributions.  All cash distributions to the managing general
     partner were made from operations.

(4)  Wells drilled after December 31, 1992 will not qualify for the credit.

(5)  Partnership funded in November 1995; wells were drilled during
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996; first revenue
     distribution commenced in April 1996.

(6)  Partnership funded in December 1995; wells were drilled during
     first quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution to commence in
     June 1996.
</TABLE>



                                    - 89 -
<PAGE>
Tax Deductions and Tax Credits of Participants in Previous Partnerships

      The following table reflects the participants' share of the previous
limited partnerships' available tax deductions that were reported in the
partnerships' tax returns and such share of tax deductions as a percentage
of their subscriptions.  The following percentages do not reflect the
effect of the revenues from the partnerships' operations and are subject
to audit adjustments by the Service.  The table also reflects the
aggregate Section 29 nonconventional fuel production credit as a
percentage of the participants' initial investment over the life of each
partnership through May 31, 1996, and the federal tax savings from
deductions and tax credits based on the maximum marginal tax rate in each
year.  Wells drilled after December 31, 1992 will not qualify for the
credit.  The final column shows these tax shelter ratios calculated in
accordance with Service regulations.  Programs with anticipated tax
shelter ratios of greater than 2:1 in any of the first five years must
register as tax shelters.  The Managing General Partner does not expect
any of the prior partnerships or the Partnerships in the current Program
to exceed the 2:1 ratio.  The following table is based on past experience
and should not be considered as necessarily indicative of the results that
may be expected in these Partnerships.  It is suggested that prospective
subscribers consult with their tax advisors concerning their specific tax
circumstances and the tax benefits available to them individually, which
may materially vary in various circumstances.

<TABLE>
<S>                      <S>         <S>          <S>       <S>       <S>
                                                          Estimated
                    First        Aggregate    Aggregate   Federal     Tax
                    Year Tax    Deductions    Section 29  Tax         Shelter
                    Deductions    Thereafter     Tax      Savings(2)  Ratio(3)
                                              Credits(1)

*Pennwest
 Petroleum
 Group 1984         70.87%           25.98%       18.50%     66.92%  1.3:1

*Pennwest
 Petroleum
 Group 1985-A       69.51%           25.86%       22.32%     70.00%  1.4:1

*Petrowest
 Gas Group
 1986-A             70.10%           28.09%       34.62%     83.71%  1.7:1

*Petrowest
 Gas Group
 1987               64.60%           33.47%       31.20%     70.43%  2.1:1

*Petrowest
  Gas Group
 1987-B             68.70%           24.77%       26.84%     64.23%  1.9:1

*PDC 1987           70.30%           29.23%       36.57%     76.38%  2.3:1

*PDC 1988           72.60%           30.89%       43.75%     85.14%  2.6:1

*PDC 1988-B         66.70%           29.32%       20.64%     59.04%  1.7:1

*PDC 1988-C         69.20%           26.76%       24.87%     63.25%  1.8:1

*PDC 1989-P         71.10%           39.91%       34.64%     71.27%  2.3:1

                                    - 90 -<PAGE>
*PDC 1989-A         69.80%           26.50%       34.60%     66.37%  2.2:1

*PDC 1989-B         69.10%           23.65%       16.12%     46.73%  1.5:1

*PDC 1990-A         70.90%           17.27%        7.36%     36.46%  1.1:1

*PDC 1990-B         71.50%           22.67%       21.35%     52.42%  1.7:1

*PDC 1990-C         70.60%           19.39%       12.79%     42.49%  1.3:1

*PDC 1990-D         69.70%           22.51%       16.26%     46.69%  1.5:1

PDC 1991-A          69.80%           20.82%       23.17%     51.26%  1.7:1

PDC 1991-B          67.00%           17.06%       18.93%     44.98%  1.5:1

PDC 1991-C          69.60%           19.03%       18.61%     46.08%  1.5:1

PDC 1991-D          69.80%           15.85%       12.03%     38.58%  1.3:1

PDC 1992-A          73.10%           12.79%        8.20%     34.83%  1.1:1

PDC 1992-B          69.60%           17.34%       17.13%     44.08%  1.5:1

PDC 1992-C          69.20%           17.24%       14.47%     41.26%  1.4:1

PDC 1993-A          69.00%           25.18%        2.44%     31.64%  1.0:1

PDC 1993-B          68.10%           12.66%         --       29.07%  0.8:1

PDC 1993-C          68.80%           10.80%         --       28.65%  0.8:1

PDC 1993-D          68.60%            8.48%         --       27.75%  0.8:1

PDC 1993-E          67.60%           10.03%         --       27.95%  0.8:1

PDC 1994-A          87.70%            2.25%         --       35.62%  0.9:1

PDC 1994-B          89.40%            2.42%         --       36.36%  0.9:1

PDC 1994-C          89.70%            2.32%         --       36.44%  0.9:1

PDC 1994-D          89.90%            1.68%         --       36.27%  0.9:1

PDC 1995-A          85.66%            0.38%         --       34.07%  0.9:1

PDC 1995-B          89.02%            0.32%         --       35.38%  0.9:1

PDC 1995-C(4)       89.71%            0.18%         --       35.60%  0.9:1

PDC 1995-D(5)       89.94%            0.23%         --       35.71%  0.9:1

<FN>
 *Partnerships in existence for over five years.
_____________________
(1)  Wells drilled after December 31, 1992 will not qualify for the credit.

(2)  The Estimated Federal Tax Savings column reflects the percentage
     savings in taxes which would have been paid by an investor had he
     not had the use of the various deductions and credits available to

                                    - 91 -
<PAGE>
     a Partner in the Program and it assumes full use of deductions and
     tax credits at maximum Federal tax rates of 50% in 1984-1986, 40% in
     1987 and 1988, and 33% in 1989 and 1990, 31% in 1991-1992, 36% in
     1993, and 39.6% in 1994 and thereafter.

(3)  Total deductions plus 200% of credits generated for partnerships
     first offered before December 31, 1986.  Total deductions plus 350%
     of credits generated for partnerships offered after December 31, 1986.

(4)  Partnership funded in November 1995.

(5)  Partnership funded in December 1995.

</TABLE>















































                                    - 92 -
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<S>              <S>        <S>        <S>         <S>        <S>         <S>
                       Percentage of Return on Subscriptions Through
                                    May 31, 1996
                       From Cash Distributions, Tax Savings from
                       Deductions and Tax Credits(1)
                                                  Tax      Total     Years/
                Cash        Cumula-    Total      Deduc-   Return of Months
                Distribu    tive       Cash       tions    Cash, Tax All wells
                -tions      Section 29 & Tax      Tax      Deduction Producing
                            Credit     Credit     Effected
                (2)         (3)                   (4)      (5)

 *Pennwest
  Petroleum 
  Group 1984    52.35%     18.50%     70.84%     50.01%   120.86%    10/11

 *Pennwest
  Petroleum     37.71%     22.32%     60.03%     48.30%   108.33%    10/0
  Group 1985-A 

**Petrowest
 Gas Group      45.58%     34.62%     80.19%     47.86%   128.05%     8/11
  1986

**Petrowest
  Gas Group     61.94%     31.20%     93.14%     38.21%   131.35%     8/2
  1987

**Petrowest
  Gas Group
  1987-B        34.17%     26.84%     61.01%     38.47%    99.47%     7/11

**PDC 1987      53.30%     36.57%     89.87%     40.85%   130.72%     7/9

**PDC 1988      68.07%     43.75%    111.82%     36.26%   148.08%     7/3

**PDC 1988-B    22.72%     20.64%     43.35%     35.91%    79.27%     6/11

**PDC 1988-C    32.08%     24.87%     56.95%     35.84%    92.80%     6/9

**PDC 1989-P    49.56%     34.64%     84.20%     34.04%   118.24%     6/3

**PDC 1989-A    54.10%     34.60%     88.70%     35.93%   124.63%     5/11

**PDC 1989-B    34.93%     16.12%     51.05%     34.82%    85.88%     5/9

**PDC 1990-A    22.61%      7.36%     29.97%     31.17%    61.14%     5/4

**PDC 1990-B    34.21%     21.35%     55.55%     33.69%    89.24%     5/2

**PDC 1990-C    25.57%     12.79%     38.36%     33.98%    72.34%     4/10

**PDC 1990-D    27.63%     16.26%     43.88%     34.91%    78.79%     4/9

**PDC 1991-A    36.74%     23.17%     59.91%     30.60%    90.50%     4/4

**PDC 1991-B    29.48%     18.93%     48.41%     31.45%    79.86%     4/1

**PDC 1991-C    27.93%     18.61%     46.54%     32.18%    78.72%     3/11

**PDC 1991-D    18.28%     12.03%     30.30%    31.03%    61.34%      3/9

                                    - 93 -<PAGE>
**PDC 1992-A    11.58%      8.20%     19.78%    28.70%    48.48%      3/4

**PDC 1992-B    27.38%     17.13%     44.51%    31.65%    76.17%      3/2

**PDC 1992-C    29.52%     14.47%     43.99%    31.87%    75.85%      2/11

**PDC 1993-A    52.37%      2.44%     54.81%    34.06%    88.86%      2/9

**PDC 1993-B    16.91%       --       16.91%    32.82%    49.73%      2/4

**PDC 1993-C    12.00%       --       12.00%    32.37%    44.37%      2/1

**PDC 1993-D    13.50%       --       13.50%    31.67%    45.16%      1/11

**PDC 1993-E    10.18%       --       10.18%    31.94%    42.12%      1/8

**PDC 1994-A     9.10%       --        9.10%    38.57%    47.67%      1/4

**PDC 1994-B    10.30%       --       10.30%    39.30%    49.59%      1/1

**PDC 1994-C     8.41%       --        8.41%    39.37%    47.78%      0/11

**PDC 1994-D     6.84%       --        6.84%    39.52%    46.36%      0/9

**PDC 1995-A     6.37%       --        6.37%    39.56%    45.92%      0/5

PDC 1995-B       2.16%       --        2.16%    39.56%    41.72%      0/2

PDC 1995-C(6)     .69%       --         .69%    39.18%    39.87%      0

PDC 1995-D(7)     --         --          --     39.20%    39.20%      0 
<FN>
*   Program contains oil & gas production
**  Program contains gas production
_____________________
(1)  This table assumes investors were able to fully utilize all tax
     benefits at the maximum marginal Federal rate plus an assumed 
     state rate of 4%

(2)  Cash distributions to investors divided by investors' initial
     investment.

(3)  Credit earned on qualified production.  Wells drilled after
     December 31, 1992 will not qualify for the credit.

(4)  Tax savings from deductions assuming investor is in the
     highest marginal bracket.  Rates used were 54% in 1984, 1985 and
     1986, 42.5% in 1987, 37% in 1988, 1989 and 1990, 35% in 1991 and
     1992, 40% in 1993, and 43.6% in 1994 and thereafter.

(5)  This column represents the sum of the percentage amounts set forth
     in the first three columns of this table.

(6)  Partnership funded in November 1995; wells were drilled during
     fourth quarter of 1995 and first quarter of 1996; first revenue
     distribution commenced in April 1996.

(7)  Partnership funded in December 1995; wells were drilled during
     first quarter of 1996; first revenue distribution to commence in
     June 1996.
</TABLE>
                                    - 94 -
<PAGE>
Partnership Proved Reserves and Future Net Revenues

      The following table presents information regarding the public drilling
programs sponsored by the Managing General Partner.  The table reflects
with respect to each partnership the proved reserves and future net
reserves as of January 1, 1996.  The information presented has been
derived from reports prepared by an independent petroleum consultant,
Wright & Company, Inc. and by the Managing General Partner's
petroleum engineer as noted below.

<TABLE>
<S>               <S>  <S>            <S>       <S>              <S>          <S>

               Partnership Proved Reserves and Future Net Revenues
                        as of January 1, 1996(1)

                                                                       Percent
                                                                       Value
                                   Net Oil BBL  Net Gas    Estimated   Discounted
                     Category of   Reserves   Reserves     Future Net  at 10% Per
Partnership   Proved Reserves      BBL          MCF        Revenues      Annum

PDC 1989-A(2) Proved Developed        --     1,018,191    $ 2,054,587  $  909,210
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --            --
                     Totals           --     1,018,191    $ 2,054,587  $  909,210

PDC 1989-B(2) Proved Developed        --     1,759,982    $ 3,240,895  $1,505,744
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --            --
                     Totals           --     1,759,982    $ 3,240,895  $1,505,744

PDC 1990-A(2) Proved Developed        --       339,362    $   485,251  $  233,982
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --            --
                     Totals           --       339,362    $   485,251  $  233,982

PDC 1990-B(2) Proved Developed        --     1,761,365    $ 3,491,164  $1,461,220
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --            --
                     Totals           --     1,761,365    $ 3,491,164  $1,461,220

PDC 1990-C(2) Proved Developed        --     1,893,185    $ 3,317,081  $1,505,457
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --            --
                     Totals           --     1,893,185    $ 3,317,081  $1,505,457

PDC 1990-D(2) Proved Developed        --     1,591,053    $ 2,807,425  $1,316,962
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --           --
                     Totals           --     1,591,053    $ 2,807,425  $1,316,962

PDC 1991-A(2) Proved Developed        --     1,354,525    $ 2,224,609  $1,088,777
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --           --
                     Totals           --     1,354,525    $ 2,224,609  $1,088,777

PDC 1991-B(2) Proved Developed        --       852,318    $ 1,562,340  $  770,138
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --           --
                     Totals           --       852,318    $ 1,562,340  $  770,138

PDC 1991-C(2) Proved Developed        --     1,581,153    $ 2,748,780  $1,342,026
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,581,153    $ 2,748,780  $1,342,026

PDC 1991-D(2) Proved Developed        --     2,178,492    $ 3,609,934  $1,687,627
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --
                     Totals           --     2,178,492    $ 3,609,934  $1,687,627

                                    - 95 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1992-A(2) Proved Developed        --       710,557    $ 1,162,784  $  542,980
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --       710,557    $ 1,162,784  $  542,980

PDC 1992-B(2) Proved Developed        --     1,779,321    $ 3,100,209  $1,520,907
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,779,321    $ 3,100,209  $1,520,907

PDC 1992-C(2) Proved Developed        --     4,042,158    $ 7,670,906  $3,765,539
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --            --          --
                     Totals           --     4,042,158    $ 7,670,906  $3,765,539

PDC 1993-A(2) Proved Developed        --     2,814,688    $ 5,405,837  $2,769,792
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --            --           --
                     Totals           --     2,814,688    $ 5,405,837  $2,769,792

PDC 1993-B(2) Proved Developed        --     1,404,069    $ 2,410,419  $1,188,257
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --            --           --
                     Totals           --     1,404,069    $ 2,410,419  $1,188,257

PDC 1993-C(2) Proved Developed        --     1,783,398    $ 3,195,480  $1,515,201
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,783,398    $ 3,195,480  $1,515,201

PDC 1993-D(2) Proved Developed        --     1,641,900    $ 3,110,914  $1,519,848
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,641,900    $ 3,110,914  $1,519,848

PDC 1993-E(3) Proved Developed       632     5,324,320    $10,291,199  $4,652,765
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --
                     Totals          632     5,324,320    $10,291,199  $4,652,765

PDC 1994-A(3) Proved Developed        --     1,751,633    $ 3,352,700  $1,622,642
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,751,633    $ 3,352,700  $1,622,642

PDC 1994-B(3) Proved Developed        --     1,965,371    $ 3,628,574  $1,824,447
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,965,371    $ 3,628,574  $1,824,447

PDC 1994-C(3) Proved Developed        --     1,828,280    $ 3,391,174  $1,663,319
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     1,828,280    $ 3,391,174  $1,663,319

PDC 1994-D(3) Proved Developed        --     5,877,164    $11,140,904  $5,275,642
              Proved Undeveloped     --         --             --          --
                     Totals           --     5,877,164    $11,140,904  $5,275,642

PDC 1995-A(3)  Proved Developed       --     1,515,249    $ 3,063,332  $1,461,457
               Proved Undeveloped    --         --             --          --
                      Totals          --     1,515,249    $ 3,063,332  $1,461,457

PDC 1995-B(3)  Proved Developed       --     1,491,990    $ 2,940,205  $1,421,578
               Proved Undeveloped    --         --             --          --
                      Totals          --     1,491,990    $ 2,940,205  $1,421,578


PDC 1995-C(3)  Proved Developed       --     1,917,935    $ 3,764,661  $1,863,123
               Proved Undeveloped    --         --             --          --
                      Totals          --     1,917,935    $ 3,764,661  $1,863,123


                                    - 96 -
<PAGE>
PDC 1995-D(4)  Proved Developed       --        --             --          --
               Proved Undeveloped    --         --             --          --
                      Totals          --        --             --          --
<FN>
____________________
(1)  For the Partnerships PDC 1989-A through PDC 1992-C and from 1994-A
     through 1995-C, the Managing General Partner owns 20% of the reserves
     listed and the Investor Partners own 80% of the reserves listed above.
     In the PDC 1993-A, PDC 1993-B, PDC 1993-C, PDC 1993-D and PDC 1993-E
     Limited Partnerships, the Managing General Partner owns 18% of the
     reserves listed and the Investor Partners own 82% of the reserves
     listed above.  

(2)  Reserve reports prepared by the Managing General Parnter's petroleum
     engineer.

(3)  Reserve reports prepared by an independent petroleum consultant,
     Wright & Company, Inc.

(4)  The wells of this Partnership were drilled after December 31, 1995;
     therefore, reserve studies have not been conducted.
</TABLE>
    
TAX CONSIDERATIONS

      The full tax opinion of Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin      is
attached to the Prospectus as Appendix D.  All prospective investors should
review Appendix D in its entirety before investing in the Program.  All
references in this "Tax Considerations" section are to the tax opinion set
forth in Appendix D.

      The following is a summary of the opinions of Metzger, Hollis, Gordon
&    Alprin     , counsel to the Partnerships (collectively, the "Partnership"),
which represent counsel's opinions on all material federal income tax
consequences to the Partnership and to the Investor Partners.  There may
be aspects of a particular investor's tax situation which are not
addressed in the following discussion or in Appendix D.  Additionally, the
resolution of certain tax issues depends upon future facts and
circumstances not known to counsel as of the date of this Prospectus;
thus, no assurance as to the final resolution of such issues should be
drawn from the following discussion.

      The following statements are based upon the provisions of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), including revisions to the
Code effected by the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1990 (the "1990 Act"),
the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, the Energy Policy Act of
1992 (the "Energy Act"), the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 (the "RRA
93"), and the Uruguay Round Agreements Act ("GATT"), existing and proposed
regulations thereunder, current administrative rulings, and court
decisions.  It is possible that legislative or administrative changes or
future court decisions may significantly modify the statements and
opinions expressed herein.  Such changes could be retroactive with respect
to the transactions prior to the date of such changes.

      Moreover, uncertainty exists concerning some of the federal income tax
aspects of the transactions being undertaken by the Partnership.  Some of
the tax positions being taken by the Partnership may be challenged by the
Internal Revenue Service (the "Service") and any such challenge could be
successful.  Thus, there can be no assurance that all of the anticipated
tax benefits of an investment in the Partnership will be realized.


                                    - 97 -
<PAGE>
      Counsel's opinion is based upon the transactions described in this
Prospectus (the "Transaction") and upon facts as they have been
represented to counsel or determined by it as of the date of the opinion. 
Any alteration of the facts may adversely affect the opinions rendered. 
It is possible, however, that some of the tax benefits will be eliminated
or deferred to future years.

      Because of the factual nature of the inquiry, and in certain cases the
lack of clear authority in the law, it is not possible to reach a judgment
as to the outcome on the merits (either favorable or unfavorable) of
certain material federal income tax issues as described more fully herein.

Summary of Conclusions

      Opinions expressed:  The following is a summary of the specific
opinions expressed by counsel with respect to Tax Considerations discussed
herein.  
TO BE FULLY UNDERSTOOD, THE COMPLETE DISCUSSION OF THESE MATTERS SET FORTH
IN THE FULL TAX OPINION IN APPENDIX D SHOULD BE READ BY EACH PROSPECTIVE
INVESTOR PARTNER.

      1.   The material federal income tax benefits in the aggregate from an
investment in the Partnership will be realized.

      2.   The Partnership will be treated as a partnership for federal income
tax purposes and not as a corporation and not as association taxable as a
corporation.  See "Partnership Status;" "Federal Taxation of
Partnerships."

      3.   To the extent the Partnership's wells are timely drilled and amounts
are timely paid, the Partners will be entitled to their pro rata share of
the Partnership's IDC paid in 1996 with respect to the Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and in 1997 with respect to
the Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership."  See
"Intangible Drilling and Development Costs Deductions."

      4.   Neither the at risk nor the adjusted basis rules will limit the
deductibility of losses generated from the Partnership.  See "Basis and At
Risk Limitations."

      5.   Additional General Partners' interests will not be considered a
passive activity within the meaning of Code Section 469 and losses
generated while such general partner interest is so held will not be
limited by the passive activity provisions.  See "Passive Loss and Credit
Limitations."

      6.   Limited Partners' interests (other than those held by Additional
General Partners who convert their interests into Limited Partners'
interests) will be considered a passive activity within the meaning of
Code Section 469 and losses generated therefrom will be limited by the
passive activity provisions.  See "Passive Loss and Credit Limitations."

      7.   The Partnership will not be terminated solely as the result of the
conversion of Partnership interests.  See "Conversion of Interests."

      8.   To the extent provided herein, the Partners' distributive shares of
Partnership tax items will be determined and allocated substantially in
accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement.  See "Partnership
Allocations."

      9.   The Partnership will not be required to register with the Service as
a tax shelter.  See "Registration as a Tax Shelter."

                                    - 98 -
<PAGE>
      No opinion expressed:  Due to the lack of authority, or the essentially
factual nature of the question, counsel expresses no opinion on the
following:

      1.   The impact of an investment in the Partnership on an Investor's
alternative minimum tax, due to the factual nature of the issue.  See
"Alternative Minimum Tax."

      2.   Whether, under Code Section 183, the losses of the Partnership will
be treated as derived from "activities not engaged in for profit," and
therefore nondeductible from other gross income, due to the inherently
factual nature of a Partner's interest and motive in engaging in the
Transaction.  See "Profit Motive."

      3.   Whether each Partner will be entitled to percentage depletion since
such a determination is dependent upon the status of the Partner as an
independent producer and on the Partner's other oil and gas production. 
Due to the inherently factual nature of such a determination, counsel is
unable to render an opinion as to the availability of percentage
depletion.  See "Depletion Deductions."

      4.   Whether any interest incurred by a Partner with respect to any
borrowings will be deductible or subject to limitations on deductibility,
due to the factual nature of the issue.  Without any assistance of the
Managing General Partner or any of its affiliates, some Partners may
choose to borrow the funds necessary to acquire a Unit and may incur
interest expense in connection with those loans.  Based upon the purely
factual nature of any such loans, counsel is unable to express an opinion
with respect to the deductibility of any interest paid or incurred
thereon.  See "Interest Deductions."

      5.   Whether the fees to be paid to the Managing General Partner and to
third parties will be deductible, due to the factual nature of the issue. 
Due to the inherently factual nature of the proper allocation of expenses
among nondeductible syndication expenses, amortizable organization
expenses, amortizable "start-up" expenditures, and currently deductible
items, and because the issues involve questions concerning both the nature
of the services performed and to be performed and the reasonableness of
amounts charged, counsel is unable to express an opinion regarding such
treatment.  See "Transaction Fees."

      General Information:  Certain matters contained herein are not
considered to address a material tax consequence and are for general
information, including the matters contained in sections dealing with gain
or loss on the sale of Units or of Property, Partnership distributions,
tax audits, penalties, and state, local, and self-employment tax.  See
"General  Tax Effects of Partnership Structure," "Gain or Loss on Sale of
Properties or Units," "Partnership Distributions," "Administrative
Matters," "Accounting Methods and Periods," "Social Security Benefits;
Self-Employment Tax," and "State and Local Tax." 

      Facts and Representations:  The opinions of counsel are also based upon
the facts described in this Prospectus and upon certain representations
made to it by the Managing General Partner for the purpose of permitting
counsel to render its opinions, including the following representations
with respect to the program:

1.  The Partnership Agreement to be entered into by and among the Managing
    General Partner and Investor Partners and any amendments thereto will
    be duly executed and will be made available to any Investor Partner
    upon written request.  The Partnership Agreement will be duly recorded

                                    - 99 -
<PAGE>
    in all places required under the West Virginia Uniform Limited
    Partnership Act (the "Act") for the due formation of the Partnership
    and for the continuation thereof in accordance with the terms of the
    Partnership Agreement.  The Partnership will at all times be operated
    in accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the
    Prospectus, and the Act.

2.  No election will be made by the Partnership, Investor Partners, or
    Managing General Partner to be excluded from the application of the 
    provisions of Subchapter K of the Code.

3.  The Partnership will own an operating mineral interest, as defined in
    the Code and in the Regulations, in all of the Drill Sites and none of
    the Partnership's revenues will be from non-working interests.

4.  The Investor Partners will not own, directly or indirectly,
    individually or in the aggregate, more than twenty percent (20%) of the
    shares of the Managing General Partner, or of any affiliate (as that
    term is defined in Code Section 1504(a) and determined by application
    of the attribution rules of Code Section 318).

5.  The Managing General Partner will be independent of the Investor
    Partners and will not be merely a "dummy" acting as an agent for the
    Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner has and will continue
    to have at all times during the existence of the Partnership a net
    worth in excess of $5,000,000 (excluding its interest in the
    Partnership or any other limited partnership).

6.  The respective amounts that will be paid to the General Partners as
    Drilling Fees, Operating Fees, and other fees will be amounts that
    would not exceed amounts that would be ordinarily paid for similar
    transactions between Persons having no affiliation and dealing with
    each other at "arms' length."

7.  The Managing General Partner will cause the Partnership to properly
    elect to deduct currently all Intangible Drilling and Development
    Costs.

8.  The Partnership will have a December 31 taxable year and will report
    its income on the accrual basis.

9.  The Drilling and Operating Agreement to be entered into by and among
    the Managing General Partner and the Partnership will be duly executed
    and will govern the drilling of the Partnership's Wells.  All
    Partnership wells will be spudded by not later than March 30, 1997 for
    Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and March 30,
    1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership."  The
    entire amount to be paid to the Managing General Partner under the
    Drilling and Operating Agreement is attributable to Intangible Drilling
    and Development Costs and does not include a profit for services
    performed or materials provided by third parties which are passed
    through at actual cost.

10. The Drilling and Operating Agreement will be duly executed and will
    govern the operation of the Partnership's Wells.

11. Based upon the Managing General Partner's review of its experience
    with its previous drilling programs for the past several years and
    upon the intended operations of the Partnership, the Managing
    General Partner believes that the sum of (i) the aggregate
    deductions, including depletion deductions, and (ii) 350 percent of

                                    - 100 -
<PAGE>
    the aggregate credits from the Partnership will not, as of the close
    of any of the first five years ending after the date on which Units
    are offered for sale, exceed two times the cash invested by the
    Partners in the Partnership as of such dates.  In that regard, the
    Managing General Partner has reviewed the economics of its similar
    oil and gas drilling programs for the past several years, and has
    represented that it has determined that none of those programs has
    resulted in a tax shelter ratio greater than two to one.  Further,
    the Managing General Partner has represented that the deductions that
    are or will be represented as potentially allowable to an investor will
    not result in any Partnership having a tax shelter ratio greater than
    two to one and believes that no person could reasonably infer from
    representations made, or to be made, in connection with the offering
    of Units that such sums as of such dates will exceed two times the
    Partners' cash investments as of such dates.

12. The Managing General Partner believes that at least 90% of the gross
    income of the Partnership will constitute income derived from the
    exploration, development, production, and/or marketing of oil and
    gas.  The Managing General Partner does not believe that any market
    will ever exist for the sale of Units.  Further, the Units will not
    be traded on an established securities market.

13. The Partnership and each Partner will have the objective of carrying
    on business for profit and dividing the gain therefrom.

14. The Managing General Partner does not anticipate the purchase of
    Units by tax-exempt investors or foreign investors.

      The opinions of counsel are also subject to all the assumptions,
qualifications, and limitations set forth in the following discussion and
in the opinion, including the assumptions that each of the Partners has
full power, authority, and legal right to enter into and perform the terms
of the Partnership Agreement and to take any and all actions thereunder in
connection with the transactions contemplated thereby.

      Each prospective Investor should be aware that, unlike a ruling from
the Service, an opinion of counsel represents only such counsel's best
judgment.  THERE CAN BE NO ASSURANCE THAT THE SERVICE WILL NOT
SUCCESSFULLY ASSERT POSITIONS WHICH ARE INCONSISTENT WITH THE OPINIONS OF
COUNSEL SET FORTH IN THIS DISCUSSION AND APPENDIX D OR IN THE TAX
REPORTING POSITIONS TAKEN BY THE PARTNERS OR THE PARTNERSHIP.  EACH
PROSPECTIVE INVESTOR SHOULD CONSULT HIS OWN TAX ADVISOR TO DETERMINE THE
EFFECT OF THE TAX ISSUES DISCUSSED HEREIN AND IN APPENDIX D ON HIS
INDIVIDUAL TAX SITUATION.

General Tax Effects of Partnership Structure

      Each Partnership will be formed as a limited partnership pursuant to
the Partnership Agreement and the laws of the State of West Virginia.

      NO TAX RULING WILL BE SOUGHT FROM THE SERVICE AS TO THE STATUS OF THE
PARTNERSHIP AS A PARTNERSHIP FOR FEDERAL INCOME TAX PURPOSES.

      -    Any tax benefits anticipated from an investment in a Partnership
           would be adversely affected or eliminated if the Partnership is
           treated as a corporation for federal income tax purposes.

      -    While counsel has opined that the Partnership will initially be
           treated as a partnership for federal tax purpose, that opinion is
           not binding on the Service.

                                    - 101 -
<PAGE>
      The applicability of the federal income tax consequences described
herein depends on the treatment of the Partnerships as partnerships for
federal income tax purposes and not as corporations and not as
associations taxable as corporations.  Any tax benefits anticipated from
an investment in a Partnership would be adversely affected or eliminated
if the Partnership is treated as a corporation for federal income tax
purposes.

      Counsel to the Partnership is of the opinion that, at the time of its
formation, each of the Partnerships will be treated as a partnership for
federal income tax purposes.  The opinion is based on the provisions of
the Partnership Agreement and applicable state law and representations
made by the Managing General Partner.  The opinion of counsel is not
binding on the Service and is based on existing law, which is to a great
extent the result of administrative and judicial interpretation.  In
addition, no assurance can be given that a Partnership will not lose
partnership status as a result of changes in the manner in which it is
operated or other facts upon which the opinion of counsel is based.

      Under the Code, a partnership is not a taxable entity and, accordingly,
incurs no federal income tax liability.  Rather, a partnership is a "pass-
through" entity which is required to file an information return with the
Service.  In general, the character of a partner's share of each item of
income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit is determined at the partnership
level.  Each partner is allocated a distributive share of such items in
accordance with the partnership agreement and is required to take such
items into account in determining the partner's income.  Each partner
includes such amounts in income for any taxable year of the partnership
ending within or with the taxable year of the partner, without regard to
whether the partner has received or will receive any cash distributions
from the Partnership.

Intangible Drilling and Development Costs Deductions

      -    Provided drilling is completed in a timely manner, investors will
           have the option of deducting their proportionate share of IDC in
           1996 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership"
           and in 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited
           Partnership" or capitalizing it and deducting it over a 60-month
           period from the date of investment.

      -    87% of Subscriptions will be utilized for IDC, which is deductible
           in the year of investment against any form of income (by Additional
           General Partners) or passive income (by Limited Partners); a one
           Unit investor in a 39.6% marginal federal income tax bracket would
           reduce his taxes payable by $6,890.

      Congress granted to the Treasury Secretary the authority to prescribe
regulations that would allow taxpayers the option of deducting, rather
than capitalizing, intangible drilling and development costs ("IDC").  The
Secretary's rules state that, in general, the option to deduct IDC applies
only to  expenditures for drilling and development items that do not have
a salvage value.

      The Prospectus provides that 87% of the Investor Partners' capital
contributions (i.e, Subscriptions net of Dealer Manager commissions,
discounts, due diligence expenses, and wholesaling costs and the
Management Fee) will be utilized for IDC, which is deductible in the year
of investment.  As a result, Additional General Partners will realize a
deduction of 87% of their investment against any form of income in the
year in which the investment is made, provided wells are spudded within

                                    - 102 -
<PAGE>
the first 90 days of the following year.  The deduction by Limited
Partners will be restricted to passive income.  Based on an 87% deduction,
a one Unit ($20,000) investor in a 39.6% marginal Federal tax bracket
would reduce taxes payable by $6,890.  The investor could also realize
additional tax savings on state income taxes in many states.

      A.   Classification of Costs

      In general, IDC consists of those costs which in and of themselves have
no salvage value.  In previous partnerships intangible drilling costs have
ranged from 64.6% to 89.9% of the investor's contributions.  While the
planned activities of the Partnership are similar in nature to those of
prior partnerships, the amount of expenditures classified as IDC could be
greater than or less than prior partnerships.  In addition, a
partnership's classification of a cost as IDC is not binding on the
government, which might reclassify an item labelled as IDC as a cost which
must be capitalized.  To the extent not deductible, such amounts will be
included in the Partnership's basis in mineral property and in the
Partners' bases of their interests in the Partnership.

      B.   Timing of Deductions

      Although the Partnership will elect to deduct IDC, each investor has an
option of deducting IDC, or capitalizing all or a part of the IDC and
amortizing it on a straight-line basis over a sixty-month period,
beginning with the taxable month in which the expenditure is made.  In
addition to the effect of this change on regular taxable income, the two
methods have different treatment under the AMT (see "Alternative Minimum
Tax").

      In order for the IDC to qualify for deduction in 1996, the wells for
Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" must be spudded
by March 30, 1997; in order for the IDC to qualify for deduction in 1997,
the wells for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership"
must be spudded by March 30, 1998; in each case certain other requirements
must be met.  Although PDC will attempt to satisfy each requirement of the
Service and judicial authority for deductibility of IDC in 1996 for
Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership (or in 1997 for
Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership"), no assurance
can be given that the Service will not successfully contend that the IDC
of a well which is not completed until 1997 for Partnerships designated
"PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" (or 1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC
1997-_ Limited Partnership") are not deductible in whole or in part until
1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" (or 1998
for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership").  Further,
to the extent drilling of the Partnership's wells does not commence by
March 30, 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" (or March 30, 1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership"), the deductibility of all or a portion of the IDC
may be deferred.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, no assurance can be given
that the Service will not challenge the current deduction of IDC because
of the prepayment being made to a related party.  If the Service were
successful with such challenge, the Partners' deductions for IDC would be
deferred to later years.

      C.   Recapture of IDC

      IDC previously deducted that is allocable to the property (directly or
through the ownership of an interest in a partnership) and which would
have been  included in the adjusted basis of the property is recaptured to
the extent of any gain realized upon the disposition of the property. 
Recently promulgated Treasury regulations provide that recapture is

                                    - 103 -<PAGE>
determined at the partner level (subject to certain anti-abuse
provisions).  Where only a portion of recapture property is disposed of,
any IDC related to the entire property is recaptured to the extent of the
gain realized on the portion of the property sold.  In the case of the
disposition of an undivided interest in a property (as opposed to the
disposition of a portion of the property), a proportionate part of the IDC
with respect to the property is treated as allocable to the transferred
undivided interest to the extent of any realized gain.

Depletion Deductions

      -    Unless they are already substantially involved in the oil and gas
           business, investors will be entitled to claim a percentage depletion
           deduction on their oil and gas income currently equal to 15% of
           gross revenue from the properties not to exceed 100% of the taxable
           income (excluding depletion) from the property or 65% of the
           taxpayer's taxable income (subject to certain adjustments).

      The owner of an economic interest in an oil and gas property is
entitled to claim the greater of percentage depletion or cost depletion
with respect to oil and gas properties which qualify for such depletion
methods.  In the case of partnerships, the depletion allowance must be
computed separately by each partner and not by the partnership.  For
properties placed in service after 1986, depletion deductions, to the
extent they reduce basis in an oil and gas property, are subject to
recapture under section 1254.

      Cost depletion for any year is determined by multiplying the number of
units (e.g., barrels of oil or Mcf of gas) sold during the year by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the cost or other basis of the mineral
interest and the denominator of which is total reserves available at the
beginning of the period.  In no event can the cost depletion exceed the
adjusted basis of the property to which it relates.

      Percentage depletion is a statutory allowance pursuant to which a
deduction currently equal to 15% of the taxpayer's gross income from each
property is allowed in any taxable year, not to exceed 100% of the
taxpayer's taxable income from the property (computed without the
allowance for depletion) with the aggregate deduction limited to 65% of
the taxpayer's taxable income for the year (computed without regard to
percentage depletion and net operating loss and capital loss carrybacks). 
The percentage depletion deduction rate will vary with the price of oil,
but the rate will not be less than 15%.  A percentage depletion deduction
that is disallowed in a year due to the 65% of taxable income limitation
may be carried forward and allowed as a deduction for the following year,
subject to the 65% limitation in that subsequent year.  Percentage
depletion deductions reduce the taxpayer's adjusted basis in the property. 
However, unlike cost depletion, deductions under percentage depletion are
not limited to the adjusted basis of the property; the percentage
depletion amount continues to be allowable as a deduction after the
adjusted basis has been reduced to zero.

      The availability of depletion, whether cost or percentage, will be
determined separately by each Partner.  Each Partner must separately keep
records of his share of the adjusted basis in an oil or gas property,
adjust such share of the adjusted basis for any depletion taken on such
property, and use such adjusted basis each year in the computation of his
cost depletion or in the computation of his gain or loss on the
disposition of such property.  These requirements may place an
administrative burden on a Partner.<PAGE>
Depreciation Deductions


      The Partnership will claim depreciation, cost recovery, and
amortization deductions with respect to its basis in Partnership Property
as permitted by the Code.  For most tangible personal property placed in
service after December 31, 1986, the "modified accelerated cost recovery
system" ("MACRS") must be used in calculating the cost recovery
deductions.  Thus, the cost of lease equipment and well equipment, such as
casing, tubing, tanks, and pumping units, and the cost of oil or gas
pipelines cannot be deducted currently but must be capitalized and
recovered under MACRS.  The cost recovery deduction for most equipment
used in domestic oil and gas exploration and production and for most of
the tangible personal property used in natural gas gathering systems is
calculated using the 200% declining balance method switching to the
straight-line method, a seven-year recovery period, and a half-year
convention.  If an accelerated depreciation method is used, a portion of
the depreciation will be a preference item for AMT purposes.

Interest Deductions

      In the Transaction, the Investor Partners will acquire their interests
by remitting cash in the amount of $20,000 per Unit to the Partnership. 
In no event will the Partnership accept notes in exchange for a
Partnership interest.  Nevertheless, without any assistance from the
Managing General Partner or any of its affiliates, some Partners may
choose to borrow the funds necessary to acquire a Unit and may incur
interest expense in connection with those loans.  Based upon the purely
factual nature of any such loans, counsel is unable to express an opinion
with respect to the deductibility of any interest paid or incurred
thereon.

Transaction Fees

      -    Partnership expenditures classified as organizational expenses, and
           start-up expenses may be amortized over periods ranging from 60
           months to the life of the property.

      -    No deduction is permitted for syndication expenses, including sales
           commissions for the purchase of Units.

      The Partnership may classify a portion of the fees to be paid to third
parties and to the Managing General Partner or to the Operator and its
affiliates (as described in the Prospectus under "Source of Funds and Use
of Proceeds") as expenses which are deductible as organizational expenses
or otherwise.  There is no assurance that the Service will allow the
deductibility of such expenses and counsel expresses no opinion with
respect to the allocation of the Fees to deductible and nondeductible
items.

      Generally, expenditures made in connection with the creation of, and
with sales of interests in, a partnership will fit within one of several
categories.

      A partnership may elect to amortize and deduct its organizational
expenses ratably over a period of not less than 60 months commencing with
the month the partnership begins business.  Examples of organizational
expenses are legal fees for services incident to the organization of the
partnership, such as negotiation and preparation of a partnership
agreement, accounting fees for services incident to the organization of
the partnership, and filing fees.

                                    - 100 -
<PAGE>
      No deduction is allowable for "syndication expenses," examples of which
include brokerage fees, registration fees, legal fees of the underwriter
or placement agent and the issuer (general partners or the partnership)
for securities advice and for advice pertaining to the adequacy of tax
disclosures in the prospectus or private placement memorandum for
securities law purposes, printing costs, and other selling or promotional
material.  These costs must be capitalized.  Payments for services
performed in connection with the acquisition of capital assets must be
amortized over the useful life of such assets.

      No deduction is allowable with respect to "start-up expenditures,"
although such expenditures may be capitalized and amortized over a period
of not less than 60 months.

      The Partnership intends to make payments to the Managing General
Partner, as described in greater detail in the Prospectus.  To be
deductible, compensation paid to a general partner must be for services
rendered by the partner other than in his capacity as a partner or for
compensation determined without regard to partnership income.  Fees which
are not deductible because they fail to meet this test may be treated as
special allocations of income to the recipient partner and thereby
decrease the net loss, or increase the net income among all partners.  If
the Service were to successfully challenge the Managing General Partner's
allocations, a Partner's taxable income could be increased, thereby
resulting in increased taxes and in liability for interest and penalties.

Basis and At Risk Limitations

      -    Partners contributing cash from 'personal funds' will not be
           limited, to the extent of cash contributed, in their deductibility
           of Partnership losses by the 'at risk' or 'adjusted basis' rules."

      A Partner's share of Partnership losses will be allowed only to the
extent of the aggregate amount with respect to which the taxpayer is "at
risk" for such activity at the close of the taxable year.  Any such loss
disallowed by the "at risk" limitation shall be treated as a deduction
allocable to the activity in the first succeeding taxable year.

      The Code provides that a taxpayer must recognize taxable income to the
extent that his "at risk" amount is reduced below zero.  This recaptured
income is limited to the sum of the loss deductions previously allowed to
the taxpayer, less any amounts previously recaptured.  A taxpayer may be
allowed a deduction for the recaptured amounts included in his taxable
income if and when he increases his amount "at risk" in a subsequent
taxable year.

      The Partners will purchase Units by tendering cash to the Partnership. 
To the extent the cash contributed constitutes the "personal funds" of the
Partners, the Partners should be considered at risk with respect to those
amounts.  To the extent the cash contributed constitutes "personal funds,"
in the opinion of counsel, neither     the at      risk rules nor the adjusted
basis rules will limit the deductibility of losses generated from the 
Partnership.  In no event, however, may a partner utilize his distributive
share of partnership loss where such share exceeds the partner's basis in
the partnership.

Passive Loss Limitations




                                    - 106 -
<PAGE>
      A.   Introduction

      The deductibility of losses generated from passive activities will be
limited for certain taxpayers.  The passive activity loss limitations
apply to individuals, estates, trusts, and personal service corporations
as well as, to a lesser extent, closely held C corporations.

      The definition of a "passive activity" generally encompasses all rental
activities as well as all activities with respect to which the taxpayer
does not "materially participate."  Notwithstanding this general rule,
however, the term "passive activity" does not include "any working
interest in any oil or gas property which the taxpayer holds directly or
through an entity which does not limit the liability of the taxpayer with
respect to such interest."  A taxpayer will be considered as materially
participating in a venture only if the taxpayer is involved in the
operations of the activity on a "regular, continuous, and substantial"
basis.  In addition, no limited partnership interest will be treated as an
interest with respect to which a taxpayer materially participates.

      A passive activity loss ("PAL") is the amount by which the aggregate
losses from all passive activities for the taxable year exceed the
aggregate income from all passive activities for such year.

      Individuals and personal service corporations will be entitled to PALs
only to the extent of their passive income whereas closely held C
corporations (other than personal service corporations) can offset PALs
against both passive and net active income, but not against portfolio
income.  In calculating passive income and loss, however, all activities
of the taxpayer are aggregated.  PALs disallowed as a result of the above
rules will be suspended and can be carried forward indefinitely to offset
future passive (or passive and active, in the case of a closely held C
corporation) income.

      Upon the disposition of an entire interest in a passive activity in a
fully taxable transaction not involving a related party, any passive loss
that was suspended by the provisions of the passive activity rules is
deductible from either passive or non-passive income.  The deduction must
be reduced, however, by the amount of income or gain realized from the
activity in previous years.

      B.   General Partner Interests

      -    General Partner Interests will not be considered as investments in
           passive activities for federal tax purposes.

      -    Additional General Partners who convert to limited partner status
           after recording a tax loss from their investment in any year will
           continue to have income treated as non-passive, but may have some or
           all of their deductions treated as passive.

      An Additional General Partner's interest in the Partnership will not be
considered a passive activity and losses generated while such general
partner interest is held will not be limited by the passive activity
provisions, unless there is partnership income or losses from non-working
interests.

      Notwithstanding this general rule, however, the economic performance
rules are applied in a different manner from that described above in
"Intangible Drilling and Development Costs Deductions."  Economic
performance under the passive loss rules is defined as economic
performance, without regard to the spudding rule.  Accordingly, if an

                                    - 107 -
<PAGE>
Additional General Partner's interest is converted to that of a limited
partner after the end of the year in which economic performance is deemed
to occur, but prior to the spudding date, any post-conversion losses will
be passive, notwithstanding the availability of such losses in a year in
which the taxpayer held the interest in an entity that did not limit his
liability.  The "spudding rule" and "spudding date" refer to the date that
drilling commences.

      If an Additional General Partner converts his interest to a Limited
Partner interest pursuant to the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the
character of a subsequently generated tax attribute will be dependent
upon, among other things, the nature of the tax attribute and whether
there arose, prior to conversion, losses to which the working interest
exception applied.

      Accordingly, any loss arising therefrom should be treated as a PAL with
the benefits thereof limited as described above.  However, if a taxpayer
has any loss from any taxable year from a working interest in any oil or
gas property that is treated as a non-passive loss, then any net income
from such property for any succeeding taxable year is to be treated as
income that is not from a passive activity.  Consequently, assuming that
a converting Additional General Partner has losses from working interests
which are treated as non-passive, income from the Partnership allocable to
the Partner after conversion would be treated as income that is not from
a passive activity.

      C.   Limited Partner Interests

      -    Income and losses of Limited Partners will be treated as "passive"
           for federal tax purposes.

      If an Investor Partner invests in the Partnership as a Limited Partner,
his distributive share of the Partnership's losses will be treated as
PALs, the availability of which will be limited to the Partner's passive
income.  If the Partner does not have sufficient passive income to utilize
the PAL, the disallowed PAL will be suspended and may be carried forward
to be deducted against passive income arising in future years.  Further,
upon the disposition of the interest to an unrelated party, in a fully
taxable transaction such suspended losses will be available, as described
above.

      Limited Partners should generally be entitled to offset their
distributive shares of passive income from the Partnerships with
deductions from other passive activities, but not portfolio income.

Conversion of Interests

      The Partnership, in the opinion of counsel, will not be terminated
solely as a result of the conversion by Additional General Partners of
their Partnership interests into limited partnership interests.  In the
event a constructive termination does occur, however, there will be a
deemed distribution of the Partnership's assets to the Partners and a
recontribution by such Partners to the Partnership.  This constructive
termination could have adverse Federal income tax consequences, described
in the opinion in Appendix D.  For a discussion of the conversion feature
of the Program, see "Terms of the Offering -- Conversion of Units by
Additional General Partners."

Alternative Minimum Tax


                                    - 108 -
<PAGE>
      -    Due to the potentially significant impact of a purchase of Units on
           an Investor's tax liability, investors should discuss the
           implications of an investment in the Partnership on their regular
           and AMT liabilities with their tax advisors prior to acquiring
           Units.

      Tax benefits associated with oil and gas exploration activities similar
to that of the Program had for several years been subject to the AMT. 
Specifically, prior to January 1, 1993, intangible drilling cost ("IDC")
was an AMT preference item to the extent that "excess IDC" exceeded 65% of
a taxpayer's net income from oil and gas properties for the year.  Excess
IDC was the amount by which the taxpayer's IDC deduction exceeded the
deduction that would have been allowed if the IDC had been capitalized and
amortized on a straight-line basis over ten years.  Percentage depletion,
to the extent it exceeded a property's basis, was also an AMT preference
item.

      For independent produces in taxable years beginning after 1992, the
Energy Policy Act repealed the treatment of percentage depletion as a
preference item for AMT purposes and reduced the AMT on expensing of IDC
by 30%.

      For corporations, other than integrated oil companies, the adjusted
current earning ("ACE") adjustments were also repealed.


Gain or Loss on Sale of Property or Units

      -    Sale or exchange of property by the Partnership or a Unit by an
           investor could result in taxable income in the year of the sale to
           the investor in excess of the value of money and property received
           from the sale.

      -    Investors who fail to report a sale or exchange of a Unit in the
           Partnership could be subject to a penalty of 5% of the aggregate
           income not reported.

      In the event some or all of the property of the Partnership is sold, or
upon sale of a Unit (including a sale under the Unit Repurchase Program),
an investor will recognize gain to the extent the amount realized exceeds
his basis in the investment.  In addition, there may be recapture of IDCs
and depletion which is treated as additional ordinary income for tax
purposes.  If the gain exceeds the amount of the recaptured income, the
investor will recognize ordinary income to the extent of the recapture and
capital gains for the balance.

      It is possible that an investor will be required to recognize ordinary
income pursuant to the recapture rules in excess of the taxable income of
the disposition transaction or in a situation where the disposition
transaction resulted in a taxable loss.  To balance the excess income, the
investor would recognize a capital loss for the difference between the
gain and the income.  Depending on an investor's particular tax situation,
some or all of this loss might be deferred to future years, resulting in
a greater tax liability in the year in which the sale was made and a
reduced future tax liability.

      Any partner who sells or exchanges interests in a partnership must
generally notify the partnership in writing within 30 days of such
transaction in accordance with Regulations and must attach a statement to
his tax return reflecting certain facts regarding the sale or exchange. 
The notice must include names, addresses, and taxpayer identification

                                    - 109 -
<PAGE>
numbers (if known) of the transferor and transferee and the date of the
exchange.  The partnership also is required to provide copies of the
information it provides to the Service to the transferor and the
transferee.

      Any investor who is required to notify the Partnership of a transfer of
his Partnership interest, and, who fails to do so, may be fined $50 for
each failure, limited to $100,000, provided no intentional disregard of
the filing requirement.  Similarly, the Partnership may be fined for
failure to report the transfer.  The partnership's penalty is $50 for each
failure, limited to $250,000, provided no intentional disregard of the
filing requirement.

      The tax consequences to an assignee purchaser of a Unit from a Partner
are not described herein.  Any assignor of a Unit should advise his
assignee to consult his own tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of
such assignment.

Partnership Distributions

      Under the Code, any increase in a partner's share of partnership
liabilities, or any increase in such partner's individual liabilities by
reason of an assumption by him of partnership liabilities is considered to
be a contribution of money by the partner to the partnership.  Similarly,
any decrease in a partner's share of partnership liabilities or any
decrease in such partner's individual liabilities by reason of the
partnership's assumption of such individual liabilities will be considered
as a distribution of money to the partner by the partnership.

      The Partners' adjusted bases in their Units will initially consist of
the cash they contribute to the Partnership.  Their bases will be
increased by their share of Partnership income and additional
contributions and decreased by their share of Partnership losses and
distributions.  To the extent that such actual or constructive
distributions are in excess of a Partner's adjusted basis in his
Partnership interest (after adjustment for contributions and his share of
income and losses of the Partnership), that excess will generally be
treated as gain from the sale of a capital asset.  In addition, gain could
be recognized to a distributee partner upon the disproportionate
distribution to a partner of unrealized receivables or substantially
appreciated inventory.  The Partnership Agreement prohibits distributions
to any Investor Partner to the extent such would create or increase a
deficit in the Partner's Capital Account.

Partnership Allocations

      The Partners' distributive shares of partnership income, gain, loss,
and deduction should be determined and allocated substantially in
accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement.

      The Service could contend that the allocations contained in the
Partnership Agreement do not have substantial economic effect or are not
in accordance with the Partners' interests in the Partnership and may seek
to reallocate these items in a manner that will increase the income or
gain or decrease the deductions allocable to a Partner.

Profit Motive

      -    Investors who enter a business without economic, nontax profit
           motive may be denied the benefits of deductions associated with the
           business to the extent they exceed the income from the business.

                                    - 110 -<PAGE>
      The existence of economic, nontax motives for entering into the
Transaction is essential if the Partners are to obtain the tax benefits
associated with an investment in the Partnership.

      Where an activity entered into by an individual is not engaged in for
profit, the individual's deductions with respect to that activity are
limited to those not dependent upon the nature of the activity (e.g.,
interest and taxes); any remaining deductions will be limited to gross
income from the activity for the year.  Should it be determined that a
Partner's activities with respect to the Transaction are "not for profit,"
the Service could disallow all or a portion of the deductions generated by
the Partnership's activities.

      The Code generally provides for a presumption that an activity is
entered into for profit where gross income from the activity exceeds the
deductions attributable to such activity for three or more of the five
consecutive taxable years ending with the taxable year in question.  At
the taxpayer's election, such presumption can relate to three or more of
the taxable years in the 5-year period beginning with the taxable year in
which the taxpayer first engages in the activity.

      Due to the inherently factual nature of a Partner's intent and motive
in engaging in the Transaction, counsel does not express an opinion as to
the ultimate resolution of this issue in the event of a challenge by the
Service.  Partners must, however, seek to make a profit from their
activities with respect to the Transaction beyond any tax benefits derived
from those activities or risk losing those tax benefits.


Administrative Matters

      Returns and Audits.  While no federal income tax is required to be paid
by an organization classified as a partnership for federal income tax
purposes, a partnership must file federal income tax information returns,
which are subject to audit by the Service.  Any such audit may lead to
adjustments, in which event the Investor Partners may be required to file
amended personal federal income tax returns.  Any such audit may also lead
to an audit of an Investor Partner's individual tax return and adjustments
to items unrelated to an investment in units.

      For purposes of reporting, audit, and assessment of additional federal
income tax, the tax treatment of "partnership items" is determined at the
partnership level.  Partnership items will include those items that the
Regulations provide are more appropriately determined at the partnership
level than the partner level.  The Service generally cannot initiate
deficiency proceedings against an individual partner with respect to
partnership items without first conducting an administrative proceeding at
the partnership level as to the correctness of the partnership's treatment
of the item.  An individual partner may not file suit for a credit or a
refund arising out of a partnership item without first filing a request
for an administrative proceeding by the Service at the partnership level. 
Individual partners are entitled to notice of such administrative
proceedings and decisions therein, except in the case of partners with
less than 1% profits interest in a partnership having more than 100
partners.  If a group of partners having an aggregate profits interest of
5% or more in such a partnership so requests, however, the Service also
must mail notice to a partner appointed by that group to receive notice. 
All partners, whether or not entitled to notice, are entitled to
participate in the administrative proceedings at the partnership level,
although the Partnership Agreement provides for waiver of certain of these

                                    - 111 -
<PAGE>
rights by the Investor Partners.  All Investor Partners, including those
not entitled to notice, may be bound by a settlement reached by the
Partnership's representative "tax matters partner", which will be
Petroleum Development Corporation.  If a proposed tax deficiency is
contested in any court by any Partner of a Partnership or by the Managing
General Partner, all Partners of that Partnership may be deemed parties to
such litigation and bound by the result reached therein.

      Consistency Requirements.  An Investor Partner must generally treat
Partnership items on his federal income tax returns consistently with the
treatment of such items on the Partnership information return unless he
files a statement with the Service identifying the inconsistency or
otherwise satisfies the requirements for waiver of the consistency
requirement.  Failure to satisfy this requirement will result in an
adjustment to conform the Investor Partner's treatment of the item with
the treatment of the item on the Partnership return.  Intentional or
negligent disregard of the consistency requirement may subject an Investor
Partner to substantial penalties.

      Compliance Provisions.  Taxpayers are subject to several penalties and
other provisions that encourage compliance with the federal income tax
laws, including an accuracy-related penalty in an amount equal to 20% of
the portion of an underpayment of tax caused by negligence, intentional
disregard of rules or regulations or any "substantial understatement" of
income tax.  A "substantial understatement" of tax is an understatement of
income tax that exceeds the greater of (a) 10% of the tax required to be
shown on the return (the correct tax), or (b) $5,000 ($10,000 in the case
of a corporation other than an S corporation or personal holding
corporation).

      Except in the case of understatements attributable to "tax shelter"
items, an item of understatement may not give rise to the penalty if (a)
there is or was "substantial authority" for the taxpayer's treatment of
the item or (b) all facts relevant to the tax treatment of the item are
disclosed on the return or on a statement attached to the return, and
there is a reasonable basis for the tax treatment of such item by the
taxpayer.  In the case of partnerships, the disclosure is to be made on
the return of the partnership.  Under the applicable Regulations, however,
an individual partner may make adequate disclosure with respect to
partnership items if certain conditions are met.

      In the case of understatements attributable to "tax shelter" items, the
substantial understatement penalty may be avoided only if the taxpayer
establishes that, in addition to having substantial authority for his
position, he reasonably believed the treatment claimed was more likely
than not the proper treatment of the item.  A "tax shelter" item is one
that arises from a partnership (or other form of investment) the principal
purpose of which is the avoidance or evasion of federal income tax.  Under
the GATT legislation, a corporation is generally held to a higher standard
to avoid the substantial understatement penalty.

      Based on the definition  of a "tax shelter" in the Regulations,
performance of previous partnerships, and the planned activities of the
Program, the Managing General Partner does not believe that the
Partnerships will qualify as "Tax Shelters" under the Code, and will not
register them as such.

Accounting Methods and Periods

      The Partnership will use the accrual method of accounting and will
select the calendar year as its taxable year.

                                    - 112 -
<PAGE>
Social Security Benefits; Self-employment Tax

      A General Partner's share of any income or loss attributable to Units
will constitute "net earnings from self-employment" for both social
security and self-employment tax purposes, while a Limited Partner's share
of such items will not constitute "net earnings from self-employment." 
Thus, no quarters of coverage or increased benefits under the Social
Security Act will be earned by Limited Partners.  If a General Partner is
receiving Social Security benefits, his taxable income attributable to his
investment in the Units must be taken into account in determining any
reduction in benefits because of "excess earnings."

State and Local Taxes

      The opinions expressed herein are limited to issues of federal income
tax law and do not address issues of state or local law.  Investors are
urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the impact of state and
local laws on an investment in the Partnership.

Individual Tax Advice Should Be Sought

      The foregoing is only a summary of the material tax considerations that
may affect an investor's decision regarding the purchase of Units.  The
tax considerations attendant to an investment in a Partnership are
complex, vary with individual circumstances, and depend in some instances
upon whether the investor acquires General Partner Interests or Limited
Partner Interests.  Each prospective Investor Partner should review such
tax consequences with his tax advisor.

                   SUMMARY OF PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

      The rights and obligations of the Partners will be governed by the
Limited Partnership Agreement (the "Partnership Agreement") in the form
attached to this Prospectus as Appendix A.  Each prospective investor,
together with his personal advisers, should carefully study the
Partnership Agreement in its entirety before submitting a subscription. 
The following statements concerning the Partnership Agreement are merely
an outline, do not purport to be complete and in no way amend or modify
the Partnership Agreement.

Responsibility of Managing General Partner

      The Managing General Partner shall have the exclusive management and 
control of all aspects of the business of the Partnership.  Sections 5.01 
and 6.01 of the Partnership Agreement.  No Investor Partner shall have any
voice in the day-to-day business operations of the Partnership.  Section
7.01.  The Managing General Partner is authorized to delegate and
subcontract its duties under the Partnership Agreement to others,
including entities related to it.  Section 5.02.

Liabilities of General Partners, Including Additional General Partners

      General Partners, including Additional General Partners, will not be
protected by limited liability for Partnership activities.  The Additional
General Partners will be jointly and severally liable for all obligations
and liabilities to creditors and claimants, whether arising out of
contract or tort, in the conduct of Partnership operations.  Section 7.12.

      The Managing General Partner, as Operator, maintains general liability
insurance.  In addition, the Managing General Partner has agreed to
indemnify each of the Additional General Partners for obligations related

                                    - 113 -
<PAGE>
to casualty and business losses which exceed available insurance coverage
and Partnership assets.  Section 7.02.

      The Additional General Partners, by execution of the Partnership
Agreement, grant to the Managing General Partner the exclusive authority
to manage the Partnership business in its sole discretion and to thereby
bind the Partnership and all Partners in its conduct of the Partnership
business.  The Additional General Partners will not be authorized to
participate in the management of the Partnership business; and the
Partnership Agreement prohibits the Additional General Partners from
acting in a manner harmful to the assets or the business of the
Partnership or to do any other act which would make it impossible to carry
on the ordinary business of the Partnership.  If an Additional General
Partner acts in contravention of the terms of the Partnership Agreement,
losses caused by his actions will be borne by such Additional General
Partner alone and such Additional General Partner may be liable to other
Partners for all damages resulting from his breach of the Partnership
Agreement.  Section 7.01.  Additional General Partners  who  choose to
assign their Units in the future may only do so as provided in the
Partnership Agreement and liability of Partners who have assigned their
Units may continue after such assignment unless a formal assumption and
release of liability is effected.  Section 7.03.

Liability of Limited Partners

      The Partnerships will be governed by the West Virginia Uniform Limited
Partnership Act under which a Limited Partner's liability for the
obligations of the partnership is limited to his Capital Contribution, his
share of Partnership assets and the return of any part of his Capital
Contribution for a period of one year after such return (or six years in
the event such return is in violation of the Agreement).  A Limited
Partner will not otherwise be liable for the obligations of the
Partnership unless, in addition to the exercise of his rights and powers
as a Limited Partner, such person takes part in the control of the
business of the Partnership.  Section 7.01.

Allocations and Distributions

      General:  Profits and losses are to be allocated and cash is to be
distributed in the manner described in the section entitled "Participation
in Costs and Revenues."  See Article III of the Partnership Agreement.

      Time of Distributions:  Cash available for distribution will be
determined and distributed by the Managing General Partner not less
frequently than quarterly.  Section 4.01.  The Managing General Partner
may, at its discretion, make distributions more frequently. 
Notwithstanding any other provision of the Partnership Agreement to the
contrary, no Partner will receive any distribution to the extent such
distribution will create or increase a deficit in that Partner's Capital
Account (as increased by his share of Partnership Minimum Gain).  Section
4.03.

      Liquidating Distributions:  Liquidating distributions will be made in
the same manner as regular distributions; however, in the event of
dissolution of the Partnership, distributions will be made only after due
provision has been made for, among other things, payment of all
Partnership debts and liabilities.  Section 9.03.





                                    - 114 -
<PAGE>
Voting Rights

      Investor Partners owning 10% or more of the then outstanding Units
entitled to vote have the right to require the Managing General Partner to
call a meeting of the Partners.  Section 7.07.

      Investor Partners will be entitled to vote with respect to Partnership
matters.  Each Unit is entitled to one vote on all matters; each
fractional Unit is entitled to that fraction of one vote equal to the
fractional interest in the Unit.  Except as otherwise provided herein or
in the Partnership Agreement, at any meeting of Investor Partners, a vote
of a majority of Units represented at such meeting, in person or by proxy,
with respect to matters considered at the meeting at which a quorum is
present will be required for approval of any such matters.  A vote of a
majority of the then outstanding Units entitled to vote will be required
to approve any of the following matters:

      (a)       The sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the
                Partnership;

      (b)       Removal of the Managing General Partner and election of a new
                managing general partner;

      (c)       Dissolution of the Partnership;

      (d)       Any non-ministerial amendment to the Partnership Agreement;

      (e)       Cancellation of contracts for services with the Managing General
                Partner or Affiliates; and

      (f)       The appointment of a liquidating trustee in the event the
                Partnership is to be dissolved by reason of the retirement,
                dissolution, liquidation, bankruptcy, death, or adjudication
                of insanity or incapacity of the last remaining General Partner.

      Additionally, the Partnership is not permitted to participate in a
Roll-Up transaction unless the Roll-Up has been approved by at least 66
2/3% in interest of Investor Partners.  Sections 5.07(m) and 7.08.  In the
event that the Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates purchase
Units in a Partnership, the Managing General Partner and/or Affiliate will
not be entitled to vote the Units so purchased.  Section 6.03.  The
Managing General Partner if it were removed by the Investor Partners may
elect to retain its interest in the Partnership as a Limited Partner in
the successor limited partnership (assuming that the Investor Partners 
determined to continue the Partnership and elected a successor managing
general partner), in which case the former Managing General Partner would
be entitled to vote its interest as a Limited Partner.  Section 7.06.

      Investor Partners have the right to review the Partnership's books and
records and list of Investor Partners at any reasonable time and have a
copy of the list of Investor Partners mailed to the requesting Investor
Partner at the latter's expense.  Investor Partners have the right to
submit proposals to the Managing General Partner for inclusion in the
voting materials for the next meeting of Investor Partners for
consideration and approval by the Investor Partners.  With respect to the
merger or consolidation of the Partnership or the sale of all or
substantially all of the Partnership's assets, Investor Partners have the
right to exercise dissenter's rights for fair appraisal of their Units in
accordance with Section 31-1-123 of the West Virginia Corporation Law. 
Sections 7.07, 7.08, and 8.01.

Retirement and Removal of the Managing General Partner

                                    - 115 -<PAGE>
      In the event that the Managing General Partner desires to withdraw from
the Partnership for whatever reason, it may do so only upon one hundred
twenty (120) days prior written notice and with the written consent of the
Investor Partners owning a majority of the then outstanding Units. 
Section 6.03. 

      In the event that the Investor Partners desire to remove the Managing
General Partner, they may do so at any time upon ninety (90) days written
notice, with the consent of the Investor Partners owning a majority of the
then outstanding Units, and upon the selection of a successor managing
general partner, within such ninety-day period, by the Investor Partners
owning a majority of the then outstanding Units.  Section 7.06.

Term and Dissolution

      The Partnership will continue for a maximum period ending December 31,
2046 unless earlier dissolved upon the occurrence of any of the following:

      (a)    the written consent of the Investor Partners owning a majority
of the then outstanding Units;

      (b)       the retirement, bankruptcy, adjudication of insanity or
incapacity, withdrawal, removal, or death (or, in the case of a corporate
managing general partner, the retirement, withdrawal, removal,
dissolution, liquidation, or bankruptcy) of a managing general partner,
unless a successor managing general partner is selected by the Partners
pursuant to the Partnership Agreement or the remaining managing general
partner, if any, continues the Partnership's business;

      (c)       the sale, forfeiture, or abandonment of all or substantially all
of the Partnership's property; or

      (d)       the occurrence of any event causing dissolution of the
Partnership under the laws of the State of West Virginia. 

Section 9.01.

Indemnification

      The Managing General Partner has agreed to indemnify each of the
Additional General Partners for obligations related to casualty losses
which exceed available insurance coverage and Partnership assets.  Section
7.02.

      If obligations incurred by the Partnership are the result of the
negligence or misconduct of an Additional General Partner, or the
contravention of the terms of the Partnership Agreement by the Additional
General Partner, then the foregoing indemnification by the Managing
General Partner will be unenforceable as to such Additional General
Partner and such Additional General Partner will be liable to all other
Partners for damages and obligations resulting therefrom.  Section 7.02.

      The Managing General Partner will be entitled to reimbursement and
indemnification for all expenditures made (including amounts paid in
settlement of claims) or losses or judgments suffered by it in the
ordinary and proper course of the Partnership's business, provided that
the Managing General Partner has determined in good faith that the course
of conduct which caused the loss or liability was in the best interests of
the Partnership, that the Managing General Partner was acting on behalf of
or performing services for the Partnership, and that such expenditures,

                                    - 116 -
<PAGE>
losses or judgments were not the result of the negligence or misconduct on
the part of the Managing General Partner.  Section 6.04.  The Managing
General Partner will have no liability to the Partnership or to any
Partner for any loss suffered by the Partnership which arises out of any
action or inaction of the Managing General Partner if the Managing General
Partner, in good faith, determined that such course of conduct was in the
best interest of the Partnership and such course of conduct did not
constitute negligence or misconduct of the Managing General Partner.  The
Managing General Partner will be indemnified by the Partnership to the
limit of the insurance proceeds and tangible net assets of the Partnership
against any losses, judgments, liabilities, expenses and amounts paid in
settlement of any claims sustained by it in connection with the
Partnership, provided that the same were not the result of negligence or
misconduct on the part of the Managing General Partner.

      Notwithstanding the above, the Managing General Partner will not be
indemnified for liabilities arising under Federal and state securities
laws unless (1) there has been a successful adjudication on the merits of
each count involving securities law violations; or (2) such claims have
been dismissed with prejudice on their merits by a court of competent
jurisdiction; or (3) a court of competent jurisdiction approves a
settlement of such claims against a particular indemnitee and finds that
indemnification of the settlement and the related costs should be made,
and the court considering the request for indemnification has been advised
of the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission and of the
position of any state securities regulatory authority in which securities
of the Partnership were offered or sold as to indemnification for
violations of securities laws; provided, however, the court need only be
advised of the positions of the securities regulatory authorities of those
states (i) which are specifically set forth in the Prospectus and (ii) in
which plaintiffs claim they were offered or sold Partnership Units.

      In any claim for indemnification for Federal or state securities laws
violations, the party seeking indemnification must place before the court
the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
Massachusetts Securities Division, and the Tennessee Securities Division or
other respective state securities division with respect to the issue of
indemnification for securities laws violations.

      The Partnership will not incur the cost of the portion of any insurance
which insures any party against any liability as to which such party is
herein prohibited from being indemnified.  Section 6.04.
 
Reports to Partners

      The Managing General Partner will furnish to the Investor Partners of
each Partnership certain semi-annual and annual reports which will contain
financial statements (including a balance sheet and statements of income,
Partners' equity and cash flows), which statements at fiscal year end will
be audited by an independent accounting firm and will include a
reconciliation of such statements with information provided to the
Investor Partners for Federal income tax purposes.  Financial statements
furnished in a Partnership's semi-annual reports will not be audited. 
Semi-annually, all Investor Partners will also receive a summary
itemization of the transactions between the Managing General Partner or
any Affiliate thereof and the Partnership showing all items of
compensation received by the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates. 
Annually beginning with the fiscal year ended December 31, 1996 with
respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and
December 31, 1997 with respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_

                                    - 117 -
<PAGE>
Limited Partnership," oil and gas reserve estimates prepared by an
independent petroleum engineer will also be furnished to the Investor
Partners.  Annual reports will be provided to the Investor Partners within
120 days after the close of each Partnership fiscal year, and semi-annual
reports will be provided within 75 days after the close of the first six
months of each Partnership fiscal year.  In addition, the Investor
Partners will receive on a monthly basis while the Partnership is
participating in the drilling and completion activities of a Program,
reports containing a description of the Partnership's acquisition of
interests in Prospects, including farmins and farmouts, and the drilling,
completion and abandonment of wells thereon.  All Investor Partners will
receive a report containing information necessary for the preparation of
their Federal income tax returns and any required state income tax returns
by March 15 of each calendar year.  Investor Partners will also receive in
such monthly reports a summary of the status of wells drilled by the
Partnership, the amount of oil  or gas from each well and the drilling
schedule for proposed wells, if known.  The Managing General Partner may
provide such other reports and financial statements as it deems necessary
or desirable.  Section 8.02.

Power of Attorney

      Each Partner will grant to the Managing General Partner a power of
attorney to execute certain documents deemed by the Managing General
Partner to be necessary or convenient to the Partnership's business or
required in connection with the qualification and continuance of the
Partnership.  Section 10.01.

Other Provisions

      Other provisions of the Partnership Agreement are summarized in this
Prospectus under the headings "Terms of the Offering," "Source of Funds
and Use of Proceeds," "Participation in Costs and Revenues," "Management,"
"Fiduciary Responsibility of the Managing General Partner," and
"Transferability of Units." The attention of prospective investors is
directed to these sections.

                    TRANSFERABILITY OF UNITS

      -    The sale of Units by investors is limited; no market for the Units
           will develop.

      -    Purchasers of Units from investors must satisfy the suitability
           requirements of this offering and as imposed by law.

      No market for the Units will develop.  An investment in the
Partnerships should be considered an illiquid investment.  Investors may
not be able to sell their Units.  In addition, as a basis of counsel's
opinion that the Partnerships will not be treated as "publicly traded
partnerships," the Managing General Partner has represented that the Units
will not be traded on an established securities market or the substantial
equivalent thereof.

      While Units of the Partnership are transferable, assignability of the
Units is limited, requiring among other things the consent of the Managing
General Partner.  Section 7.03.  Transfers of fractional Units are
prohibited, unless the Investor Partner owns less than a whole Unit, in
which case his entire fractional interest must be transferred.  Units may
be assigned only to a person otherwise qualified to become an Investor
Partner, including the satisfaction of any relevant suitability

                                    - 118 -
<PAGE>
requirements, as imposed by law or the Partnership.  In no event may any
assignment be made which, in the opinion of counsel to the Partnership,
would result in the Partnership being considered to have been terminated
for purposes of Section 708 of the Code, unless the Managing General
Partner consents to such an assignment, or which, in the opinion of
counsel to the Partnership, would result in the Partnership being treated
as a publicly traded partnership, or which, in the opinion of counsel to
the Partnership, may not be effected without registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or would result in the violation of
any applicable state securities laws.  A substituted Additional General
Partner will have the same rights and responsibilities, including
unlimited liability, in the Partnership as every other Additional General
Partner.  Upon receipt of notice of a purported transfer or assignment of
a Unit of general partnership interest, the Managing General Partner,
after having determined that the purported transferee satisfies the
suitability standards of an Additional General Partner and other
conditions established by the Program, will promptly notify the purported
transferee of the Partnership's consent to the transfer and will include
with the notice a copy of the Partnership Agreement, together with a
signature page.  In such notification, the Managing General Partner will
advise the transferee that he will have the same rights and
responsibilities, including unlimited liability, as every other Additional
General Partner and that he will not become a Partner of record until he
returns the executed signature page to the Partnership.  A Partnership
will not be required to recognize any assignment until the instrument of
assignment has been delivered to the Managing General Partner.  The
assignee of such interests has certain rights of ownership but may become
a substituted Investor Partner and thus be entitled to all of the rights
of an Additional General Partner or Limited Partner only upon meeting
certain conditions, including (i) obtaining the consent of the Managing
General Partner to such substitution, (ii) paying all costs and expenses
incurred in connection with such substitution, (iii) making certain
representations to the Managing General Partner and (iv) executing
appropriate documents to evidence its agreement to be bound by all of the
terms and provisions of the applicable Partnership Agreement.

      Conversion of Units by Additional General Partners.  Upon written
notice to the Managing General Partner, Additional General Partners will
have the right to convert their interests into limited partnership
interests and thereafter become Limited Partners of the Partnership.  See
"Terms of the Offering -- Conversion of Units by Additional General
Partners."  Moreover, upon completion of drilling of a particular
Partnership, the Managing General Partner will convert all Units of
general partnership interest of that Partnership into Units of limited
partnership interest of that Partnership.

      Unit Repurchase Program.  Beginning with the third anniversary of the
date of the first cash distribution of the Partnership, Partners may
tender their Units to the Managing General Partner for repurchase, subject
to certain conditions.  See "Terms of the Offering -- Unit Repurchase
Program."

                    PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

      -    An affiliate of the Managing General Partner is dealer manager of
           the offering.

      -    Sales will be made on a "minimum-maximum best efforts" basis through
           NASD-licensed broker-dealers.



                                    - 119 -
<PAGE>
      -    Broker-dealers will receive an amount equal to 10 1/2% of the
           subscription proceeds as sales commissions, expenses, and
           wholesaling fees.

      -    Purchase of Units by the Managing General Partner and/or Affiliates
           may allow the offering to satisfy the minimum sales requirements and
           thereby allow the offering to close and a partnership to be funded.

      Units of preformation limited and general partnership interest are
being offered for sale through PDC Securities Incorporated, the Dealer
Manager, an Affiliate of the Managing General Partner, as principal
distributor, and through NASD-licensed broker-dealers on a "minimum-
maximum best efforts" basis for each Partnership, to a select group of
investors who meet the suitability standards set forth under "Terms of the
Offering -- Investor Suitability."  Units will not be sold to tax-exempt
investors or to foreign investors.  "Minimum-maximum best efforts" means
(1) that the various broker-dealers which will sell the Units (a) will not
be obligated to sell or to purchase any amount of Units but (b) will be
obligated to make a reasonable and diligent effort (that is, their "best
efforts") to sell as many Units as possible and (2) that the offering will
not close unless the minimum number of Units (50 Units aggregating $1
million   ; 75 Units aggregating $1.5 million with respect to PDC 1996-D
Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership    ) is sold within
the offering period.  The term "maximum" refers to the maximum proceeds ($10
million   ; $15 million with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC
1997-D Limited Partnership    ) that can be raised with respect to any
Partnership.

      The Dealer Manager, an NASD member, will receive a sales commission
equal to 8% of the Investor Partners' Subscriptions and reimbursement of
due diligence expenses, marketing support fees, and other compensation
equal to 2% of the Investor Partners' Subscriptions, and wholesaling fees
equal to 0.5% of the Investor Partners' Subscriptions, for an aggregate of
$5,250,000 ($105,000 if the minimum number of 50 Units is sold), which the
Dealer Manager may reallow, in whole or in part, to NASD-licensed broker-
dealers for sale of the Units.  The Dealer Manager will not reallow the
wholesaling fees.  In no event will the total compensation paid to NASD
members execeed 10% of Subscriptions (compromised of 8% in sales commissions,
0.5% in wholesaling fees, and 1.5% in marketing support fees and other
compensation) and 0.5% of Subscriptions for reimbursement of bona fide due
diligence expenses.  In no event will such fees exceed in the aggregate 10
1/2% of the total Investor Partners' Subscriptions.  Any such commissions
and other remuneration will be paid in cash solely on the amount of
initial Subscriptions and only as permitted under Federal and state
securities laws and applicable rules and regulations.  As provided in the
soliciting dealers agreements between PDC Securities Incorporated and the
various soliciting dealers, the Managing General Partner, prior to the
time that $1 million or more of subscription funds have been received and
cleared from subscribers that the Managing General Partner deems suitable
to be Investor Partners in the Partnership in which Units are then being
offered, may advance to the various NASD-licensed broker-dealers from the
Managing General Partner's own funds the sales commissions and due
diligence expenses which would otherwise be payable in connection with
subscription funds received and cleared from subscribers that the Managing
General Partner deems suitable to be Investor Partners prior to the close
and funding of the Partnership.  In the event that the minimum sale of 50
Units has not occurred as of such time as the particular offering
terminates or the Managing General Partner determines not to organize and
fund the Partnership for any reason, such broker-dealers which have been
advanced commissions and due diligence expenses by the Managing General

                                    - 120 -
<PAGE>
Partner with respect to the sale of Units in that Partnership are required
by the soliciting-dealers agreements to return such commissions and due
diligence expenses to the Managing General Partner promptly.

      No sales commissions will be paid on sales of Units to officers,
directors, employees, or registered representatives of a Soliciting Dealer
if such Soliciting Dealer, in its discretion, has elected to waive such
sales commissions.  Any Units so purchased will be held for investment and
not for resale.

      The Managing General Partner, the Dealer Manager, and soliciting
dealers have agreed to indemnify one another against certain civil
liabilities, including liability under the Securities Act of 1933, as
amended.  Members of the selling group may be deemed to be "underwriters"
as defined under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and their
commissions and other payments may be deemed to be underwriting
compensation.
 
      The Dealer Manager may offer the Units and receive commissions in
connection with the sale of Units only in those states in which it is
lawfully qualified to do so.

      The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may elect to purchase
Units in the offering on the same terms and conditions as other investors,
net of commissions.  The purchase of Units by the Managing General Partner
and/or its Affiliates may have the effect of allowing the offering to be
subscribed to the minimum, thereby satisfying an express condition of the
offering, and thus allow the offering to close.  The Managing General
Partner and/or its Affiliates will not purchase more than 10% of the Units
subscribed by the Investor Partners in any Partnership.  Additionally, not
more than $50,000 of Units purchased by the Managing General Partner and
Affiliates are permitted to be applied to satisfying the $1 million
minimum requirement.  Any Units purchased by the Managing General Partner
and/or its Affiliates will be held for investment and not for resale.

                    SALES LITERATURE

      In connection with the offering, the NASD-registered broker-dealers may
utilize various sales literature which discusses certain aspects of the
Program, namely, a Program highlight information piece which will
constitute the Prospectus summary ("Program Summary" in bullet format), an
introduction to the Program ("Flip Chart/Slide Presentation"), and
prospect letters ("Broker-Dealer Guide").  The Program may also utilize a
Program general summary piece ("Program Summary" in text format) and a
sheet presenting information regarding comparative investment deductions
("Investment Deductions").  Such sales material will not contain any
material information which is not also set forth in the Prospectus.  The
offering of Units will be made only by means of this Prospectus.

                    LEGAL OPINIONS

      The validity of the Units offered hereby and certain Federal income tax
matters discussed under "Tax Considerations" and in the tax opinion set
forth in Appendix D to the Prospectus have been passed upon by Metzger,
Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     , 1275 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.  20005.

                    EXPERTS

      The Partnership reserve and future net revenues information which has
been presented under "Prior Activities -- Partnership Proved Reserves and
Future Net Revenues" has been prepared by Wright & Company, Inc.,
Brentwood, Tennessee, independent petroleum consultants.  

                                    - 121 -<PAGE>
      The consolidated balance sheets of Petroleum Development Corporation
and subsidiaries as of     March 31, 1996 and     December 31, 1995         
included herein and in the Registration Statement have been included herein
and in the Registration Statement in reliance upon the reports of KPMG Peat
Marwick LLP, independent certified public accountants, appearing elsewhere
herein, and upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and
auditing.

                    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

      A Registration Statement on Form S-1    (Reg. No. 33-63635)     with
respect to the Units offered hereby has been filed on behalf of the Partnerships
with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Washington, D.C.  20549, under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended.  This Prospectus does not contain all
of the information set forth in the Registration Statement, certain
portions of which have been omitted pursuant to the rules and regulations
of the Securities and Exchange Commission.  Reference is made to such
Registration Statement, including exhibits, for further information. 
Reference is hereby made to the copy of documents filed as exhibits to the
Registration Statement for full statements of the provisions thereof, and
each such statement in this Prospectus is qualified in all respects by
this reference.  Copies of any materials filed as a part of the
Registration Statement may be obtained from the Securities and Exchange
Commission by payment of the requisite fees therefor or may be examined in
the offices of the Commission without charge.  The delivery of this
Prospectus at any time does not imply that the information contained
herein is correct as of any time subsequent to the date hereof.

                    GLOSSARY OF TERMS

      The following terms used in this Prospectus shall (unless the context
otherwise requires) have the following respective meanings:

Act:  The West Virginia Uniform Limited Partnership Act.

Additional General Partners:  Those Investor Partners who purchase Units
as additional general partners, and their transferees and assigns.

Administrative Costs: All customary and routine expenses incurred by the
Managing General Partner for the conduct of program administration,
including legal, finance, accounting, secretarial, travel, office rent,
telephone, data processing and other items of a similar nature.

Affiliate:  An affiliate of a specified person means (a) any person
directly or indirectly owning, controlling, or holding with power to vote
10 percent or more of the outstanding voting securities of such specified
person; (b) any person 10 percent or more of whose outstanding voting
securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled, or held with
power to vote, by such specified person; (c) any person directly or
indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with such
specified person; (d) any officer, director, trustee or partner of such
specified person; and (e) if such specified person is an officer,
director, trustee or partner, any person for which such person acts in any
such capacity.

Assessment:  Additional amounts of capital which may be mandatorily
required of or paid voluntarily by an Investor Partner beyond his
Subscription commitment.

Benson Formation:  A late Devonian Age rock unit generally found 4,000 to
4,500 feet below the surface in the prospect area.

                                    - 122 -<PAGE>
Capital Accounts:  The accounts to be maintained for each Partner on the
books and records of the Partnership pursuant to Section 3.01 of the
Partnership Agreement.

Capital Contribution:  With respect to each Investor Partner, the total
investment, including the original investment, assessments and amounts
reinvested, by such Investor Partner to the capital of the Partnership
pursuant to Section 2.02 of the Partnership Agreement and, with respect to
the Managing General Partner and Initial Limited Partner, the total
investment, including the original investment, assessments and amounts
reinvested, to the capital of the Partnership pursuant to Section 2.01 of
the Partnership Agreement.

Capital Expenditures:  Those costs associated with property acquisition
and the drilling and completion of oil and gas wells which are generally
accepted as capital expenditures pursuant to the provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code.

Carried Interest:   An equity interest in a program issued to a person
without consideration, in the form of cash or tangible property, in an
amount proportionately equivalent to that received from the participants.

Code:  The Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

Cost:  When used with respect to the sale of property to the Partnership,
means (a) the sum of the prices paid by the seller to an unaffiliated
person for such property, including bonuses; (b) title insurance or
examination costs, brokers' commissions, filing fees, recording costs,
transfer taxes, if any, and like charges in connection with the
acquisition of such property; (c) a pro rata portion of the seller's
actual necessary and reasonable expenses for seismic and geophysical
services; and (d) rentals and ad valorem taxes paid by the seller with
respect to such property to the date of its transfer to the buyer,
interest and points actually incurred on funds used to acquire or maintain
such property, and such portion of the seller's reasonable, necessary and
actual expenses for geological, engineering, drafting, accounting, legal
and other like services allocated to the property cost in conformity with
generally accepted accounting principles and industry standards, except
for expenses in connection with the past drilling of wells which are not
producers of sufficient quantities of oil or gas to make commercially
reasonable their continued operations, and provided that the expenses
enumerated in this subsection (d) hereof shall have been incurred not more
than 36 months prior to the purchase by the Partnership; provided that
such period may be extended, at the discretion of the state securities
administrator, upon proper justification.  When used with respect to
services, "cost" means the reasonable, necessary and actual expense
incurred by the seller on behalf of the Partnership in providing such
services, determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles.  As used elsewhere, "cost" means the price paid by the seller
in an arm's-length transaction.

Dealer Manager:  PDC Securities Incorporated, an affiliate of the Managing
General Partner.

Development Well:  A well drilled within the proved area of an oil or gas
reservoir to the depth of a stratigraphic horizon known to be productive.

Devonian Shale:  Shales deposited during the Paleozoic Devonian Period as
defined in Section 272.103(e) of the Natural Gas Policy Act of 1978.


                                    - 123 -
<PAGE>
Direct Costs:   All actual and necessary costs directly incurred for the
benefit of the Partnership and generally attributable to the goods and
services provided to the Partnership by parties other than the Managing
Limited Partner or its affiliates.  Direct costs shall not include any
cost otherwise classified as organization and offering expenses,
administrative costs, operating costs or property costs.  Direct costs may
include the cost of services provided by the Managing General Partner or
its affiliates if such services are provided pursuant to written contracts
and in compliance with Section 5.07(e) of the Partnership Agreement.

Distributable Cash:  Cash remaining for distribution to the Managing
General Partner and the Investor Partners after the payment of all
Partnership obligations, including debt service and the establishment of
contingency reserves for anticipated future costs as determined by the
Managing General Partner.

Drilling and Completion Costs:  All costs, excluding Operating Costs, of
drilling, completing, testing, equipping and bringing a well into
production or plugging and abandoning it, including all labor and other
construction and installation costs incident thereto, location and surface
damages, cementing, drilling mud and chemicals, drillstem tests and core
analysis, engineering and well site geological expenses, electric logs,
costs of plugging back, deepening, rework operations, repairing or
performing remedial work of any type, costs of plugging and abandoning any
well participated in by the Partnership, and reimbursements and
compensation to well operators, including charges paid to the Managing
General Partner as unit operator during the drilling and completion phase
of a well, plus the cost of the gathering systems and of acquiring
leasehold interests.

Dry Hole:  Any well abandoned without having produced oil or gas in
commercial quantities.

Escrow Agent:  PNC Bank, N.A., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, or its successor.

Exploratory Well:  A well drilled to find commercially productive
hydrocarbons in an unproved area, to find a new commercially productive
horizon in a field previously found to be productive of hydrocarbons at
another horizon, or to significantly extend a known prospect.

Farmout:  An agreement whereby the owner of a leasehold or Working
Interest agrees to assign an interest in certain specific acreage to the
assignees, retaining an interest such as an Overriding Royalty Interest,
an oil and gas payment, offset acreage or other type of interest, subject
to the drilling of one or more specific wells or other performance as a
condition of the assignment.

Horizon:  A zone of a particular formation; that part of a formation of
sufficient porosity and permeability to form a petroleum reservoir.

IDC:  Intangible drilling and development costs.

Independent Expert:  A person with no material relationship to the
Managing General Partner who is qualified and who is in the business of
rendering opinions regarding the value of oil and gas properties based
upon the evaluation of all pertinent economic, financial, geologic and
engineering information available to the Managing General Partner.

Initial Limited Partner:  Steven R. Williams or any successor to his
interest.


                                    - 124 -
<PAGE>
Investor Partner:  Any investor participating in the Partnership as an
Additional General Partner or a Limited Partner, but excluding the
Managing General Partner and Initial Limited Partner.

Landowners' Royalty Interest:  An interest in production, or the proceeds
therefrom, to be received free and clear of all costs of development,
operation, or maintenance, reserved by a landowner upon the creation of an
oil and gas lease.

Lease:  Full or partial interests in:  (i) undeveloped oil and gas leases;
(ii) oil and gas mineral rights; (iii) licenses; (iv) concessions; (v)
contracts; (vi) fee rights; or (vii) other rights authorizing the owner
thereof to drill for, reduce to possession and produce oil and gas.

Limited Partners:  Those Investor Partners who purchase Units as Limited
Partners, transferees or assignees who become Limited Partners, or
Additional General Partners who convert their interests to limited
partnership interests pursuant to the provisions of the Partnership
Agreement.

Loss:  The excess of the Partnership's losses and deductions over the
Partnership's income and gains, computed in accordance with the provisions
of the Federal income tax laws.

Management Fee:  The fee to which the Managing General Partner is entitled
pursuant to Section 6.06 of the Partnership Agreement.

Managing General Partner:  Petroleum Development Corporation or its
successors.

Mcf:  One thousand cubic feet of natural gas measured at the standard
temperature of 60 degrees Fahrenheit and pressure of 14.65 psi.

Net Subscriptions:  An amount equal to total Subscriptions of the Investor
Partners less the amount of Organization and Offering Costs of the
Partnership.

Net Well:  The sum of fractional Working Interests owned and drilled by
the Partnership.

Non-capital Expenditures:  Those expenditures associated with property
acquisition and the drilling and completion of oil and gas wells that
under present law are generally accepted as fully deductible currently for
federal income tax purposes.

Offering Termination Date:  December 31, 1996 with respect to Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and December 31, 1997 with
respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" or
such earlier date as the Managing General Partner, in its sole and
absolute discretion, shall select.

Oil and Gas Interest:  Any oil or gas royalty or lease, or fractional
interest therein, or certificate of interest or participation or
investment contract relative to such royalties, leases or fractional
interests, or any other interest or right which permits the exploration
of, drilling for, or production of oil and gas or other related
hydrocarbons or the receipt of such production or the proceeds thereof.

Operating Costs:  Expenditures made and costs incurred in producing and
marketing oil or gas from completed wells, including, in addition to
labor, fuel, repairs, hauling, materials, supplies, utility charges and

                                    - 125 -
<PAGE>
other costs incident to or therefrom, ad valorem and severance taxes,
insurance and casualty loss expense, and compensation to well operators or
others for services rendered in conducting such operations.

Organization and Offering Costs:  All costs of organizing and selling the
offering including, but not limited to, total underwriting and brokerage
discounts and commissions (including fees of the underwriters' attorneys),
expenses for printing, engraving, mailing, salaries of employees while
engaged in sales activity, charges of transfer agents, registrars,
trustees, escrow holders, depositaries, engineers and other experts,
expenses of qualification of the sale of the securities under federal and
state law, including taxes and fees, accountants' and attorneys' fees and
other frontend fees.

Overriding Royalty Interest:  An interest in the oil and gas produced
pursuant to a specified oil and gas lease or leases, or the proceeds from
the sale thereof, carved out of the working interest, to be received free
and clear of all costs of development, operation, or maintenance.

Participant:  The purchaser of a Unit in the Program.

Partners:  The Managing General Partner, the Additional General Partners
other than the Managing General Partner, and the Limited Partners. 
Reference to a "Partner" shall mean any one of the Partners.

Partnership or Partnerships:  One or all of the limited partnerships to be
formed in the PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program comprised of a series of up
to eight limited partnerships to be designated as the PDC 1996-A Limited
Partnership, the PDC 1996-B Limited Partnership, the PDC 1996-C Limited 
Partnership, PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-A Limited
Partnership, PDC 1997-B Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-C Limited
Partnership, and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership.  The Partnerships will be
governed by the West Virginia Uniform Limited Partnership Act.  Together
the Partnerships, for purposes of this offering, are referred to as the
PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program or sometimes as the Program.

Partnership Agreement:  The Limited Partnership Agreement as it may be
amended from time to time, the form of which is attached to the Prospectus
as Appendix A.

Partnership Minimum Gain:  Partnership Minimum Gain as defined in Treas.
Reg. Section 1.704-2(d)(1).

PDC:  Petroleum Development Corporation.

Profit:  The excess of the Partnership's income and gains over the
Partnership's losses and deductions, computed in accordance with the
provisions of the Federal income tax laws.

Program:  One or more limited partnerships formed, or to be formed, for
the primary purpose of exploring oil or gas.  Herein, PDC 1996-1997
Drilling Program.

Prospect:  A contiguous oil and gas leasehold estate, or lesser interest
therein, upon which drilling operations may be conducted.  In general, a
Prospect is an area in which a Partnership owns or intends to own one or
more oil and gas interests, which is geographically defined on the basis
of geological data by the Managing General Partner and which is reasonably
anticipated by the Managing General Partner to contain at least one
reservoir.  An area covering lands which are believed by the Managing
General Partner to contain subsurface structural or stratigraphic

                                    - 126 -
<PAGE>
conditions making it susceptible to the accumulations of hydrocarbons in
commercially productive quantities at one or more horizons.  The area,
which may be different for different horizons, shall be designated by the
Managing General Partner in writing prior to the conduct of program
operations and shall be enlarged or contracted from time to time on the
basis of subsequently acquired information to define the anticipated
limits of the associated hydrocarbon reserves and to include all acreage
encompassed therein.  A "prospect" with respect to a particular horizon
may be limited to the minimum area permitted by state law or local
practice, whichever is applicable, to protect against drainage from
adjacent wells if the well to be drilled by the Partnership is to a
horizon containing proved reserves.

Prospectus:  The Partnership's Prospectus, including a preliminary
prospectus, of which the Partnership Agreement is a part, pursuant to
which the Units are being offered and sold.

Proved Developed Oil and Gas Reserves.  Proved developed oil and gas
reserves are reserves that can be expected to be recovered through
existing wells with existing equipment and operating methods.  Additional
oil and gas expected to be obtained through the application of fluid
injection or other improved recovery techniques for supplementing the
natural forces and mechanisms of primary recovery should be included as
"proved developed reserves" only after testing by a pilot project or after
the operation of an installed program has confirmed through production
response that increased recovery will be achieved.

Proved Oil and Gas Reserves:  Proved oil and gas reserves are the
estimated quantities of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids
which geological and engineering data demonstrate with reasonable
certainty to be recoverable in future years from known reservoirs under
existing economic and operating conditions, i.e., prices and costs as of
the date the estimate is made.  Prices include consideration of changes in
existing prices provided only by contractual arrangements, but not on
escalations based upon future conditions.

      (i)       Reservoirs are considered proved if economic producibility is
                supported by either actual production or conclusive formation
                test.  The area of a reservoir considered proved includes (A)
                that portion delineated by drilling and defined by gas-oil 
                and/or oil-water contacts, if any, and (B) the immediately 
                adjoining portions not yet drilled, but which can be
                reasonably judged as economically productive on the basis of 
                available geological and engineering data.  In the absence of
                information on fluid contacts, the lowest known structural 
                occurrence of hydrocarbons controls the lower proved limit of
                the reservoir.

      (ii)      Reserves which can be produced economically through application
                of improved recovery techniques (such as fluid injection) are
                included in the "proved" classification when successful testing
                by a pilot project, or the operation of an installed program in
                the reservoir, provides support for the engineering analysis on
                which the project or program was based.

      (iii)     Estimates or proved reserves do not include the following:  (A)
                oil that may become available from known reservoirs but is
                classified separately as "indicated additional reserves; (B)
                crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids, the recovery of
                which is subject to reasonable doubt because of uncertainty as
                to geology, reservoir characteristics, or economic factors; (C)

                                    - 127 -
<PAGE>
                crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids, that may occur
                in undrilled prospects; and (D) crude oil, natural gas, and
                natural gas liquids, that may be recovered from oil shales, 
                coal, gilsonite and other such sources.

Proved Undeveloped Reserves.  Proved undeveloped oil and gas reserves are
reserves that are expected to be recovered from new wells on undrilled
acreage, or from existing wells where a relatively major expenditure is
required for recompletion.  Reserves on undrilled acreage shall be limited
to those drilling units offsetting productive units that are reasonably
certain of production when drilled.  Proved reserves for other undrilled
units can be claimed only where it can be demonstrated with certainty that
there is continuity of production from the existing productive formation. 
Under no circumstances should estimates for proved undeveloped reserves be
attributable to any acreage for which an application of fluid injection or
other improved recovery technique is contemplated, unless such techniques
have been proved effective by actual tests in the area and in the same
reservoir.

Reservoir:  A separate structural or stratigraphic trap containing an
accumulation of oil or gas.

Roll-Up:  A transaction involving the acquisition, merger, conversion, or
consolidation, either directly or indirectly, of the Partnership and the
issuance of securities of a roll-up entity.  Such term does not include:

(a)    a transaction involving securities of the Partnership that have been
       listed for at least 12 months on a national exchange or traded
       through the National Association of Securities Dealers Automated
       Quotation National Market System; or

(b)    a transaction involving the conversion to corporate, trust or
       association form of only the Partnership if, as a consequence of the
       transaction, there will be no significant adverse change in any of
       the following:

      (1)   voting rights;

      (2)   the term of existence of the Partnership;

      (3)   sponsor compensation; or

      (4)   the Partnership's investment objectives.

Roll-Up Entity:  A partnership, trust, corporation or other entity that
would be created or survive after the successful completion of a proposed
roll-up transaction.

Royalty:  A fractional undivided interest in the production of oil and gas
wells, or the proceeds therefrom to be received free and clear of all
costs of development, operations or maintenance.  Royalties may be
reserved by landowners upon the creation of an oil and gas lease
("landowner's royalty") or subsequently carved out of a working interest
("overriding royalty"). 

Securities Act:  Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

Sponsor:  Any person directly or indirectly instrumental in organizing,
wholly or in part, a program or any person who will manage or is entitled
to manage or participate in the management or control of a program. 
"Sponsor" includes the managing and controlling general partner(s) and any
other person who actually controls or selects the person who controls 25%

                                    - 128 -<PAGE>
or more of the exploratory, developmental or producing activities of the
Partnership, or any segment thereof, even if that person has not entered
into a contract at the time of formation of the Partnership.  "Sponsor"
does not include wholly independent third parties such as attorneys,
accountants, and underwriters whose only compensation is for professional
services rendered in connection with the offering of units.  Whenever the
context of these guidelines so requires, the term "sponsor" shall be
deemed to include its affiliates.

Spudding Rule and Spudding Date:  The date that drilling commences.

Subscriptions:  The Subscription Agreement(s) or the amount indicated on
the Subscriptions Agreements that the Additional General Partners and the
Limited Partners have agreed to pay to a Partnership.

Tangible Costs:  Those costs which are generally accepted as capital
expenditures pursuant to the provisions of the Code.

Treas. Reg.:  A regulation promulgated by the Treasury Department under
Title 26 of the United States Code.

Unit:  An undivided interest of the Investor Partners in the aggregate
interest in the capital and profits of the Partnership.

Well Head Gas Price:  The price paid by a gas purchaser for gas produced
from Partnership wells excluding any tax reimbursements or transportation
allowances.

   
Wholesaling Fee: A fee paid to the representative of teh Dealer Manager
who helps introduce and explain the Program to registered representatives
with firms executing a selling agreement with the Dealer Manager for the
Program.    
 

Working Interest:  An interest in an oil and gas leasehold which is
subject to some portion of the costs of development, operation, or
maintenance.























                                    - 129 -<PAGE>






















                            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
                            AND SUBSIDIARIES


                            Consolidated Balance Sheets

                            March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

                            (With Independent Auditors' Report Thereon)<PAGE>










                         Independent Auditors' Report













The Stockholders and Board of Directors
Petroleum Development Corporation:


We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of Petroleum
Development Corporation and subsidiaries as of March 31, 1996 and December 31,
1995.  These consolidated statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated
financial statements based on our audits.

We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to
obtain reasonable assurance about whether the balance sheets are free of
material misstatement.  An audit of a balance sheet includes examining, on a
test basis, evidence supporting the amounts and disclosures in that balance
sheet.  An audit of a balance sheet also includes assessing the accounting
principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well as 
evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  We believe that our
audits of the balance sheets provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion, the consolidated balance sheets referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Petroleum 
Development Corporation and subsidiaries as of March 31, 1996 and December 31, 
1995, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles. 




                                                    KPMG PEAT MARWICK LLP     




Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
May 16, 1996
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                        Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995



<TABLE>
  <S>                                           <S>            <S>
                                               1996          1995  

          Assets

Current assets:
  Cash and cash equivalents                $ 5,668,000  10,053,600 
  Notes and accounts receivable (note 2)     2,595,500   2,016,600 
  Inventories                                  217,700     217,900 
  Prepaid expenses                             746,300     868,800 

                Total current assets         9,227,500  13,156,900 


Properties and equipment (notes 1 and 3):
  Oil and gas properties (successful
   efforts accounting method)               38,030,800  37,992,000 
  Pipelines                                  6,917,800   6,851,900 
  Transportation and other equipment         2,536,400   2,546,900 
  Land and buildings                           849,200     849,200 

                                            48,334,200  48,240,000 

  Less accumulated depreciation,
   depletion and amortization               21,711,500  21,127,100 

                                            26,622,700  27,112,900 

Other assets (note 2)                          495,100     350,300 

                                                                   

                                           $36,345,300  40,620,100 

</TABLE>










                                                               (Continued)

                               F-2
<PAGE>




            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                        Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

<TABLE>
<S>                                                 <S>            <S>
                                                   1996           1995 

       Liabilities and Stockholders' Equity

Current liabilities:
  Accounts payable                           $ 3,402,800     2,119,100 
  Accrued taxes                                  386,100       155,100 
  Other accrued expenses                       1,813,900     1,628,800 
  Advances for future drilling contracts       2,158,900    10,069,600 
  Funds held for future distribution           1,680,900       704,000 

                Total current liabilities      9,442,600    14,676,600 

Long-term debt, excluding current maturities
  (note 3)                                     2,950,000     2,500,000 

Other liabilities                                673,300       601,700 

Deferred income taxes (note 4)                 2,949,500     2,920,900 

Commitments and contingencies (note 8)

Stockholders' equity (note 5):
  Common stock, par value $.01 per share;
    authorized 22,250,000 shares; issued and
    outstanding 10,209,126 and 11,208,627        102,100       112,100 
  Common stock, Class A, par value $.01 per 
    share; authorized 2,750,000 shares; issued 
    and outstanding - none                          -             -    
  Additional paid-in capital                   6,155,800     7,019,800 
  Retained earnings                           14,158,000    12,878,000 
  Unamortized stock award                        (86,000)      (89,000)

                Total stockholders' equity    20,329,900    19,920,900 

                                             $36,345,300    40,620,100 
</TABLE>


       See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.


AN INVESTOR IN PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING PROGRAM DOES NOT THEREBY ACQUIRE ANY
       INTEREST IN THE ASSETS OF PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION.

                               F-3
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

(1)  Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

     Principles of Consolidation

     The accompanying consolidated balance sheets include the accounts of
       Petroleum Development Corporation and its wholly owned subsidiaries. 
       All material intercompany accounts and transactions have been
       eliminated in consolidation.  The Company accounts for its investment
       in limited partnerships under the proportionate consolidation method. 
       Under this method, the Company's balance sheets include its prorata
       share of assets and liabilities of the limited partnerships in which
       it participates.

     The Company is principally involved in oil and gas exploration,
       production and development and related property management which is
       considered one business segment for financial reporting purposes.

     The Company grants credit to purchasers of oil and gas and the owners
       of managed properties, substantially all of whom are located in the
       Appalachian Basin area of West Virginia, Tennessee, Pennsylvania and
       Ohio.

     Cash Equivalents

     For purposes of the statement of cash flows, the Company considers all
       highly liquid debt instruments with original maturities of three
       months or less to be cash equivalents.

     Inventories

     Inventories of well equipment, parts and supplies are valued at the
       lower of average cost or market.

     Oil and Gas Properties

     Exploration and development costs are accounted for by the successful
       efforts method.

     The Company assesses impairment of capitalized costs of proved oil and
       gas properties by comparing net capitalized costs to undiscounted
       future net cash flows on a field-by-field basis using expected
       prices.  Prices utilized for measurement purposes and expected costs
       are held constant.  If net capitalized costs exceed undiscounted
       future net cash flow, the measurement of impairment is based on
       estimated fair value.

     Property acquisition costs are capitalized when incurred.  Geological
       and geophysical costs and delay rentals are expensed as incurred. 
       The costs of drilling exploratory wells are capitalized pending
       determination of whether the wells have discovered economically
       producible reserves.  If reserves are not discovered, such costs are
       expensed as dry holes.  Development costs, including equipment and
       intangible drilling costs related to both producing wells and
       developmental dry holes, are capitalized.

     Unproved properties are assessed on a property-by-property basis and
       properties considered to be impaired are charged to expense when such
       impairment is deemed to have occurred.

     Costs of proved properties, including leasehold acquisition,
       exploration and development costs and equipment, are depreciated or 

                                                               (Continued)

                               F-4
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

       depleted by the unit-of-production method based on estimated proved
       developed oil and gas reserves.

     Upon sale or retirement of complete units of depreciable or depletable
       property, the net cost thereof, less proceeds or salvage value, is
       credited or charged to income.  Upon retirement of a partial unit of
       property, the cost thereof is charged to accumulated depreciation and
       depletion.

     Based on the Company's experience, management believes site
       restoration, dismantlement and abandonment costs to be immaterial in
       relation to operating costs.  These costs are being expensed when
       incurred.

     Transportation Equipment, Pipelines and Other Equipment

     Transportation equipment, pipelines and other equipment are carried at
       cost.  Depreciation is provided principally on the straight-line
       method over useful lives of 3 to 17 years.

     Maintenance and repairs are charged to expense as incurred.  Major
       renewals and betterments are capitalized.  Upon the sale or other
       disposition of assets, the cost and related accumulated depreciation,
       depletion and amortization are removed from the accounts, the
       proceeds applied thereto and any resulting gain or loss is reflected
       in income.

     Buildings

     Buildings are carried at cost and depreciated on the straight-line
       method over estimated useful lives of 30 years.

     Retirement Plans

     The Company has a 401-K contributory retirement plan (401-K Plan)
       covering full-time employees.  The Company provides a discretionary
       matching of employee contributions to the plan.  

     The Company also has a profit sharing plan covering full-time
       employees.  The Company's contributions to this plan are
       discretionary.

     During 1994, the Company established a deferred compensation
       arrangement covering executive officers of the Company as a
       supplemental retirement benefit.  

     During 1995, the Company established split-dollar life insurance
       arrangements with certain executive officers.  Under these
       arrangements, advances are made to these officers equal to the
       premiums due.  The advances are collateralized by the cash surrender
       value of the policies.  The Company records as other assets its share
       of the cash surrender value of the policies.

     Income Taxes

     Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for the future tax
       consequences attributable to differences between the financial
       statement carrying amounts of existing assets and liabilities and
       their respective tax bases.  Deferred tax assets and liabilities are
       measured using enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable income 
       in the years in which those temporary differences are expected to be 

                                                               (Continued)

                               F-5
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

       recovered or settled.  The effect on deferred tax assets and
       liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in income in the
       period that includes the enactment date.

     Use of Estimates

     Management of the Company has made a number of estimates and
       assumptions relating to the reporting of assets and liabilities and
       the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities to prepare these
       consolidated balance sheets in conformity with generally accepted
       accounting principles.  Actual results could differ from those
       estimates.  Estimates which are particularly significant to the
       consolidated balance sheets include estimates of oil and gas reserves
       and future undiscounted cash flows from oil and gas properties.

     New Pronouncement

     The Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
       121, "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived Assets and for
       Long-Lived Assets to Be Disposed Of", effective January 1, 1995. 
       This statement requires that long-lived assets and certain
       identifiable intangibles be reviewed for impairment whenever events
       or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying amount of an
       asset may not be recoverable.  In performing the review for
       recoverability, the entity should estimate the future cash flows
       expected to result from the use of the asset and its eventual
       disposition.  If the sum of the expected future cash flows
       (undiscounted and without interest charges) is less then the carrying
       amount of the asset, an impairment loss is recognized.  Measurement
       of an impairment loss for long-lived assets and identifiable
       intangibles is based on the fair value of the asset.  The impact from
       the adoption of this accounting standard was not significant.

     The Company adopted Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No.
       123, "Accounting for Stock-Based Compensation", effective January 1,
       1996.  SFAS 123 establishes a fair value based approach for
       accounting for stock-based compensation arrangements under which
       employees receive shares of stock or other equity instruments of the
       employer, or the employer otherwise incurs liabilities to its
       employees in amounts based on the price of its stock.  The Statement
       provides a choice of accounting methods for transactions within the
       scope of APB Opinion No. 25 Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees
       ("Opinion 25").  Companies may continue to apply Opinion 25 in
       accounting for its stock-based employee compensation arrangements. 
       However, an entity that does so shall disclose pro forma net income
       and earnings per share determined as if the fair value based method
       had been applied in measuring compensation costs.  The Company
       continues to value its stock options using the guidance of Opinion
       25.

(2)  Notes and Accounts Receivable

     The Company holds notes receivable from officers and directors with
       interest from 8% to 12% as of March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995, 
       in the amount of $33,300 of which $200 is current.

     Included in other assets are noncurrent notes and accounts receivable
       as of March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995, in the amounts of
       $158,700 and $168,400, net of the allowance for doubtful accounts of
       $470,900 and $368,800, respectively.

                                                               (Continued)

                               F-6
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

  The allowance for doubtful current accounts receivable as of March 31,
    1996 and December 31, 1995 was $5,300 and $20,200, respectively.

(3) Long-Term Debt

  Long term debt at March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995 consisted of a note
    payable to a bank under a credit agreement, due in November, 1998 with
    interest payable monthly at prime (8.25% at March 31, 1996) plus 1/2
    percent The outstanding balance as of March 31, 1996 and December 31,
    1995 was  $2,950,000 and $2,500,000, respectively.

  On November 17, 1993, the Company entered into a Credit Agreement
    providing a borrowing base of $7,500,000 subject to adequate natural gas
    reserve levels.  During 1995 an amendment to the Credit Agreement was
    executed which reduced the interest rate and extended the Agreement
    until 1998.  

  The Credit Agreement requires no principal payments until it matures in
    November, 1998.  The Company has activated $5,000,000 of the credit line
    and is required to pay an annual commitment fee of 1/2% on the unused
    portion of the activated credit facility.  The loan is secured by
    substantially all properties and equipment of the Company.  The Credit
    Agreement requires the existence of satisfactory levels of natural gas
    reserves, and additionally provides, among other things, for the
    maintenance of certain working capital and tangible net worth ratios
    along with limitations on dividend payments.

(4) Income Taxes

    The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant
      portions of the deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities at
      March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995, are presented below:
<TABLE>
<S>                                             <S>            <S>
                                               1996           1995   
    Deferred tax assets:
      Drilling notes, principally
       due to allowance for
       doubtful accounts                  $   572,600        671,300 
    Investment tax credit carryforwards       147,200        233,300 
    Alternative minimum tax credit
      carryforwards (Section 29)            1,121,000        909,400 
    Other                                     555,900        440,600 
      Total gross deferred tax assets       2,396,700      2,254,600 
      Less valuation allowance             (1,121,000)      (941,300)
      Net deferred tax assets               1,275,700      1,313,300 
      Less current deferred tax assets
       (included in prepaid expenses)        (386,200)      (386,200)
      Net non-current deferred 
       tax assets                             889,500        927,100 
    Deferred tax liabilities:
      Plant and equipment, principally
       due to differences in depreciation
       and amortization                    (3,839,000)    (3,848,000)
    Total gross deferred
      tax liabilities                      (3,839,000)    (3,848,000)
    Net deferred tax liability            $(2,949,500)    (2,920,900)
</TABLE>

    The Company has evaluated each deferred tax asset and has provided a
      valuation allowance where it is believed more likely than not that
      some portion of the asset will not be realized.

                                                               (Continued)

                               F-7
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

    The net changes in the total valuation allowance for the period ended
      March 31, 1996 and for the year ended December 31, 1995, were
      increases of $179,700 and $98,600, respectively.

    At March 31, 1996, the Company has investment tax credit carryforwards
      for federal income tax purposes of approximately $147,200 which are
      available to reduce future federal income taxes, if any, through 2000. 
      In addition, the Company has alternative minimum tax credit
      carryforwards (Section 29) of approximately $1,121,000 which are
      available to reduce future federal regular income taxes, if any, over
      an indefinite period.  

(5) Common Stock

    Changes in capital during 1996 and 1995 are as follows:
<TABLE>
<S>                          <S>          <S>       <S>          <S>        <S> 
      <S>
                              Common stock
                                 issued         
                           Number                Additional
                           of                    paid-in     Retained 
Unamortized
                           shares      Amount    capital     earnings  Stock
Award     Total

Balance,
 December 31, 1994       11,040,627 $110,400  $6,873,600 $11,396,500           
  $18,380,500 
Issuance of common stock:
 Exercise of employee
  stock options              78,000      800      45,800                       
       46,600 
Stock award                  90,000      900     100,400                (101,300)
Amortization of 
 stock award                                                              12,300 
     12,300 
Net income                                                 1,481,500           
    1,481,500 
Balance,
 December 31, 1995       11,208,627  112,100   7,019,800  12,878,000     (89,000) 
19,920,900 
Issuance of common stock:
 Exercise of employee
  stock options             215,000    2,100     151,400                       
      153,500 
Amortization of stock
 award                                                                     3,000 
      3,000 
 Purchase of treasury stock
  for cancellation       (1,214,501) (12,100) (1,015,400)                      
   (1,027,500)
Net income                                                 1,280,000           
    1,280,000 
Balance March 31, 1996   10,209,126 $102,100  $6,155,800 $14,158,000   $ (86,000)
$20,329,900 
</TABLE>
   Options

   Options amounting to 210,000 shares were granted during 1995 to certain
   employees and directors under the Company's Stock Option Plans.  These
   options were granted at market value as of the date of grant and the
   outstanding options expire from 1997 to 2002.
<TABLE> <S>                               <S>            <S>          <S>
                                        Number
                                        of Shares     Average     Range

Outstanding December 31, 1994         1,956,000        $0.77   .38 - 1.63
Granted                                 210,000        $1.13    .94 - .94
Exercised                               (78,000)       $0.60    .56 - .72
Expired                                (235,350)       $0.68   .38 - 1.63

Outstanding December 31, 1995         1,852,650        $0.91   .50 - 1.63
Granted                                    -           $ -         -     
Exercised                              (215,000)       $0.70   .50 - 1.13
Expired                                 (40,000)       $0.82   .50 - 1.63

Outstanding March 31, 1996            1,597,650        $0.94   .50 - 1.63
</TABLE>
                               F-8
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

Stock Redemption Agreement

   The Company has stock redemption agreements with three officers of the
     Company.  The agreements require the Company to maintain life insurance
     on each executive in the amount of $1,000,000.  The agreements provide
     that the Company shall utilize the proceeds from such insurance to
     purchase from such executives' estates or heirs, at their option,
     shares of the Company's stock.  The purchase price for the outstanding
     common stock is to be based upon the average closing asked price for
     the Company's stock as quoted by NASDAQ during a specified period.  The
     Company is not required to purchase any shares in excess of the amount
     provided for by such insurance.

(6)  Employee Benefit Plans

   In 1995, a total of 90,000 restricted shares of the Company's common
     stock were granted to certain employees and available to them upon
     retirement.  The market value of shares awarded was $101,300.  This
     amount was recorded as unamortized stock award and is shown as separate
     component of stockholders' equity.  The unamortized stock award is
     being amortized to expense over the employees' expected years to
     retirement and amounted to $3,000 and $12,300 in 1996 and 1995,
     respectively.

   At March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995, the Company has recorded as
     other assets $60,000 as its share of the cash surrender value of the
     life insurance pledged as collateral for the payment of premiums on
     split-dollar life insurance policies owned by certain executive
     officers.

(7)  Transactions with Affiliates

   As part of its duties as well operator, the Company received $5,596,900
     in 1996 and $11,397,000 in 1995, representing proceeds from the sale of
     oil and gas, and made distributions to investor groups according to
     their working interests in the related oil and gas properties.

(8)  Commitments and Contingencies

   The nature of the independent oil and gas industry involves a dependence
     on outside investor drilling capital and involves a concentration of
     gas sales to a few customers.  The Company sells natural gas to various
     public utilities and industrial customers, none of which accounted for
     more than 10% of total revenues.

   The Company is not party to any legal action that would materially affect
     the Company's operations or financial statements.

                                                               (Continued)

                               F-9
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995

(9)  Costs Incurred in Oil and Gas Property Acquisition, Exploration and
     Development Activities

   Costs incurred by the Company in oil and gas property acquisition,
     exploration and development are presented below:
<TABLE>
       <S>                                     <S>                <S>

                                                 Periods Ended         
                                           March 31,      December 31,
                                            1996              1995    
   Property acquisition cost:
     Proved undeveloped properties        $  349,900           167,800
     Producing properties                     16,500           218,500
   Development costs                           7,500         2,977,700
                                          $  373,900         3,364,000
</TABLE>
   Property acquisition costs include costs incurred to purchase, lease or
     otherwise acquire a property.  Exploration costs include the cost of
     geological and geophysical activity, dry holes and drilling and 
     equipping exploratory wells.  Development costs include costs incurred
     to gain access to and prepare development well locations for drilling,
     to drill and equip development wells and to provide facilities to
     extract, treat, gather and store oil and gas.

(10) Oil and Gas Capitalized Costs

   Aggregate capitalized costs for the Company related to oil and gas
     exploration and  production activities with applicable accumulated
     depreciation, depletion and amortization are presented below:
<TABLE>
   <S>                                      <S>             <S>
                                        March 31,     December 31,
                                          1996             1995   
Proved properties:
  Intangible drilling costs            $16,598,400      16,582,000
  Tangible well equipment               16,839,400      16,831,800
  Well equipment leased to others        4,063,600       4,063,600
  Undeveloped properties                   529,400         514,600
                                        38,030,800      37,992,000
     Less accumulated depreciation,
      depletion and amortization        15,030,300      14,529,900
                                       $23,000,500      23,462,100
</TABLE>
(11)   Net Proved Oil and Gas Reserves (Unaudited)

   The proved reserves of oil and gas of the Company as estimated by the
       Company, all  of which are located within the United States, are as
       follows:
<TABLE>  <S>                              <S>                <S>
                                             Oil (BBLS)           
                                      March 31,       December 31,
                                        1996              1995    
Proved developed and
 undeveloped reserves:
   Beginning of year                    140,000            79,000 
   Revisions of previous estimates      (17,000)           72,000 
   Beginning of year as revised         123,000           151,000 
   Production                            (2,000)          (11,000)
   End of period                        121,000           140,000 
Proved developed reserves:
   Beginning of year                    140,000            79,000 
   End of period                        121,000           140,000 
</TABLE>
                                                               (Continued)
                               F-10
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                Notes to Consolidated Financial Statements

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995
<TABLE>
<S>                                      <S>                 <S>

                                             Gas (MCF)            
                                       March 31,      December 31,
                                         1996            1995     
Proved developed and
 undeveloped reserves:
   Beginning of year                 33,829,000        32,225,000 
   Revisions of previous estimates      820,000           686,000 
   Beginning of year as revised      34,649,000        32,911,000 
   New discoveries and extensions     1,614,000         2,119,000 
   Acquisitions                          20,000           135,000 
   Production                          (335,000)       (1,336,000)
   End of period                     35,948,000        33,829,000 
 Proved developed reserves:
   Beginning of year                 29,326,000        27,746,000 
   End of period                     31,444,000        29,326,000 
</TABLE>

(12) Standardized Measure of Discounted Future Net Cash Flows and Changes
     Therein Relating to Proved Oil and Gas Reserves (Unaudited)

     Summarized in the following table is information for the Company with
       respect to the standardized measure of discounted future net cash
       flows relating to proved oil and gas reserves.  Future cash inflows
       are derived by applying current oil and gas prices to estimated
       future production.  Future production, development, site restoration
       and abandonment costs are derived based on current costs assuming
       continuation of existing economic conditions.  Future income tax 
       expenses are computed by applying the statutory rate in effect at the
       end of each year to the future pretax net cash flows, less the tax
       basis of the properties and gives effect to permanent differences,
       tax credits and allowances related to the properties.

<TABLE>
          <S>                            <S>                <S>
                                            Period Ended          
                                      March 31,       December 31,
                                        1996              1995    
     Future estimated cash flows   $158,550,000        99,478,000 
     Future estimated production
       and development costs        (36,257,000)      (29,288,000)
     Future estimated income
       tax expense                  (25,926,000)      (20,004,000)
       Future net cash flows         96,367,000        50,186,000 
     10% annual discount for
       estimated timing of cash
       flows                        (55,106,000)      (29,126,000)
       Standardized measure of
        discounted future
        estimated net cash flows   $ 41,261,000        21,060,000 

</TABLE>
     The following table summarizes the principal sources of change in the
       standardized measure of discounted future estimated net cash flows:


                                                               (Continued)
                               F-11
<PAGE>
            PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION AND SUBSIDIARIES

                   Notes to Consolidated Balance Sheets

                   March 31, 1996 and December 31, 1995
<TABLE>

           <S>                            <S>             <S>
                                             Period Ended         
                                       March 31,      December 31,
                                        1996             1995     
       Sales of oil and gas
        production, net of 
        production costs            $  (939,000)       (1,938,000)
       Net changes in prices
        and production costs         46,912,000        17,024,000 
       Extensions, discoveries
        and improved recovery,
        less related cost             4,276,000         4,609,000 
       Acquisitions                      42,000           294,000 
       Development costs incurred
        during the period                 8,000         2,978,000 
       Revisions of previous
        quantity estimates            2,015,000         1,700,000 
       Changes in estimated
        income taxes                 (5,922,000)       (6,054,000)
       Accretion of discount        (25,980,000)       (8,575,000)
       Other                           (211,000)       (3,423,000)
                                    $20,201,000         6,615,000 

</TABLE>

     It is necessary to emphasize that the data presented should not be
       viewed as representing the expected cash flow from, or current value
       of, existing proved reserves since the  computations are based on a
       large number of estimates and arbitrary assumptions.  Reserve
       quantities cannot be measured with precision and their estimation
       requires many judgmental determinations and frequent revisions.  The
       required projection of production and related expenditures over time
       requires further estimates with respect to pipeline availability,
       rates of demand and governmental control.  Actual future prices and
       costs are likely to be substantially different from the current
       prices and costs utilized in the computation of reported amounts. 
       Any analysis or evaluation of the reported amounts should give
       specific recognition to the computational methods utilized and the
       limitations inherent therein.  Natural gas prices increased
       significantly during the fourth quarter of 1995 and the first quarter
       of 1996.  During the second quarter of 1996, gas prices returned to
       December 31, 1995 levels.  Accordingly, the above information is
       valued at period-end prices and may not be indicative of long-term
       trends.

(13) Subsequent Event (unaudited)

     On April 1, 1996, the Company acquired, in a transaction to be
       accounted for as a purchase, Riley Natural Gas Company (RNG), a
       privately held gas marketing company in a stock for stock exchange. 
       While this addition does not constitute a significant subsidiary for
       accounting purposes, it will substantially increase the Company's
       capabilities in the natural gas marketing area.  PDC expects to issue
       approximately 210,000 shares of common stock for 100% of the
       outstanding common stock of RNG.  Key employees of RNG have agreed to
       enter into employment contracts with PDC to assure the continuity of
       RNG's gas marketing operations.

                               F-12<PAGE>

                             APPENDIX A








                                FORM OF
                     LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
                                  OF
                   PDC 1996-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
                  [PDC 1997-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP]


<PAGE>
TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page



APPENDIX A








                               FORM OF
                     LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
                                 OF
                   PDC 1996-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
                   [PDC 1997-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP]


<PAGE>
                         TABLE OF CONTENTS


                                             Page

ARTICLE I:          The Partnership . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . .   1

           1.01     Organization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  1
           1.02     Partnership Name. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  1
           1.03     Character of Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  1
           1.04     Principal Place of Business . . . . . . . . . . .  1
           1.05     Term of Partnership . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
           1.06     Filings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
           1.07     Independent Activities  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  2
           1.08     Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3

ARTICLE II:         Capitalization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12

           2.01     Capital Contributions of the Managing General
                    Partner and Initial Limited Partner . . . . . . . 12
           2.02     Capital Contributions of the Investor
                    Partners. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
           2.03     Additional Contributions. . . . . . . . . . . . . 13

ARTICLE III:        Capital Accounts and Allocations. . . . . . . . . 14

           3.01     Capital Accounts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
           3.02     Allocation of Profits and Losses. . . . . . . . . 16
           3.03     Depletion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
           3.04     Apportionment Among Partners. . . . . . . . . . . 22

ARTICLE IV:         Distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23

           4.01     Time of Distribution. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
           4.02     Distributions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
           4.03     Capital Account Deficits. . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
           4.04     Liability Upon Receipt of Distributions . . . . . 24

ARTICLE V:          Activities. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

           5.01     Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
           5.02     Conduct of Operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
           5.03     Acquisition and Sale of Leases. . . . . . . . . . 26
           5.04     Title to Leases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
           5.05     Farmouts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
           5.06     Release, Abandonment, and Sale or Exchange
                    of Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
           5.07     Certain Transactions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

ARTICLE VI:         Managing General Partner. . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

           6.01     Managing General Partner. . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
           6.02     Authority of Managing General
                    Partner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
           6.03     Certain Restrictions on Managing General
                    Partner's Power and Authority . . . . . . . . . . 35
           6.04     Indemnification of Managing General
                    Partner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
           6.05     Withdrawal. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38


                                                            i
<PAGE>
           6.06     Management Fee. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
           6.07     Tax Matters and Financial Reporting
                    Partner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39


ARTICLE VII:        Investor Partners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39

           7.01     Management. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
           7.02     Indemnification of Additional
                    General Partners. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
           7.03     Assignment of Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
           7.04     Prohibited Transfers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
           7.05     Withdrawal by Investor Partners . . . . . . . . . 42
           7.06     Removal of Managing General Partner . . . . . . . 42
           7.07     Calling of Meetings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
           7.08     Additional Voting Rights. . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
           7.09     Voting by Proxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
           7.10     Conversion of Additional General Partner
                    Interests into Limited Partner
                    Interests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
           7.11     Unit Repurchase Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
           7.12     Liability of Partners . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46


ARTICLE VIII:       Books and Records. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .46

           8.01     Books and Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
           8.02     Reports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
           8.03     Bank Accounts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
           8.04     Federal Income Tax Elections. . . . . . . . . . . 49

ARTICLE IX:         Dissolution; Winding-up . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49

           9.01     Dissolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
           9.02     Liquidation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
           9.03     Winding-up  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

ARTICLE X:          Power of Attorney . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

           10.01    Managing General Partner as Attorney-in-Fact. . . 52
           10.02    Nature as Special Power . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

ARTICLE XI:         Miscellaneous Provisions. . . . . . . . . . . . . 53

           11.01    Liability of Parties. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
           11.02    Notices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
           11.03    Paragraph Headings. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
           11.04    Severability. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.05    Sole Agreement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.06    Applicable Law. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.07    Execution in Counterparts . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.08    Waiver of Action for Partition. . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.09    Amendments. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
           11.10    Consent to Allocations and Distributions. . . . . 55
           11.11    Ratification. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
           11.12    Substitution of Signature Pages . . . . . . . . . 55
           11.13    Incorporation by Reference. . . . . . . . . . . . 55

                    Signature Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56

                                                                ii
<PAGE>
                               FORM OF
                      LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
                   OF PDC 1996-____ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,
                   [PDC 1997-____LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,]
                   A WEST VIRGINIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

    This LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT (the "Agreement") is made as of this
___ day of ___________, 1996 [1997] by and among Petroleum Development
Corporation, a Nevada corporation, as managing general partner (the
"Managing General Partner"), Steven R. Williams, a resident of West
Virginia, as the Initial Limited Partner, and the Persons whose names are
set forth on Exhibit A attached hereto, as additional general partners
(the "Additional General Partners") or as limited partners (the "Limited
Partners" and, collectively with Additional General Partners, the
"Investor Partners"), pursuant to the provisions of the West Virginia
Uniform Limited Partnership Act (the "Act"), on the following terms and
conditions:

                          ARTICLE I

                       The Partnership

    1.01  Organization.  Subject to the provisions of this Agreement, the
parties hereto do hereby form a limited partnership (the "Partnership")
pursuant to the provisions of the Act.  The Partners hereby agree to
continue the Partnership as a limited partnership pursuant to the
provisions of the Act and upon the terms and conditions set forth in this
Agreement.

    1.02  Partnership Name.  The name of the Partnership shall be PDC 1996-
___ Limited Partnership, [PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership,] a West Virginia
limited partnership, and all business of the Partnership shall be
conducted in such name.  The Managing General Partner may change the name
of the Partnership upon ten days notice to the Investor Partners.  The
Partnership shall hold all of its property in the name of the Partnership
and not in the name of any Partner.

    1.03  Character of Business.  The principal business of the Partnership
shall be to acquire Leases, drill sites, and other interests in oil and/or
gas properties and to drill for oil, gas, hydrocarbons, and other minerals
located in, on, or under such properties, to produce and sell oil, gas,
hydrocarbons, and other minerals from such properties, and to invest and
generally engage in any and all phases of the oil and gas business.  Such
business purpose shall include without limitation the purchase, sale,
acquisition, disposition, exploration, development, operation, and
production of oil and gas properties of any character.  The Partnership
shall not acquire property in exchange for Units.  Without limiting the
foregoing, Partnership activities may be undertaken as principal, agent,
general partner, syndicate member, joint venturer, participant, or
otherwise.

    1.04  Principal Place of Business.  The principal place of business of
the Partnership shall be at 103 East Main Street, Bridgeport, West
Virginia, 26330.  The Managing General Partner may change the principal
place of business of the Partnership to any other place within the State
of West Virginia upon ten days notice to the Investor Partners.



                              1
<PAGE>
    1.05  Term of Partnership.  The Partnership shall commence on the date
the Partnership is organized, as set forth in Section 1.01, and shall
continue until terminated as provided in Article IX hereof. 
Notwithstanding the foregoing, if Investor Partners agreeing to purchase
$1,000,000    ($1,500,000 with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership
and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)     in Units have not subscribed and
paid for their Units by the Offering Termination Date, then this Agreement
shall be void in all respects, and all investments of the Investor Partners
shall be promptly returned together with any interest earned thereon and
without any deduction therefrom.  The Managing General Partner and its
Affiliates may purchase up to 10% (and no more) of the Units subscribed for 
by Investor Partners in the Partnership; however, not more than $50,000 of
the Units purchased by the Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates
will
be applied to satisfying the $1,000,000 minimum.  The Units so purchased by
the Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates will be counted toward
satisfying the minimum subscription amount.

    1.06  Filings.

    (a)     A Certificate of Limited Partnership (the "Certificate") has
been filed in the office of the Secretary of State of West Virginia in
accordance with the provisions of the Act.  The Managing General Partner
shall take any and all other actions reasonably necessary to perfect and
maintain the status of the Partnership as a limited partnership under the
laws of West Virginia.  The Managing General Partner shall cause
amendments to the Certificate to be filed whenever required by the Act.

    (b)     The Managing General Partner shall execute and cause to be filed
original or amended Certificates and shall take any and all other actions
as may be reasonably necessary to perfect and maintain the status of the
Partnership as a limited partnership or similar type of entity under the
laws of any other states or jurisdictions in which the Partnership engages
in business.

    (c)     The agent for service of process on the Partnership shall be
Steven R. Williams or any successor as appointed by the Managing General
Partner.

    (d)     Upon the dissolution of the Partnership, the Managing General
Partner (or any successor managing general partner) shall promptly execute
and cause to be filed certificates of dissolution in accordance with the
Act and the laws of any other states or jurisdictions in which the
Partnership has filed certificates.

    1.07  Independent Activities.  Each General Partner and each Limited
Partner may, notwithstanding this Agreement, engage in whatever activities
they choose, whether the same are competitive with the Partnership or
otherwise, without having or incurring any obligation to offer any
interest in such activities to the Partnership or any Partner.  However,
except as otherwise provided herein, the Managing General Partner and any
of its Affiliates may pursue business opportunities that are consistent
with the Partnership's investment objectives for their own account only
after they have determined that such opportunity either cannot be pursued
by the Partnership because of insufficient funds or because it is not
appropriate for the Partnership under the existing circumstances.  Neither
this Agreement nor any activity undertaken pursuant hereto shall prevent
the Managing General Partner from engaging in such activities, or require
the Managing General Partner to permit the Partnership or any Partner to
participate in any such activities, and as a material part of the
consideration for the execution of this Agreement by the Managing General
Partner and the admission of each Investor Partner, each Investor Partner 

                              2
<PAGE>
hereby waives, relinquishes, and renounces any such right or claim of
participation.  Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Managing General
Partner still has an overriding fiduciary obligation to the Investor
Partners.

    1.08  Definitions.  Capitalized words and phrases used in this Agreement
shall have the following meanings:

    (a)  "Act" shall mean the Uniform Limited Partnership Act of the State
of West Virginia, as set forth in Sections 47-9-1 through 47-9-63 thereof,
as amended from time to time (or any corresponding provisions of
succeeding law).

    (b)     "Additional General Partner" shall mean an Investor Partner who
purchases Units as an additional general partner, and such partner's
transferees and assigns.  "Additional General Partners" shall mean all
such Investor Partners.  "Additional General Partner" shall not include,
after a conversion, such Investor Partner who converts his interest into
a Limited Partnership interest pursuant to Section 7.10 herein.

    (c)     "Administrative Costs" shall mean all customary and routine
expenses incurred by the Managing General Partner for the conduct of
program administration, including legal, finance, accounting,
secretarial, travel, office rent, telephone, data processing and other
items of a similar nature.

    (d)     "Affiliate" shall mean an affiliate of a specified person
means (a) any person directly or indirectly owning,  controlling, or
holding with power to vote 10 percent or more of the outstanding voting
securities of such specified person; (b) any person 10 percent or
more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly
owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such specified
person; (c) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with such specified person; (d) any officer,
director, trustee or partner of such specified person, and (e) if such
specified person is an officer, director, trustee or partner, any
person for which such person acts in any such capacity.

    (e)  "Agreement" or "Partnership Agreement" shall mean this Limited
Partnership Agreement, as amended from time to time.

    (f)  "Capital Account" shall mean, with respect to any Partner, the
capital account maintained for such Partner pursuant to Section 3.01
hereof.

    (g)  "Capital Contribution" shall mean, the total investment, including
the original investment, assessments, and amounts reinvested, by such
Investor Partner to the capital of the Partnership pursuant to Section
2.02 herein, and, with respect to the Managing General Partner and the
Initial Limited Partner, the total investment, including the original
investment, assessments, and amounts reinvested, to the capital of the
Partnership pursuant to Section 2.01 herein.

    (h)  "Code" shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended
from time to time (or any corresponding provisions of succeeding law).

    (i)  "Cost," when used with respect to the sale of property to the
Partnership, shall mean (a) the sum of the prices paid by the seller to an

                              3
<PAGE>
unaffiliated person for such property, including bonuses; (b) title
insurance or examination costs, brokers' commissions, filing fees,
recording costs, transfer taxes, if any, and like charges in connection
with the acquisition of such property; (c) a pro rata portion of the
seller's actual necessary and reasonable expenses for seismic and
geophysical services; and (d) rentals and ad valorem taxes paid by the
seller with respect to such property to the date of its transfer to the
buyer, interest and points actually incurred on funds used to acquire or
maintain such property, and such portion of the seller's reasonable,
necessary and actual expenses for geological, engineering, drafting,
accounting, legal and other like services allocated to the property cost
in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles and industry
standards, except for expenses in connection with the past drilling of
wells which are not producers of sufficient quantities of oil or gas to
make commercially reasonable their continued operations, and provided that
the expenses enumerated in this subsection (d) hereof shall have been
incurred not more than 36 months prior to the purchase by the Partnership;
provided that such period may be extended, at the discretion of the state
securities administrator, upon proper justification,  When used with
respect to services, "cost" means the reasonable, necessary and actual
expense incurred by the seller on behalf of the Partnership in providing
such services, determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting
principles.  As used elsewhere, "cost" means the price paid by the seller
in an arm's-length transaction.

    (j)  "Depreciation" shall mean, for each fiscal year or other period,
an amount equal to the depreciation, amortization, or other cost recovery
deduction allowable with respect to an asset for such year or other
period, except that if the Gross Asset Value of an asset differs from its
adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes at the beginning of such
year or other period, Depreciation shall be an amount which bears the same
ratio to such beginning Gross Asset Value as the federal income tax
depreciation, amortization, or other cost recovery deduction for such year
or other period bears to such beginning adjusted tax basis; provided,
however, that if the federal income tax depreciation, amortization, or
other cost recovery deduction for such year is zero, Depreciation shall be
determined with reference to such beginning Gross Asset Value using any
reasonable method selected by the Managing General Partner.

    (k)  "Development Well" shall mean a well drilled within the proved area
of an oil or gas reservoir to the depth of a stratigraphic horizon known
to be productive.

    (l)  "Direct Costs" shall mean all actual and necessary costs directly
incurred for the benefit of the Partnership and generally attributable to
the goods and services provided to the Partnership by parties other than
the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates.  Direct costs shall not
include any cost otherwise classified as organization and offering
expenses, administrative costs, operating costs or property costs.  Direct
costs may include the cost of services provided by the Managing General
Partner or its Affiliates if such services are provided pursuant to
written contracts and in compliance with Section 5.07(e) of the
Partnership Agreement.

    (m)  "Drilling and Completion Costs" shall mean all costs, excluding
Operating Costs, of drilling, completing, testing, equipping and bringing
a well into production or plugging and abandoning it, including all labor
and other construction and installation costs incident thereto, location
and surface damages, cementing, drilling mud and chemicals, drillstem

                              4
<PAGE>
tests and core analysis, engineering and well site geological expenses,
electric logs, costs of plugging back, deepening, rework operations,
repairing or performing remedial work of any type, costs of plugging and
abandoning any well participated in by the Partnership, and reimbursements
and compensation to well operators, including charges paid to the Managing
General Partner as unit operator during the drilling and completion phase
of a well, plus the cost of the gathering system and of acquiring
leasehold interests.

    (n)  "Dry Hole" shall mean any well abandoned without having produced
oil or gas in commercial quantities.

    (o)  "Exploratory Well" shall mean a well drilled to find commercially
productive hydrocarbons in an unproved area, to find a new commercially
productive horizon in a field previously found to be productive of
hydrocarbons at another horizon, or to significantly extend a known
prospect.

    (p)     "Farmout" shall mean an agreement whereby the owner of the
leasehold
or working interest agrees to assign his interest in certain specific
acreage to the assignees, retaining some interest such as an overriding
royalty interest, an oil and gas payment, offset acreage or other type of
interest, subject to the drilling of one or more specific wells or other
performance as a condition of the assignment.

    (q)  "General Partners" shall mean the Additional General Partners and
the Managing General Partner.

    (r)  "Gross Asset Value" shall mean, with respect to any asset, the
asset's adjusted basis for federal income tax purposes, except as follows:

          (1)  The initial Gross Asset Value of any asset contributed by
               a Partner to the Partnership shall be the gross fair market
               value of such asset, as determined by the contributing
               Partner and the Partnership; 

          (2)  The Gross Asset Values of all Partnership assets shall be
               adjusted to equal their respective gross fair market
               values, as determined by the Managing General Partner,
               as of the following times: (a) the acquisition of an
               additional interest in the Partnership by any new or
               existing Partner in exchange for more than a de minimis
               Capital Contribution; (b) the distribution by the 
               Partnership Property as consideration for an interest in
               the Partnership; and (c) the liquidation of the Partnership
               within the meaning of Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b) 
               (2)(ii)(g); provided, however, that the adjustments
                pursuant to clauses (a) and (b) above shall be made only if
                the Managing General Partner reasonably determines that
                such adjustments are necessary or appropriate to reflect
                the relative economic interests of the Partners in the
                Partnership;

          (3)   The Gross Asset Value of any Partnership asset distributed
                to any Partner shall be the gross fair market value of
                such asset on the date of distribution; and 

          (4)   The Gross Asset Values of Partnership assets shall be
                increased (or decreased) to reflect any adjustments to the
                adjusted basis of such assets pursuant to Code Section 

                              5
<PAGE>
                 734(b) or Code Section 743(b), but only to the extent
                 that such adjustments are taken into account in
                 determining Capital Accounts pursuant to Treas. Reg.
                 Section 1.704-1(b)(2) (iv)(m) and Section 3.02(g)
                 hereof; provided, however, that Gross Asset Values
                 shall not be adjusted pursuant to this Section (4)
                 to the extent the Managing General Partner determines
                 that an adjustment pursuant to Section
                 (2) hereof is necessary or appropriate in connection 
                 with a transaction that would otherwise result in an 
                 adjustment pursuant to this Section (4).

If the Gross Asset Value of an asset has been determined or adjusted
pursuant to Section (i), Section (ii), or (iv) hereof, such Gross Asset
value shall thereafter be adjusted by the Depreciation taken into account
with respect to such asset for purposes of computing Profits and Losses.

    (s)  "IDC" shall mean intangible drilling and development costs.

    (t)  "Independent Expert" shall mean a person with no material
relationship with the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates who is
qualified and who is in the business of rendering opinions regarding the
value of oil and gas properties based upon the evaluation of all pertinent
economic, financial, geologic and engineering information available to the
Managing General Partner or its Affiliates.

    (u)  "Initial Limited Partner" shall mean Steven R. Williams or any
successor to his interest.

    (v)  "Investor Partner" shall mean any Person other than the Managing
General Partner (i) whose name is set forth on Exhibit A, attached hereto,
as an Additional General Partner or as a Limited Partner, or who has been
admitted as an additional or Substituted Investor Partner pursuant to the
terms of this Agreement, and (ii) who is the owner of a Unit.  "Investor
Partners" means all such Persons.  All references in this Agreement to a
majority in interest or a specified percentage of the Investor Partners
shall mean Investor Partners holding more than 50% or such specified
percentage, respectively, of the outstanding Units then held.

    (w)  "Lease" shall mean full or partial interests in:  (i) undeveloped
oil and gas leases; (ii) oil and gas mineral rights; (iii) licenses; (iv)
concessions; (v) contracts; (vi) fee rights; or (vii) other rights
authorizing the owner thereof to drill for, reduce to possession and
produce oil and gas.

    (x)  "Limited Partner" shall mean an Investor Partner who purchases
Units
as a Limited Partner, such partner's transferees or assignees, and an
Additional General Partner who converts his interest to a limited
partnership interest pursuant to the provisions of the Agreement. 
"Limited Partners" shall mean all such Investor Partners.

    (y)   "Management Fee" shall mean that fee to which the Managing General
Partner is entitled pursuant to Section 6.06 hereof.

    (z)   "Managing General Partner" shall mean Petroleum Development
Corporation or its successors, in their capacity as the Managing General
Partner.

    (aa)   "Mcf" shall mean one thousand cubic feet of natural gas.


                              6
<PAGE>
    (bb)   "Net Subscriptions" shall mean an amount equal to the total
Subscriptions of the Investor Partners less the amount of Organization and
Offering Costs of the Partnership.

    (cc)   "Nonrecourse Deductions" shall have the meaning set forth in
Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-2(b)(1).  The amount of Nonrecourse Deductions
for a Partnership fiscal year shall equal the net increase in the amount
of Partnership Minimum Gain during that fiscal year reduced (but not below
zero) by the aggregate distributions during that fiscal year of proceeds
of a Nonrecourse Liability that are allocable to an increase in
Partnership Minimum Gain, determined according to the provisions of Treas.
Reg. Section 1.704-2(c).

    (dd)   "Nonrecourse Liability" shall have the meaning set forth in
Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-2(b)(3) and 1.752-1(a)(2).

    (ee)   "Offering Termination Date" shall mean December 31, 1996 with
respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership
(December 31, 1997 with respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership") or such earlier date as the Managing General
Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, shall elect.

    (ff)   "Oil and Gas Interest" shall mean any oil or gas royalty or
lease,
or fractional interest therein, or certificate of interest or
participation or investment contract relative to such royalties, leases or
fractional interests, or any other interest or right which permits the
exploration of, drilling for, or production of oil and gas or other
related hydrocarbons or the receipt of such production or the proceeds
thereof.

    (gg)   "Operating Costs" shall mean expenditures made and costs incurred
in producing and marketing oil or gas from completed wells, including, in
addition to labor, fuel, repairs, hauling, materials, supplies, utility
charges and other costs incident to or therefrom, ad valorem and severance
taxes, insurance and casualty loss expense, and compensation to well
operators or others for services rendered in conducting such operations.

    (hh)   "Organization and Offering Costs" shall mean all costs of
organizing and selling the offering including, but not limited to, total
underwriting and brokerage discounts and commissions (including fees of
the underwriters' attorneys), expenses for printing, engraving, mailing,
salaries of employees while engaged in sales activity, charges of transfer
agents, registrars, trustees, escrow holders, depositaries, engineers and
other experts, expenses of qualification of the sale of the securities
under Federal and State law, including taxes and fees, accountants' and
attorneys' fees and other frontend fees.

    (ii)   "Overriding Royalty Interest" shall mean an interest in the oil
and gas produced pursuant to a specified oil and gas lease or leases, or
the proceeds from the sale thereof, carved out of the working interest, to
be received free and clear of all costs of development, operation, or
maintenance.

    (jj)   "Partner Minimum Gain" shall mean an amount, with respect to each
Partner Nonrecourse Debt, equal to the Partnership Minimum Gain that would
result if such Partner Nonrecourse Debt were treated as a Nonrecourse
Liability, determined in accordance with Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-2(i).

    (kk)   "Partner Nonrecourse Debt" shall have the meaning set forth in
Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-2(b)(4).

                              7
<PAGE>
    (ll)   "Partner Nonrecourse Deductions" shall have the meaning set forth
in Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-2(i)(2).  The amount of Partner Nonrecourse
Deductions with respect to a Partner Nonrecourse Debt for a Partnership
fiscal year shall equal the net increase in the amount of Partner Minimum
Gain attributable to such Partner Nonrecourse Debt during that fiscal year
reduced (but not below zero) by proceeds of the liability distributed
during that fiscal year to the Partner bearing the economic risk of loss
for such liability that are both attributable to the liability and
allocable to an increase in Partner Minimum Gain attributable to such
Partner Nonrecourse Debt, determined in accordance with Treas. Reg.
Section 1.704-2(i)(3).

    (mm)   "Partners" shall mean the Managing General Partner, the Initial
Limited Partner, and the Investor Partners.  "Partner" shall mean any one
of the Partners.  All references in this Agreement to a majority in
interest or a specified percentage of the Partners shall mean Partners
holding more than 50% or such specified percentage, respectively, of the
outstanding Units then held.

    (nn)  "Partnership" shall mean the partnership pursuant to this
Agreement and the partnership continuing the business of this Partnership
in the event of dissolution as herein provided.

    (oo)   "Partnership Minimum Gain" shall have the meaning set forth in
Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-2(b)(2) and 1.704-2(d)(1).

    (pp)   "Permitted Transfer" shall mean any transfer of Units satisfying
the provisions of Section 7.03 herein.

    (qq)   "Person" shall mean any individual, partnership, corporation,
trust, or other entity.

    (rr)   "Profits" and "Losses" shall mean, for each fiscal year or other
period, an amount equal to the Partnership's taxable income or loss for
such year or period, determined in accordance with Code Section 703(a)
(for this purpose, all items of income, gain, loss, or deduction required
to be stated separately pursuant to Code Section 703(a)(1) shall be
included in taxable income or loss), with the following adjustments:

           (1)  Any income of the Partnership that is exempt from federal
                income tax and not otherwise taken into account in 
                computing Profits or Losses pursuant to this Section
                1.08(rr) shall be added to such taxable income or loss;

            (2) Any expenditures of the Partnership described in Code
                Section 705(a)(2)(B) or treated as Code Section 705(a)
                (2)(B) expenditures pursuant to Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-
                1(b)(2)(iv)(i), and not otherwise taken into account in
                computing Profits or Losses pursuant to this Section
                1.08(rr) shall be subtracted from such taxable income or
                loss;

            (3) In the event the Gross Asset Value of any Partnership
                asset is adjusted pursuant to Section 1.08(r)(2) or Section
                1.08(r)(3) hereof, the amount of such adjustment shall
                be taken into account as gain or loss from the 
                disposition of such asset for purposes of computing 
                Profits or Losses.

            (4) Gain or loss resulting from any disposition of Partnership
                Property with respect to which gain or loss is recognized

                              8
<PAGE>
                for federal income tax purposes shall be computed by
                reference to the Gross Asset Value of the property
                disposed of, notwithstanding that the adjusted tax
                basis of such property differs from its Gross Asset Value;

            (5) In lieu of the depreciation, amortization, and other cost
                recovery deductions taken into account in computing such
                taxable income or loss, there shall be taken into account
                Depreciation for such fiscal year or other period, computed
                in accordance with Section 1.08(r) hereof; and

            (6) Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section
                1.08(rr), any items which are specially allocated 
                pursuant to this Agreement shall not be taken into 
                account in computing Profits or Losses.

    (ss)  "Prospect" shall mean a contiguous oil and gas leasehold estate,
or lesser interest therein, upon which drilling operations may be
conducted.  In general, a Prospect is an area in which the Partnership
owns or intends to own one or more oil and gas interests, which is
geographically defined on the basis of geological data by the Managing
General Partner of such Partnership and which is reasonably anticipated by
the Managing General Partner to contain at least one reservoir.  An area
covering lands which are believed by the Managing General Partner to
contain subsurface structural or stratigraphic conditions making it
susceptible to the accumulations of hydrocarbons in commercially
productive quantities at one or more horizons.  The area, which may be
different for different horizons, shall be designated by the Managing
General Partner in writing prior to the conduct of program operations and
shall be enlarged or contracted from time to time on the basis of
subsequently acquired information to define the anticipated limits of the
associated hydrocarbon reserves and to include all acreage encompassed
therein.  A "prospect" with respect to a particular horizon may be limited
to the minimum area permitted by state law or local practice, whichever is
applicable, to protect against drainage from adjacent wells if the well to
be drilled by the Partnership is to a horizon containing proved reserves.

    (tt)  "Prospectus" shall mean that Prospectus (including any
preliminary prospectus), of which this Agreement is a part, pursuant to
which the Units are being offered and sold.

    (uu)   "Proved Developed Oil and Gas Reserves shall mean the reserves
that can be expected to be recovered through existing wells with existing
equipment and operating methods.  Additional oil and gas expected to be
obtained through the application of fluid injection or other improved
recovery techniques for supplementing the natural forces and mechanisms of
primary recovery should be included as "proved developed reserves" only
after testing by a pilot project or after the operation of an installed
program has confirmed through production response that increased recovery
will be achieved.

    (vv)   "Proved Oil and Gas Reserves" shall mean the estimated quantities
of crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids which geological and
engineering data demonstrate with reasonable certainty to be recoverable
in future years from known reservoirs under existing economic and
operating conditions, i.e., prices and costs as of the date the estimate
is made.  Prices include consideration of changes in existing prices
provided only by contractual arrangements, but not on escalations based
upon future conditions.

                              9
<PAGE>
            (1)  Reservoirs are considered proved if economic producibility
                 is supported by either actual production or conclusive
                 formation test.  The area of a reservoir considered proved
                 includes (A) that portion delineated by drilling and
                 defined by gas-oil and/or oil-water contacts, if any,
                 and (B) the immediately adjoining portions not yet drilled,
                 but which can be reasonably judged as economically
                 productive on the basis of available geological and
                 engineering data.  In the absence of information on
                 fluid contacts, the lowest known structural occurrence
                 of hydrocarbons controls the lower proved limit of the
                 reservoir.

            (2)  Reserves which can be produced economically through
                 application of improved recovery techniques (such as
                 fluid injection) are included in the "proved"
                 classification when successful testing by a pilot
                 project, or the operation of an installed program in 
                 the reservoir, provides support for the
                 engineering analysis on which the project or program
                 was based.

            (3)  Estimates or proved reserves do not include the following: 
                 (A) oil that may become available from known reservoirs 
                 but is classified separately as "indicated additional 
                 reserves; (B) crude oil, natural gas, and natural gas 
                 liquids, the recovery of which is subject to reasonable 
                 doubt because of uncertainty as to geology, reservoir
                 characteristics, or economic factors; (C) crude oil,
                 natural gas, and natural gas liquids, that may
                 occur in undrilled prospects; and (D) crude oil,
                 natural gas, and natural gas liquids, that may be
                 recovered from oil shales, coal, gilsonite and other
                 such sources.

    (ww)   "Proved Undeveloped Reserves" shall mean the reserves that are
expected to be recovered from new wells on undrilled acreage, or from
existing wells where a relatively major expenditure is required for
recompletion.  Reserves on undrilled acreage shall be limited to those
drilling units offsetting productive units that are reasonably certain of
production when drilled.  Proved reserves for other undrilled units can be
claimed only where it can be demonstrated with certainty that there is
continuity of production from the existing productive formation.  Under no
circumstances should estimates for proved undeveloped reserves be
attributable to any acreage for which an application of fluid injection or
other improved recovery technique is contemplated, unless such techniques
have been proved effective by actual tests in the area and in the same
reservoir.

    (xx)   "Reservoir" shall mean a separate structural or stratigraphic
trap containing an accumulation of oil or gas.

    (yy)   "Roll-Up" shall mean a transaction involving the acquisition,
merger, conversion, or consolidation, either directly or indirectly, of
the Partnership and the issuance of securities of a roll-up entity.  Such
term does not include:

            (1) a transaction involving securities of the Partnership that
                have been listed for at least 12 months on a national
                exchange or traded through the National Association of
                Securities Dealers Automated Quotation National Market
                System; or

            (2) a transaction involving the conversion to corporate, trust
                
                              10
<PAGE>
                or association form of only the Partnership if, as a
                consequence of the transaction, there will be no
                significant adverse change in any of the following:

                (i)    voting rights;

                (ii)    the term of existence of the Partnership;

                (iii)  sponsor compensation; or

                (iv)    the Partnership's investment objectives.

    (zz)   "Roll-Up Entity" shall mean a partnership, trust, corporation or
other entity that would be created or survive after the successful
completion of a proposed roll-up transaction.

    (aaa)  "Sponsor" shall mean any person directly or indirectly
instrumental in organizing, wholly or in part, a program or any person who
will manage or is entitled to manage or participate in the management or
control of a program.  "Sponsor" includes the managing and controlling
general partner(s) and any other person who actually controls or selects
the person who controls 25% or more of the exploratory, developmental or
producing activities of the Partnership, or any segment thereof, even if
that person has not entered into a contract at the time of formation of
the Partnership.  "Sponsor" does not include wholly independent third
parties such as attorneys, accountants, and underwriters whose only
compensation is for professional services rendered in connection with the
offering of units.  Whenever the context of these guidelines so requires,
the term "sponsor" shall be deemed to include its affiliates.

    (bbb)  "Subscription" shall mean the amount indicated on the
Subscription Agreement that an Investor Partner has agreed to pay to the
Partnership as his Capital Contribution.

    (ccc)  "Subscription Agreement" shall mean the Agreement, attached to
the Prospectus as Appendix B, pursuant to which an Investor subscribes to
Units in the Partnership.

    (ddd)  "Substituted Investor Partner" shall mean any Person admitted to
the Partnership as an Investor Partner pursuant to Section 7.03(c) hereof.

    (eee)  "Treas. Reg." or "Regulation" shall mean the income tax
regulations promulgated under the Code, as such regulations may be amended
from time to time (including corresponding provisions of succeeding
regulations).

    (fff)  "Unit" shall mean an undivided interest of the Investor Partners
in the aggregate interest in the capital and profits of the Partnership. 
Each Unit represents Capital Contributions of $20,000 to the Partnership.

    (ggg)  "Working Interest" shall mean an interest in an oil and gas
leasehold which is subject to some portion of the costs of development,
operation, or maintenance.

                         ARTICLE II

                        Capitalization

    2.01  Capital Contributions of the Managing General Partner and Initial
Limited Partner.

                              11
<PAGE>
          (a)  On or before the Offering Termination Date, the Managing
    General Partner shall make a Capital Contribution in cash to the
    Partnership of an amount equal to not less than 21-7/8% of the aggregate
    Capital Contributions of the Investor Partners.  The Managing General
    Partner shall pay all Lease and tangible drilling costs as well as all
    Intangible Drilling Costs in excess of such costs paid by the Investor
    Partners with respect to the Partnership; to the extent that such costs
    are greater than the Managing General Partner's Capital Contribution set
    forth in the previous sentence, the Managing General Partner shall make
    such additional contributions in cash to the Partnership equal to such
    additional Costs.  In consideration of making such Capital Contribution,
    becoming a General Partner, subjecting its assets to the liabilities of
    the Partnership, and undertaking other obligations as herein set forth,
    the Managing General Partner shall receive the interest in the
    Partnership allocated in Article III hereof.

          (b) The Initial Limited Partner shall contribute $100 in cash to
    the capital of the Partnership.  Upon the earlier of the conversion of
    an Additional General Partner's interest into a Limited Partner's
    interest or the admission of a Limited Partner to the Partnership, the
    Partnership shall redeem in full, without interest or deduction, the
    Initial Limited Partner's Capital Contribution, and the Initial Limited
    Partner shall cease to be a Partner.

    2.02  Capital Contributions of the Investor Partners.

          (a) Upon execution of this Agreement, each Investor Partner (whose
    names and addresses and number of Units to which Subscribed are set
    forth in Exhibit A) shall contribute to the capital of the Partnership
    the sum of $20,000 for each Unit purchased.  The minimum subscription
    by an Investor Partner is one-quarter Unit ($5,000).  The maximum
    aggregate number of Units which may be purchased by Investor Partners
    is two thousand five hundred (2,500).

          (b) The contributions of the Investor Partners pursuant to
    subsection 2.02(a) hereof shall be in cash or by check subject to
    collection.

          (c) Until the Offering Termination Date and until such 
    subsequent time as the contributions of the Investor Partners are 
    invested in accordance with the provisions of the Prospectus, all
    monies received from persons subscribing as Investor Partners (i)
    shall continue to be the property of the investor making such
    payment, (ii) shall be held in escrow for such investor in the
    manner and to the extent provided in the Prospectus, and (iii)
    shall not be commingled with the personal monies or become an
    asset of the Managing General Partner or the Partnership.

          (d) Upon the original sale of Units by the Partnership,
    subscribers shall be admitted as Partners no later than 15 days after
    the release from the escrow account of the Capital Contributions to the
    Partnership, in accordance with the terms of the Prospectus;
    subscriptions shall be accepted or rejected by the Partnership within
    30 days of their receipt; if rejected, all subscription monies shall be
    returned to the subscriber forthwith.

          (e) Except as provided in Section 4.03 hereof, any proceeds of the
    offering of Units for sale pursuant to the Prospectus not used,
    committed for use, or reserved as operating capital in the Partnership's
    operations within one year after the closing of such offering shall be

                              12
<PAGE>
    distributed pro rata to the Investor Partners as a return of capital and
    the Managing General Partner shall reimburse such Investors for selling
    expenses, management fees, and offering expenses allocable to the return
    of capital.

          (f) Until proceeds from the public offering are invested in the
    Partnership's operations, such proceeds may be temporarily invested in
    income producing short-term, highly liquid investments, where there is
    appropriate safety of principal, such as U.S. Treasury Bills.  Any such
    income shall be allocated pro rata to the Investor Partners providing
    such capital contributions.

    2.03  Additional Contributions.  Except as otherwise provided in this
Agreement, no Investor Partner shall be required or obligated (a) to
contribute any capital to the Partnership other than as provided in
Section 2.02 hereof, or (b) to lend any funds to the Partnership.  No
interest shall be paid on any capital contributed to the Partnership
pursuant to this Article II and, except as otherwise provided herein, no
Partner, other than the Initial Limited Partner as authorized herein, may
withdraw his Capital Contribution.  The Units are nonassessable; however,
General Partners are liable, in addition to their Capital Contributions,
for Partnership obligations and liabilities represented by their ownership
of interests as general partners, in accordance with West Virginia law.


                        ARTICLE III

              Capital Accounts and Allocations

    3.01  Capital Accounts.

          (a)  General.  A separate Capital Account shall be established
    and maintained for each Partner on the books and records of the
    Partnership.  Capital Accounts shall be maintained in accordance with
    Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b) and any inconsistency between the
    provisions of this Section 3.01 and such regulation shall be resolved
    in favor of the regulation.  In the event the Managing General Partner
    shall determine that it is prudent to modify the manner in which the
    Capital Accounts, or any debits or credits thereto (including, without
    limitation, debits or credits relating to liabilities that are secured
    by contributed or distributed property or that are assumed by the
    Partnership of the Partners), are computed in order to comply with such
    regulations, the Managing General Partner may make such modification,
    provided that it is not likely to have a material effect on the amounts
    distributable to any Partner pursuant to Section 9.03 hereof upon the
    dissolution of the Partnership.  The Managing General Partner also shall
    (i) make any adjustments that are necessary or appropriate to maintain
    equality between the Capital Accounts of the Partners and the amount of
    Partnership capital reflected on the Partnership's balance sheet, as
    computed for book purposes, in accordance with Treas. Reg.
    Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(q), and (ii) make any appropriate
    modifications in the event unanticipated events might otherwise cause
    this Agreement not to comply with Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b).

          (b) Increases to Capital Accounts.  Each Partner's Capital Account
    shall be credited with (i) the amount of money contributed by him to the
    Partnership; (ii) the amount of any Partnership liabilities that are
    assumed by him (within the meaning of Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-
    1(b)(2)(iv)(c)), but not by increases in his share of Partnership

                              13
<PAGE>
    liabilities within the meaning of Code Section 752(a); (iii) the Gross
    Asset Value of property contributed by him to the Partnership (net of
    liabilities securing such contributed property that the Partnership is
    considered to assume or take subject to under Code Section 752); and
    (iv) allocations to him of Partnership Profits (or items thereof),
    including income and gain exempt from tax and Income and gain described
    in Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(g) (relating to adjustments to
    reflect book value).

          (c)  Decreases to Capital Accounts.  Each Partner's Capital
    Account shall be debited with (i) the amount of money distributed to
    him by the Partnership; (ii) the amount of his individual liabilities
    that are assumed by the Partnership (other than liabilities described
    in Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(b)(2) that are assumed by
    the Partnership and other than decreases in his share of Partnership
    liabilities within the meaning of Code Section 752(b)); (iii) the
    Gross Asset Value of property distributed to him by the Partnership
    (net of liabilities securing such distributed property that he is
    considered to assume or take subject to under Code Section 752);
    (iv) allocations to him of expenditures of the Partnership not
    deductible in computing Partnership taxable income and not properly
    chargeable to Capital Account (as described in Code Section
    705(a)(2)(B)), and (v) allocations to him of Partnership Losses (or
    item thereof), including loss and deduction described in Treas. Reg.
    Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(g) (relating to adjustments to reflect book
    value), but excluding items described in (iv) above and excluding loss
    or deduction described in Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(4)(iii)
    (relating to excess percentage depletion).

          (d)  Adjustments to Capital Accounts Related to Depletion.

               (i)  Solely for purposes of maintaining the Capital
            Accounts, each year the Partnership shall compute (in
            accordance with Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(k))
            a simulated depletion allowance for each oil and gas
            property using that method, as between the cost depletion
            method and the percentage depletion method (without
            regard to the limitations of Code Section 613A(c)(3) which
            theoretically could apply to any Partner), which results in the
            greatest simulated depletion allowance.  The simulated depletion
            allowance with respect to each oil and gas property shall reduce
            the Partners' Capital Accounts in the same proportion as the
            Partners were allocated adjusted basis with respect to such oil
            and gas property under Section 3.03(a) hereof.  In no event
            shall the Partnership's aggregate simulated depletion allowance
            with respect to an oil and gas property exceed the Partnership's
            adjusted basis in the oil and gas property (maintained solely
            for Capital Account purposes).

                (ii)  Upon the taxable disposition of an oil and gas
            property by the Partnership, the Partnership shall determine
            the simulated (hypothetical) gain or loss with respect to such
            oil and gas property (solely for Capital Account purposes) by
            subtracting the Partnership's simulated adjusted basis for the
            oil and gas property (maintained solely for Capital Account
            purposes) from the amount realized by the Partnership upon
            such disposition.  Simulated adjusted basis shall be determined
            by reducing the adjusted basis by the aggregate simulated
            depletion charged to the Capital Accounts of all Partners in
            accordance with Section 3.01(d)(i) hereof.  The Capital
            Accounts of the Partners shall be adjusted upward 


                              14
<PAGE>
            by the amount of any simulated gain on such disposition in
            proportion to such Partners' allocable share of the portion of
            total amount realized from the disposition of such property that
            exceeds the Partnership's simulated adjusted basis in such
            property.  The Capital Accounts of the Partners shall be
            adjusted downward by the amount of any simulated loss in
            proportion to such Partners' allocable shares of the total
            amount realized from the disposition of such property that
            represents recovery of the Partnership's simulated adjusted
            basis in such property.

          (e) Restoration of Negative Capital Accounts.  Except as otherwise
    provided in this Agreement, neither an Investor Partner nor the Initial
    Limited Partner shall be obligated to the Partnership or to any other
    Partner to restore any negative balance in his Capital Account.  The
    Managing General Partner shall be obligated to restore the deficit
    balance in its Capital Account.

    3.02  Allocation of Profits and Losses.

          (a) General.  Except as provided in this Section 3.02 or in
    Section 3.03 hereof, Profits and Losses of the Partnership shall be
    allocated 80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing General
    Partner;  provided, that if the subordination of the Managing General
    Partner's share of cash distributions is effected pursuant to Section
    4.02 the allocations of Profits and Losses of the Partnership shall be
    allocated to reflect such subordination.  Notwithstanding the above
    allocations, the following special allocations shall be employed:

                (i)   IDC and recapture of IDC shall be allocated 100%
            to the Investor Partners and 0% to the Managing General
            Partner;

                (ii)   Organization and Offering Costs net of
            commissions, due diligence expenses and wholesaling
            fees payable to the dealer manager and the soliciting
            dealers shall be paid by the Managing General Partner;
            such commissions, due diligence expenses and
            wholesaling fees payable to the dealer manager and the
            soliciting dealers shall be allocated 100% to the Investor
            Partners and 0% to the Managing General Partner; except
            that Organization and Offering Costs in excess of 10 1/2%
            of Subscriptions shall be allocated 100% to the Managing
            General Partner and 0% to the Investor Partners;

                (iii) the Management Fee shall be allocated 100% to
            the Investor Partners and 0% to the Managing General
            Partner;

                (iv) Costs of Leases and Costs of tangible equipment,
            including depreciation or cost recovery benefits, and
            revenues from the sale of equipment shall be allocated 0%
            to the Investor Partners and 100% to the Managing General
            Partner;

                (v)   Drilling and Completion Costs shall be allocated
            80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing General
            Partner;

                (vi)  Direct Costs and Operating Costs shall be allocated
            80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing General
            Partner; and

                (vii) Administrative Costs shall be borne 100% by and
            allocated 100% to the Managing General Partner.



                              15
<PAGE>
            (b)  Capital Account Deficits.  Notwithstanding anything to the
    contrary in Section 3.02(a), no Investor Partner shall be allocated any
    item to the extent that such allocation would create or increase a
    deficit in such Investor Partner's Capital Account.

                (i)   Obligations to Restore.  For purposes of this Section
            3.02(b), in determining whether an allocation would create or
            increase a deficit in a Partner's Capital Account, such Capital
            Account shall be reduced for those items described in Treas.
            Reg. Sections 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(4), (5), and (6) and shall
            be increased by any amounts which such Partner is obligated to
            restore or is deemed obligated to restore pursuant to the
            penultimate sentences of Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-2(g)(1) and
            1.704-2(i)(5).  Further, such Capital Accounts shall otherwise
            meet the requirements of Treas. Reg. Section
            1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d).

                (ii)   Reallocations.  Any loss or deduction of the
            Partnership, the allocation of which to any Partner is
            prohibited by this Section 3.02(b), shall be reallocated
            to those Partners not having a deficit in their Capital
            Accounts (as adjusted in Section 3.02(b)(i)) in the
            proportion that the positive balance of each such Partner's
            adjusted Capital Account bears to the aggregate balance of
            all such Partners' adjusted Capital Accounts, with any
            remaining losses or deductions being allocated to the Managing
            General Partner.

                (iii) Qualified Income Offset.  In the event any Investor 
            Partner unexpectedly receives any adjustments, allocations, or
            distributions described in Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-
            1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(4), (5), or (6), items of Partnership income and
            gain shall be specifically allocated to such Partner in an
            amount and manner sufficient to eliminate (to the extent
            required by the Regulations) the total of the deficit balance
            in his Capital Account (as adjusted in Section 3.02(b)(i))
            created by such adjustments, allocations, or distributions,
            provided that an allocation pursuant to this Section
            3.02(b)(iii) shall be made if and only to the extent that
            such Partner would have a deficit in his Capital Account
            (as adjusted in Section 3.02(b)(i)) after all other
            allocations provided for in this Section 3 have been
            tentatively made as if this Section 3.02(b)(iii) were not 
            in the Agreement.

               (iv)   Gross Income Allocations.  In the event an Investor 
            Partner has a deficit Capital Account at the end of any 
            Partnership fiscal year which is in excess of the sum of (i) the
            amount such Partner is obligated to restore pursuant to any 
            provision of this Agreement and (ii) the amount such Partner is
            deemed to be obligated to restore pursuant to the penultimate 
            sentences of Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-2(g)(1) and
            1.704-2(i)(5), such Partner shall be specially allocated items
            of Partnership income and gain in the amount of such excess as
            quickly as possible, provided that an allocation pursuant to
            this Section 3.02(b)(iv) shall be made only if and to the extent
            that such Partner would have a deficit Capital Account in excess
            of such sum after all other allocations provided for in this
            Section 3 have been made as if Section 3.02(b)(iii) hereof and 
            this Section 3.02(b)(iv) were not in the Agreement.

            (c) Minimum Gain Chargeback.  Notwithstanding any other
    provision of this Section 3.02, if there is a net decrease in
    Partnership Minimum Gain during any taxable year, pursuant to Treas.
    Reg. Section 1.704-

                              16
<PAGE>
    2(f)(1), all Partners shall be allocated items of partnership income and
    gain for that year equal to that partner's share of the net decrease in
    Partnership Minimum Gain (within the meaning of Treas. Reg.
    Section1.704-2(g)(2)).  Notwithstanding the preceding sentence, no such
    chargeback shall be made to the extent one or more of the exceptions
    and/or waivers provided for in Treas. Reg. Section1.704-2(f)(2)-(5)
    applies.  Allocations pursuant to the previous sentence shall be made
    in proportion to the respective amounts required to be allocated to each
    Partner pursuant thereto.  The items to be so allocated shall be
    determined in accordance with Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-2(f)(6).  This
    Section 3.02(c) is intended to comply with the minimum gain chargeback
    requirement in such Section of the Regulations and shall be interpreted
    consistently therewith.  To the extent permitted by such Section of the
    Regulations and for purposes of this Section 3.02(c) only, each
    Partner's Capital Account (as adjusted in Section 3.02(b)(i)) shall be
    determined prior to any other allocations pursuant to this Section 3
    with respect to such tax year and without regard to any net decrease in
    Partner Minimum Gain during such fiscal year.

            (d)      Partner Minimum Gain Chargeback.  Notwithstanding any
    other provision of this Section 3 except Section 3.02(c), if there is a
    net decrease in Partner Minimum Gain attributable to a Partner
    Nonrecourse Debt during any Partnership fiscal year, rules similar to
    those contained in Section 3.02(c) shall apply in a manner consistent
    with Treas. Reg. Section1.704-2(i)(4).  This Section 3.02(d) is intended
    to comply with the minimum gain chargeback requirement in such Section
    of the Regulations and shall be interpreted consistently therewith. 
    Solely for purposes of this Section 3.02(d), each Person's Capital
    Account deficit (as so adjusted) shall be determined prior to any other
    allocations pursuant to this Section 3 with respect to such fiscal year,
    other than allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(c) hereof.

          (e)      Nonrecourse Deductions.  Nonrecourse Deductions for any 
    fiscal year or other period shall be specially allocated to the Partners
    (in proportion to their Units), in accordance with Treas. Reg.
    Section 1.704-2.

            (f)      Partner Nonrecourse Deductions.  Any Partner
    Nonrecourse Deductions for any fiscal year or other period shall be
    specially allocated to the Partner who bears the economic risk of loss
    with respect to the Partner Nonrecourse Debt to which such Partner
    Nonrecourse Deductions are attributable in accordance with Treas. Reg.
    Section 1.704-2(i).

          (g)        Code Section 754 Adjustments.  To the extent an
    adjustment to the adjusted tax basis of any Partnership asset pursuant
    to Code Section 734(b) or Section 743(b) is required, pursuant to Treas.
    Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(m), to be taken into account in
    determining Capital Accounts, the amount of such adjustment to the
    Capital Accounts shall be treated as an item of gain (if the adjustment
    increases the basis of the asset) or loss (if the adjustment decreases
    such basis) and such gain or loss shall be specially allocated to the
    Partners in a manner consistent with the manner in which their Capital
    Accounts are required to be adjusted pursuant to such Section of the
    Regulations.

            (h)      Curative Allocations.



                              17
<PAGE>
               (i)   The "Regulatory Allocations" consist of the "Basic
            Regulatory Allocations," as defined in Section 3.02(h)(ii)
            hereof, the "Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations," as defined
            in Section 3.02(h)(iii) hereof, and the "Partner Nonrecourse
            Regulatory Allocations," as defined in Section 3.02(h)(iv)
            hereof.

                (ii)   The "Basic Regulatory Allocations" consist of
            allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(b)(ii), (iii), and (iv)
            hereof.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement,
            other than the Regulatory Allocations, the Basic Regulatory
            Allocations shall be taken into account in allocating items of
            income, gain, loss, and deduction among the Partners so that, to
            the extent possible, the net amount of such allocations of other
            items and the Basic Regulatory Allocations to each Partner shall
            be equal to the net amount that would have been allocated to
            each such Partner if the Basic Regulatory Allocations had not
            occurred.  For purposes of applying the foregoing sentence,
            allocations pursuant to this Section 3.02(h)(ii) shall only be
            made with respect to allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(g)
            hereof to the extent the Managing General Partner reasonably
            determines that such allocations will otherwise be inconsistent
            with the economic agreement among the parties to this Agreement.

                (iii) The "Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations" consist of
            all allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(c) and 3.02(e) hereof. 
            Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, other
            than the Regulatory Allocations, the Nonrecourse Regulatory
            Allocations shall be taken into account in allocating items of
            income, gain, loss, and deduction among the Partners so that, to
            the extent possible, the net amount of such allocations of other
            items and the Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations to each Partner
            shall be equal to the net amount that would have been allocated
            to each Partner if the Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations had
            not occurred.  For purposes of applying the foregoing sentence
            (i) no allocations pursuant to this Section 3.02(h)(iii) shall
            be made prior to the Partnership fiscal year during which there
            is a net decrease in Partnership Minimum Gain, and then only to
            the extent necessary to avoid any potential economic distortions
            caused by such net decrease in Partnership Minimum Gain, and
            (ii) allocations pursuant to this Section 3.02(h)(iii) shall be
            deferred with respect to allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(e)
            hereof to the extent the Managing General Partner reasonably
            determines that such allocations are likely to be offset by
            subsequent allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(c).

                (iv)   The "Partner Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations"
            consist of all allocations pursuant to Sections 3.02(d) and
            3.02(f) hereof.  Notwithstanding any other provision of this
            Agreement, other than the Regulatory Allocations, the Partner
            Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations shall be taken into account
            in allocating items of income, gain, loss, and deduction among
            the Partners so that, to the extent possible, the net amount of
            such allocations of other items and the Partner Nonrecourse
            Regulatory Allocations to each Partner shall be equal to the net
            amount that would have been allocated to each such Partner if
            the Partner Nonrecourse Regulatory Allocations had not occurred.
            For purposes of applying the foregoing sentence (i) no
            allocations pursuant to this Section  3.02(h)(iv) shall be made
            with respect to allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(f) relating
            to a particular Partner Nonrecourse Debt

                              18
<PAGE>
            prior to the Partnership fiscal year during which there is a net
            decrease in Partner Minimum Gain attributable to such Partner
            Nonrecourse Debt, and then only to the extent necessary to avoid
            any potential economic distortions caused by such net decrease
            in Partner Minimum Gain, and (ii) allocations pursuant to this
            Section 3.02(h)(iv) shall be deferred with respect to
            allocations pursuant to Section 3.02(f) hereof relating to a
            particular Partner Nonrecourse Debt to the extent the Managing
            General Partner reasonably determines that such allocations are
            likely to be offset by subsequent allocations pursuant to
            Section 3.02(d) hereof.

                (v)   The Managing General Partner shall have reasonable
            discretion with respect to each Partnership fiscal year, to
            apply the provisions of Sections 3.02(h)(ii), (iii), and (iv)
            hereof among the Partners in a manner that is likely to minimize
            such economic distortions.

            (i)  Other Allocations.  Except as otherwise provided in this
    Agreement, all items of Partnership income, loss, deduction, and any
    other allocations not otherwise provided for shall be divided among the
    Unit Holders in the same proportions as they share Profits or Losses,
    as the case may be, for the year.

            (j)  Agreement to be Bound.  The Partners are aware of the
    income tax consequences of the allocations made by this Section 3.02 and
    hereby agree to be bound by the provisions of this Section 3.02 in
    reporting their shares of Partnership income and loss for income tax
    purposes.

            (k)   Excess Nonrecourse Liabilities.  Solely for purposes of
    determining a Partner's proportionate share of the "excess nonrecourse
    liabilities" of the Partnership within the meaning of Treas. Reg.
    Section 1.752-3(a)(3), the Partners' interests in Partnership profits
    are as follows:  Investor Partners, 80% (in proportion to their Units)
    and the Managing General Partner, 20%.

            (l)   Allocation Variations.  The Managing General Partner shall
    have the authority to vary allocations to preserve and protect the
    intention of the Partners as follows:

                (i) It is the intention of the Partners that each Partner's
            distributive share of income, gain, loss, deduction or credit
            (or any item thereof) shall be determined and allocated in
            accordance with this Article 3 to the fullest extent permitted
            by Code Section 704(b).  In order to preserve and protect the
            allocations provided for in this Article 3, the Managing General
            Partner shall have the authority to allocate income, gain, loss,
            deduction or credit (or any item thereof) arising in any year
            differently than that expressly provided for in this Article 3,
            if and to the extent that determining and allocating income,
            gain, loss, deduction or credit (or any item thereof) in the
            manner expressly provided for in this Article 3 would cause the
            allocations of each Partner's distributive share of income,
            gain, loss, deduction or credit (or any item thereof) not to be
            permitted by Code Section 704(b) and the Regulations promulgated
            thereunder.  Any allocation made pursuant to this Section
            3.02(l) shall be deemed to be a complete substitute for any
            allocation otherwise expressly provided for in this Article 3,
            and no amendment of this Agreement or further
            consent of any Partner shall be required therefor.


                              19
<PAGE>
                (ii)   In making any such allocation (the "new allocation")
            under this Section 3.02(l) the Managing General Partner shall be
            authorized to act only after having been advised by the
            Partnership's accountants and/or counsel that, under Code
            Section 704(b) and the Regulations thereunder, (i) the new
            allocation is necessary, and (ii) the new allocation is the
            minimum modification of the allocations otherwise expressly
            provided for in this Article 3 which is necessary in order to
            assure that, either in the then current year or in any preceding
            year, each Partner's distributive share of income, gain, loss,
            deduction or credit (or any item thereof) is determined and
            allocated in accordance with this Article 3 to the fullest
            extent permitted by Code Section 704(b) and the Regulations
            thereunder.

                (iii) If the Managing General Partner is required by this 
            Section 3.02(l) to make any new allocation in a manner less  
            favorable to the Investor Partners than is otherwise expressly 
            provided for in this Article 3, then the Managing General
            Partner shall have the authority, only after having been advised
            by the Partnership's accountants and/or counsel that they are
            permitted by Code Section 704(b), to allocate income, gain,
            loss, deduction or credit (or any item thereof) arising in later
            years in such a manner as will make the allocations of income,
            gain, loss, deduction or credit (or any item thereof) to the
            Investor Partners as comparable as possible to the allocations
            otherwise expressly provided for or contemplated by this Article
            3.

              (iv)   Any new allocation made by the Managing General Partner
            under this Section 3.02(l) in reliance upon the advice of the
            Partnership's accountants and/or counsel shall be deemed to be
            made pursuant to the fiduciary obligation of the Managing
            General Partner to the Partnership and the Investor Partners,
            and no such new allocation shall give rise to any claim or cause
            of action by any Investor Partner.

    (m)  Tax Allocations:  Code Section 704(c).  In accordance with Code
Section 704(c) and the Regulations thereunder, income, gain, loss, and
deduction with respect to any property contributed to the capital of the
Partnership shall, solely for tax purposes, be allocated among the
Partners so as to take account of any variation between the adjusted basis
of such property to the Partnership for federal income tax purposes and
its initial Gross Asset Value (computed in accordance with Section
1.08(r)(1).

    In the event the Gross Asset Value of any Partnership asset is adjusted
pursuant to Section 1.08(r)(1) hereof, subsequent allocations of income,
gain, loss, and deduction with respect to such asset shall take account of
any variation between the adjusted basis of such asset for federal income
tax purposes and its Gross Asset Value in the same manner as under Code
Section 704(c) and the Regulations thereunder.

    Any elections or other decisions relating to such allocations shall be
made by the Managing General Partner in any manner that reasonably
reflects the purpose and intention of this Agreement.  Allocations
pursuant to this Section 3.02(m) are solely for purposes of federal,
state, and local taxes and shall not affect, or in any way be taken into
account in computing, any Person's Capital Account or share of Profits,
Losses, other items, or distributions pursuant to any provision of this
Agreement.

                              20
<PAGE>
    3.03  Depletion.

            (a)  The depletion deduction with respect to each oil and gas
    property of the Partnership shall be computed separately for each
    Partner in accordance with Code Section 613A(c)(7)(D) for Federal income
    tax purposes.  For purposes of such computation, the adjusted basis of
    each oil and gas property shall be allocated in accordance with the
    Partners' interests in the capital of the Partnership.  Among the
    Investor Partners, such adjusted basis shall be apportioned among them
    in accordance with the number of Units held.

            (b)  Upon the taxable disposition of an oil or gas property by
    the Partnership, the amount realized from and the adjusted basis of such
    property shall be allocated among the Partners (for purposes of
    calculating their individual gain or loss on such disposition for
    Federal income tax purposes) as follows:

                (i)  The portion of the total amount realized upon the
            taxable disposition of such property that represents recovery
            of its simulated adjusted tax basis therein (as calculated
            pursuant to Section 3.01(d) hereof) shall be allocated to the
            Partners in the same proportion as the aggregate adjusted basis
            of such property was allocated to such Partners (or their
            predecessors in interest) pursuant to Section 3.03(a) hereof;
            and

                (ii)  The portion of the total amount realized upon the
            taxable disposition of such property that represents the excess
            over the simulated adjusted tax basis therein shall be allocated
            in accordance with the provisions of Section 3.02 hereof as if
            such gain constituted an item of Profit.

    3.04  Apportionment Among Partners:

            (a)  Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, all
    allocations and distributions to the Investor Partners shall be
    apportioned among them pro rata based on Units held by the Partners.

            (b)  For purposes of Section 3.04(a) hereof, an Investor
    Partner's pro rata share in Units shall be calculated as of the end of 
    the taxable year for which such allocation has been made; provided,
    however, that if a transferee of a Unit is admitted as an Investor 
    Partner during the course of the taxable year, the apportionment of 
    allocations and distributions between the transferor and transferee of
    such Unit shall be made in the manner provided in Section 3.04(c)
    hereof.

            (c)  If, during any taxable year of the Partnership, there is a
    change in any Partner's interest in the Partnership, each Partner's
    allocation of any item of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit of
    the Partnership for such taxable year, other than "allocable cash basis
    items" shall be determined by taking into account the varying interests
    of the Partners pursuant to such method as is permitted by Code
    Section 706(d) and the regulations thereunder.  Each Partner's share of
    "allocable cash basis items" shall be determined in accordance with Code
    Section 706(d)(2) by (i) assigning the appropriate portion of each item
    to each day in the period to which it is attributable, and (ii)
    allocating the portion assigned to any such day among the Partners in
    proportion to their interests in the Partnership at the close of such
    day.  "Allocable cash basis item" shall have the meaning ascribed to it
    by Code Section 706(d)(2)(B) and the regulations thereunder.

                              21
<PAGE>
                       ARTICLE IV

                      Distributions

    4.01  Time of Distribution.  Cash available for distribution shall be
determined by the Managing General Partner.  The Managing General Partner
shall distribute, in its discretion, such cash deemed available for
distribution, but such distributions shall be made not less frequently
than quarterly.

    4.02  Distributions.  Except as provided below, all distributions (other
than those made to wind up the Partnership in accordance with Section 9.03
hereof) shall be made 80% to the Investor Partners and 20% to the Managing
General Partner.  If at any time during the initial     ten      year period
of distributions form all Partnership wells that cumulative cash
distributions to the Investor Partners average less than 10% of their
Subscription on an annual basis, subsequent distributions shall be
adjusted to increase the Investor Partners' interest in distribution until
such time as the cumulative average return is 10% or the subordination
period expires.  The Managing General Partner shall subordinate up to 50%
of its 20% share of Partnership cash distributions so that the Investor
Partners will receive increased cash distributions.  The subordination
period shall commence upon the initial cash distribution of the
Partnership after all Partnership wells have been placed in production and
shall continue in successive twelve-month periods thereafter.     In
addition to the foregoing subordination provision, if on any anniversary
of the first distribution after all Partnership wells have been placed in
production, the cumulative distributions to the Investor Partners have
averaged less than 15% of their Subscriptions on an annual basis, and the
distributions for the twelve months preceding the anniversary have totaled
less than 10%, Managing General Partner shall refund to the Partnership
which shall thereupon distribute to the Investor Partners an amount equal
to the difference between the amount distributed to Investor Partners
during the preceding twelve month period, and the lesser of 10% of the
Investor Partner Subscriptions or the amount the Investor Partners would
have received had they been allocated 90% of the Partnership's distributions
during that twelve month period.  These subordination provisions shall
expire on the tenth anniversary of the first distribution from all
partnership wells.      The Partnership shall not require that Investor
Partners reinvest their share of cash available for distribution in the
Partnership.  In no event shall funds be advanced or borrowed for purposes
of distributions, if the amount of such distributions would exceed the
Partnership's accrued and received revenues for the previous four quarters,
less paid and accrued operating costs with respect to such revenues.  The
determination of such revenues and costs shall be made in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles, consistently applied.  Cash
distributions from the Partnership to the Managing General Partner shall
only be made in conjunction with distributions to Investor Partners and
only out of funds properly allocated to the Managing General Partner's
account.

    4.03  Capital Account Deficits.  No distributions shall be made to any
Investor Partner to the extent such distribution would create or increase
a deficit in such Partner's Capital Account (as adjusted in Section
3.02(b)(i)).  Any distribution which is hereby prohibited shall be made to
those Partners not having a deficit in their Capital Accounts (as adjusted
in Section 3.02(b)(i)) in the proportion that the positive balance of each
such Partner's adjusted Capital Account bears to the aggregate balance of
all such Partners' adjusted Capital Accounts.  Any cash available for
distribution remaining after reduction of all adjusted Capital Accounts to
zero shall be distributed to the Managing General Partner.

    4.04  Liability Upon Receipt of Distributions.

          (a) If a Partner has received a return of any part of his
    Capital Contribution without violation of the Partnership Agreement or
    the Act, he is liable to the Partnership for a period of one year
    thereafter for the amount of such returned contribution, but only to
    the extent necessary to discharge the Partnership's liabilities to
    creditors who extended credit to the Partnership during the period
    the Capital Contribution was held by the Partnership.

                              22
<PAGE>
            (b) If a Partner has received a return of any part of his
    Capital Contribution in violation of either the Partnership Agreement
    or the Act, he is liable to the Partnership for a period of six years
    thereafter for the amount of the Capital Contribution wrongfully
    returned.

            (c) A Partner receives a return of his Capital Contribution to
    the extent that the distribution to him reduces his share of the fair 
    value of the net assets of the Partnership below the value, as set forth
    in the records required to be kept by West Virginia law, of his Capital
    Contribution which has not been distributed to him.


                      ARTICLE V

                      Activities

    5.01  Management.  The Managing General Partner shall conduct, direct,
and exercise full and exclusive control over all activities of the
Partnership.  Investor Partners shall have no power over the conduct of
the affairs of the Partnership or otherwise commit or bind the Partnership
in any manner.   The Managing General Partner shall manage the affairs of
the Partnership in a prudent and businesslike fashion and shall use its
best efforts to carry out the purposes and character of the business of
the Partnership.

    5.02  Conduct of Operations.

            (a)(i)  The Managing General Partner shall establish a program
    of operations for the Partnership which shall be in conformance with the
    following policies:  (x) no less than 90% of the Capital Contributions
    net of Organization and Offering Costs and the Management Fee shall be
    applied to drilling and completing Development Wells; (y) the
    Partnership shall drill all of its wells in West Virginia, Ohio,
    Pennsylvania, New York, Kentucky,     Michigan and/or Indiana     and
    (z) the Prospects will be acquired pursuant to an arrangement whereby
    the Partnership will acquire between 51% and 100% of the Working
    Interest, subject to landowners' royalty interests and the royalty
    interests payable to unaffiliated third parties in varying amounts,
    provided that the weighted average for all Prospects of the Partnership
    shall not exceed 16.125%.  At its discretion, the Partnership may
    purchase less than a 51% Working Interest with respect to the first and
    last Prospects acquired.

              (ii)  The Investor Partners agree to participate in the
    Partnership's program of operations as established by the Managing
    General Partner; provided, that no well drilled to the point of setting
    casing need be completed if, in the Managing General Partner's opinion,
    such well is unlikely to be productive of oil or gas in quantities
    sufficient to justify the expenditures required for well completion. 
    The Partnership may participate with others in the drilling of wells and
    it may enter into joint ventures, partnerships, or other such
    arrangements.

            (b) All transactions between the Partnership and the Managing
    General Partner or its Affiliates shall be on terms no less favorable
    than those terms which could be obtained between the Partnership and
    independent third parties dealing at arm's-length, subject to the
    provisions of Section 5.07 hereof.


                              23
<PAGE>
            (c)  The Partnership shall not participate in any joint
    operations on any co-owned Lease unless there has been acquired or 
    reserved on behalf of the Partnership the right to take in kind or
    separately dispose of its proportionate share of the oil and gas
    produced from such Lease exclusive of production which may be used in
    development and production operations on the Lease and production
    unavoidably lost, and, if the Managing General Partner is the operator
    of such Lease, the Managing General Partner has entered into written
    agreements with every other person or entity owning any working or
    operating interest reserving to such person or entity a similar right
    to take in-kind, unless, in the opinion of counsel to the Partnership,
    the failure to reserve such right to take in-kind will not result in
    the Partnership being treated as a member of an association taxable 
    as a corporation for Federal income tax purposes.

          (d)  The relationship of the Partnership and the Managing General
    Partner (or any Affiliate retaining or acquiring an interest) as co-
    owners in Leases, except to the extent superseded by an Operating
    Agreement consistent with the preceding paragraph and except to the
    extent inconsistent with this Partnership Agreement, shall be governed
    by the AAPL Form 610 Model Operating Agreement-1982, with a provision
    reserving the right to take production in-kind, naming the Managing
    General Partner as operator and the Partnership as a nonoperator, and
    with the accounting procedure to govern as the accounting procedures
    under such Operating Agreements.

            (e)  The Managing General Partner is expected to act as the
    operator of all Partnership wells, and the Managing General Partner may
    designate such other persons as it deems appropriate to conduct the
    actual drilling and producing operations of the Partnership.

            (f)  As operator of Partnership wells, the Managing General
    Partner or its Affiliates shall receive per-well charges for each
    producing well based on the Working Interest acquired by the
    Partnership.  These per-well charges shall be subject to annual
    adjustment beginning January 1, 1998 [with respect to Partnerships
    designated as "PDC 1996-  Limited Partnership" and January 1, 1999 with
    respect to Partnerships designated as "PDC 1997-  Limited Partnership"] 
    as provided in the accounting procedures of the operating agreements.

            (g)  The Managing General Partner shall drill wells pursuant to
    drilling contracts with the Partnership based upon competitive prices
    and terms in the geographic area of operations, and to the extent that
    such prices exceed its Costs, the Managing General Partner shall be
    deemed to have received compensation.

            (h)  The Managing General Partner shall be reimbursed by the
    Partnership for Direct Costs.  The Managing General Partner shall not
    be reimbursed for any Administrative Costs.  All other expenses shall
    be borne by the Partnership.

            (i)  The Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may enter
    into other transactions (embodied in a written contract) with the
    Partnership, such as providing services, supplies, and equipment, and
    shall be entitled to compensation for such services at prices and on
    terms that are competitive in the geographic area of operations.

            (j)  The Partnership shall make no loans to the Managing General
    Partner or any Affiliate thereof.

                              24
<PAGE>
            (k)  Neither the Managing General Partner nor any Affiliate
    shall loan any funds to the Partnership.

            (l)  The funds of the Partnership shall not be commingled with
    the funds of any other Person.

            (m)  Notwithstanding any provision herein to the contrary, no
    creditor shall receive, as a result of making any loan, a direct or
    indirect interest in the profits, capital, or property of the
    Partnership other than as a secured creditor.

            (n)  The Managing General Partner shall have a fiduciary
    responsibility for the safekeeping and use of all funds and assets of
    the Partnership, whether or not in the Managing General Partner's
    possession or control, and shall not employ or permit another to employ
    such funds or assets in any manner except for the exclusive benefit of
    the Partnership.

    5.03  Acquisition and Sale of Leases.

            (a)  To the extent the Partnership does not acquire a full
    interest in a Lease from the Managing General Partner, the remainder of
    the interest in such Lease may be held by the Managing General Partner
    which may either retain and exploit it for its own account or sell or
    otherwise dispose of all or a part of such remaining interest.  Profits
    from such exploitation and/or disposition shall be for the benefit of
    the Managing General Partner to the exclusion of the Partnership.  Any
    Leases acquired by the Partnership from the Managing General Partner
    shall be acquired only at the Managing General Partner's Cost, unless
    the Managing General Partner shall have reason to believe that Cost is
    in excess of the fair market value of such property, in which case the
    price shall not exceed the fair market value.  The Managing General
    Partner shall obtain an appraisal from a qualified independent expert
    with respect to sales of properties of the Managing General Partner and
    its Affiliates to the Partnership.  Neither the Managing General Partner
    nor any Affiliate shall acquire or retain any carried, reversionary, or
    Overriding Royalty Interest on the Lease interests acquired by the
    Partnership, nor shall the Managing General Partner enter into any
    farmout arrangements with respect to its retained interest, except as
    provided in Section 5.05 hereof.

            (b)  The Partnership shall acquire only Leases reasonably
    expected to meet the stated purposes of the Partnership.  No Leases
    shall be acquired for the purpose of a subsequent sale or farmout unless
    the acquisition is made after a well has been drilled to a depth
    sufficient to indicate that such an acquisition would be in the
    Partnership's best interest.

            (c)  Neither the Managing General Partner nor its Affiliates,
    except other partnerships sponsored by them, shall purchase any
    productive properties from the Partnership.

    5.04  Title to Leases.

            (a)  Record title to each Lease acquired by the Partnership may
    be temporarily held in the name of the Managing General Partner, or in
    the name of any nominee designated by the Managing General Partner, as
    agent for the Partnership until a productive well is completed on a
    Lease.  Thereafter, record title to Leases shall be assigned to and
    placed in the name of the Partnership.

                              25
<PAGE>
           (b)  The Managing General Partner shall take the necessary steps
    in its best judgment to render title to the Leases to be assigned to the
    Partnership acceptable for the purposes of the Partnership.  No
    operation shall be commenced on any Prospect acquired by the Partnership
    unless the Managing General Partner is satisfied that the undertaking
    of such operation would be in the best interest of Investor Partners and
    the Partnership.  The Managing General Partner shall be free, however,
    to use its own best judgment in waiving title requirements and shall not
    be liable to the Partnership or the Investor Partners for any mistakes
    of judgment unless such mistakes were made in a manner not in accordance
    with general industry standards in the geographic area and such mistakes
    were not the result of negligence by the Managing General Partner; nor
    shall the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates be deemed to be
    making any warranties or representations, express or implied, as to the
    validity or merchantability of the title to any Lease assigned to the
    Partnership or the extent of the interest covered thereby.

    5.05  Farmouts.

            (a)  No Partnership Lease shall be farmed out, sold, or
    otherwise disposed of unless the Managing General Partner determines
    that (i) the Partnership lacks sufficient funds to drill on such Lease
    and is unable to obtain suitable financing, (ii) the Leases have been
    downgraded by events occurring after assignment to the Partnership,
    (iii) drilling on the Leases would result in an excessive concentration,
    of Partnership funds creating, in the Managing General Partner's
    opinion, undue risk to the Partnership, or (iv) the Managing General
    Partner, exercising the standard of a prudent operator, determines that
    the farmout is in the best interests of the Partnership.

            (b)  Farmouts between the Partnership and the Managing General
    Partner or its Affiliates, including any other affiliated limited
    partnership, shall be effected on terms deemed fair by the Managing
    General Partner.  The Managing General Partner, exercising the standard
    of a prudent operator, shall determine that the farmout is in the best
    interest of the Partnership and the terms of the farmout are consistent
    with and, in any case, no less favorable to the Partnership than those
    utilized in the geographic area of operations for similar arrangements. 
    The respective obligations and revenue sharing of all affiliated parties
    to the transactions shall be substantially the same, and the
    compensation arrangement or any other interest or right of either the
    Managing General Partner or its Affiliates shall be substantially the
    same in each participating partnership or, if different, shall be
    reduced to reflect the lower compensation arrangement.

    5.06  Release, Abandonment, and Sale or Exchange of Properties.  Except
as provided elsewhere in this Article V and in Section 6.03, the Managing
General Partner shall have full power to dispose of the production and
other assets of the Partnership, including the power to determine which
Leases shall be released or permitted to terminate, those wells to be
abandoned, whether any Lease or well shall be sold or exchanged, and the
terms therefor.  In the event the Managing General Partner sells,
transfers, or otherwise disposes of nonproducing property of the
Partnership, the sale, transfer, or disposition shall, to the extent
possible, be made at a price which is the higher of the fair market value
of the property on the date of the sale, transfer, or disposition or the
Cost of such property to the Partnership.



                              26
<PAGE>
    5.07  Certain Transactions.

         (a)  Whenever the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates sell,
    transfer, or assign an interest in a Prospect to the Partnership, they
    shall assign to the Partnership an equal proportionate interest in each
    of the Leases comprising the Prospect.  If the Managing General Partner
    or its Affiliates (except another affiliated partnership in which the
    interest of the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates is identical
    to or less than their interest in the Partnership) subsequently propose
    to acquire an interest in a Prospect in which the Partnership possesses
    an interest or in a Prospect abandoned by the Partnership within one
    year preceding such proposed acquisition, the Managing General Partner
    or its Affiliates shall offer an equivalent interest therein to the
    Partnership; and, if funds, including borrowings, are not available to
    the Partnership to enable it to consummate a purchase of an equivalent
    interest in such property and pay the development costs thereof, neither
    the Managing General Partner nor any of its Affiliates shall acquire
    such interest or property.  The term "abandoned" shall mean the
    termination, either voluntarily or by operation of the Lease or
    otherwise, of all of the Partnership's interest in the Prospect.  These
    limitations shall not apply after the lapse of five years from the date
    of formation of the Partnership.

          (b)  The geological limits of a Prospect shall be enlarged or
    contracted on the basis of subsequently acquired geological data that
    further defines the productive limits of the underlying oil and/or gas
    reservoir and shall include all of the acreage determined by such
    subsequent data to be encompassed by such reservoir; further, where the
    Managing General Partner or Affiliate owns a separate property interest
    in such enlarged area, such interest shall be sold to the Partnership
    if the activities of the Partnership were material in establishing the
    existence of proved undeveloped reserves which are attributable to such
    separate property interest; provided, however, that the Partnership
    shall not be required to expend additional funds unless they are
    available from the initial capitalization of the Partnership or if the
    Managing General Partner believes it is prudent to borrow for the
    purpose of acquiring such additional acreage.

            (c)  The Partnership shall not purchase properties from or sell
    properties to any other affiliated partnership.  This prohibition,
    however, shall not apply to transactions among affiliated partnerships
    by which property is transferred from one to another in exchange for the
    transferee's obligation to conduct drilling activities on such property
    or to joint ventures among such affiliated partnerships, provided that
    the respective obligations and revenue sharing of all parties to the
    transaction are substantially the same and the compensation arrangement
    or any other interest or right of either the Managing General Partner
    or its Affiliates is the same in each affiliated partnership, or, if
    different, the aggregate compensation of the Managing General Partner
    is reduced to reflect the lower compensation arrangement.

            (d)  During the existence of the Partnership, and before it has
    ceased operations, neither the Managing General Partner nor any of its
    Affiliates (excluding another partnership where the Managing General
    Partner's or its Affiliates' interest in such partnership is identical
    to or less than their interest in the Partnership) shall acquire,
    retain, or drill for their own account any oil and gas interest in any
    Prospect in which the Partnership possesses an interest, except for
    transactions whereby the Managing General Partner or such Affiliate

                              27
<PAGE>
    acquires or retains a proportionate Working Interest, the respective 
    obligations of the Managing General Partner or the Affiliate and the
    Partnership are substantially the same after the sale of the interest
    to the Partnership, and the Managing General Partner's or Affiliate's
    interest in revenues does not exceed the amount proportionate to its
    Working Interest.

            (e)  Any services, equipment, or supplies which the Managing
    General Partner or an Affiliate furnishes to the Partnership shall be
    furnished at the lesser of the Managing General Partner's or the
    Affiliate's Cost or a competitive rate which could be obtained in the
    geographical area of operations unless the Managing General Partner or
    any Affiliate is engaged to a substantial extent, as an ordinary and
    ongoing business, in providing such services, equipment, or supplies to
    others in the industry, in which event, the services, supplies, or
    equipment may be provided by such person to the Partnership at prices
    competitive with those charged by others in the geographical area of
    operations which would be available to the Partnership.  If such entity
    is not engaged in the business as set forth above, then such
    compensation, price or rental shall be the cost of such services,
    equipment or supplies to such entity, or the competitive rate which
    could be obtained in the area, whichever is less.  Any drilling services
    provided by the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates shall be
    billed only on a per foot, per day, or per hour rate, or some
    combination thereof.  No turnkey drilling contracts shall be made
    between the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates and the
    Partnership.  Neither the Managing General Partner nor its Affiliates
    shall profit by drilling in contravention of its fiduciary obligations
    to the Partnership.  Any such services for which the Managing General
    Partner or an Affiliate is to receive compensation shall be embodied in
    a written contract which precisely describes the services to be rendered
    and all compensation to be paid.

            (f)  Advance payments by the Partnership to the Managing General
    Partner are prohibited, except where necessary to secure tax benefits
    of prepaid drilling costs.

           (g)   Neither the Managing General Partner nor its Affiliates 
    shall make any future commitments of the Partnership's production which 
    do not primarily benefit the Partnership, nor shall the Managing General
    Partner or any Affiliate utilize Partnership funds as compensating
    balances for the benefit of the Managing General Partner or the
    Affiliate.

            (h)  No rebates or give-ups may be received by the Managing
    General Partner or any of its Affiliates, nor may the Managing General
    Partner or any Affiliate participate in any reciprocal business
    arrangements which would circumvent these restrictions.

            (i)  During a period of five years from the date of formation of
    the Partnership, if the Managing General Partner or any of its
    Affiliates proposes to acquire from an unaffiliated person an interest
    in a Prospect in which the Partnership possesses an interest or in a
    Prospect in which the Partnership's interest has been terminated without
    compensation within one year preceding such proposed acquisition, the
    following conditions shall apply:

            (1)  If the Managing General Partner or the Affiliate does not
                 currently own property in the Prospect separately from the

                              28
<PAGE>
                  Partnership, then neither the Managing General Partner nor

                  the Affiliate shall be permitted to purchase an interest
                  in the Prospect.

            (2)   If the Managing General Partner or the Affiliate currently
                  owns a proportionate interest in the Prospect separately 
                  from the Partnership, then the interest to be acquired 
                  shall be divided between the Partnership and the 
                  Managing General Partner or the Affiliate in the same 
                  proportion as is the other property in the Prospect;
                  provided however, if cash or financing is not available
                  to the Partnership to enable it to consummate a purchase
                  of the additional interest to which it is entitled, then 
                  neither the Managing General Partner nor the Affiliate
                  shall be permitted to purchase any additional interest in
                  the Prospect.

          (j) If the Partnership acquires property pursuant to a farmout or
    joint venture from an affiliated program, the Managing General Partner's
    and/or its Affiliates' aggregate compensation associated with the
    property and any direct and indirect ownership interest in the property
    may not exceed the lower of the compensation and ownership interest the
    Managing General Partner and/or its Affiliates could receive if the
    property were separately owned or retained by either one of the
    programs.

          (k) Neither the Managing General Partner nor any Affiliate,
    including affiliated programs, may purchase or acquire any property from
    the Partnership, directly or indirectly, except pursuant to transactions
    that are fair and reasonable to the Investor Partners of the Partnership
    and then subject to the following conditions:

            (1) A sale, transfer or conveyance, including a farmout, of an
                undeveloped property from the Partnership to the Managing
                General Partner or an Affiliate, other than an affiliated
                program, must be made at the higher of cost or fair market
                value.

            (2) A sale, transfer or conveyance of a developed property from
                the Partnership to the Managing General Partner or an
                Affiliate, other than an affiliated program in which the
                interest of the Managing General Partner is substantially
                similar to or less than its interest in the subject
                Partnership, shall not be permitted except in connection
                with the liquidation of the Partnership and then only at
                fair market value.

           (3)  Except in connection with farmouts or joint ventures made in
                compliance with Section 5.07(j) above, a transfer of an
                undeveloped property from the Partnership to an affiliated
                drilling program must be made at fair market value if the
                property has been held for more than two years.  Otherwise,
                if the Managing General Partner deems it to be in the best
                interest of the Partnership, the transfer may be made at
                cost.

            (4) Except in connection with farmouts or joint ventures made
                in compliance with Section 5.07(j) above, a transfer of any
                type of property from the Partnership to an affiliated 
                production purchase or income program must be made at 
                fair market value if the property has been held for more
                than six months or

                              29
<PAGE>
                there have been significant expenditures made in connection
                with the property.  Otherwise, if the Managing General 
                Partner deems it to be in the best interest of the 
                Partnership, the transfer may be made at cost as adjusted
                for intervening operations.

    (l) If the Partnership participates in other partnerships or joint
ventures (multi-tier arrangements), the terms of any such arrangements
shall not result in the circumvention of any of the requirements or
prohibitions contained in this Partnership Agreement, including the
following:

          (1)  there will be no duplication or increase in organization and
               offering expenses, the Managing General Partner's
               compensation, Partnership expenses or other fees and costs;

          (2)  there will be no substantive alteration in the fiduciary and
               contractual relationship between the Managing General
               Partner and the Investor Partners; and

          (3)  there will be no diminishment in the voting rights of the
               Investor Partners.

    (m) In connection with a proposed Roll-Up, the following shall apply:

          (1)  An appraisal of all Partnership assets shall be obtained
               from a competent independent expert.  If the appraisal 
               will be included in a prospectus used to offer the 
               securities of a Roll-Up Entity, the appraisal shall be 
               filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the
               Administrator as an exhibit to the registration 
               statement for the offering.  The appraisal shall be based 
               on all relevant information, including current reserve 
               estimates prepared by an independent petroleum consultant, 
               and shall indicate the value of the Partnership's assets
               assuming an orderly liquidation as of a date immediately
               prior to the announcement of the proposed Roll-Up
               transaction.  The appraisal shall assume an orderly
               liquidation of Partnership assets over a 12-month period. 
               The terms of the engagement of the independent expert shall
               clearly state that the engagement is for the benefit of the
               Partnership and the Investor Partners.  A summary of the
               independent appraisal, indicating all material assumptions
               underlying the appraisal, shall be included in a report to
               the Investor Partners in connection with a proposed Roll-Up.

          (2)  In connection with a proposed Roll-Up, Investor Partners 
               who vote "no" on the proposal shall be offered the choice of:

               (i)   accepting the securities of the Roll-Up Entity
                     offered in the proposed Roll-Up; or

               (ii)  (a) remaining as Investor Partners in the Partnership 
                     and preserving their interests therein on the same 
                     terms and conditions as existed previously; or (b) 
                     receiving cash in an amount equal to the 
                     Investor Partners' pro-rata share of the appraised
                     value of the net assets of the Partnership.


                              30
<PAGE>
          (3) The Partnership shall not participate in any proposed 
              Roll-Up which, if approved, would result in the 
              diminishment of any Investor Partner's voting rights
              under the Roll-Up Entity's chartering agreement.  In no
              event shall the democracy rights of Investor Partners in
              the Roll-Up Entity be less than those provided for under
              Sections 7.07 and 7.08 of this Agreement. 
              If the Roll-Up Entity is a corporation, the democracy
              rights of Investor Partners shall correspond to the
              democracy rights provided for in this Agreement to the 
              greatest extent possible.

          (4) The Partnership shall not participate in any proposed
              Roll-Up transaction which includes provisions which would 
              operate to materially impede or frustrate the 
              accumulation of shares by any purchaser of the 
              securities of the Roll-Up Entity (except
              to the minimum extent necessary to preserve the tax status
              of the Roll-Up Entity); nor shall the Partnership
              participate in any proposed Roll-Up transaction which 
              would limit the ability of an Investor Partner to
              exercise the voting rights of its securities of the 
              Roll-Up Entity on the basis of the number of
              Partnership Units held by that Investor Partner.

          (5) The Partnership shall not participate in a Roll-Up in which
              Investor Partners' rights of access to the records of the
              Roll-Up Entity will be less than those provided for under
              Section 8.01 of this Agreement.

          (6) The Partnership shall not participate in any proposed
              Roll-Up transaction in which any of the costs of the
              transaction would be borne by the Partnership if the
              Roll-Up is not approved by the Investor Partners.

          (7) The Partnership shall not participate in a Roll-Up
              transaction unless the Roll-Up transaction is approved 
              by at least 66 2/3% in interest of the Investor Partners.


                        ARTICLE VI

                   Managing General Partner

    6.01  Managing General Partner.  The Managing General Partner shall have
the sole and exclusive right and power to manage and control the affairs
of and to operate the Partnership and to do all things necessary to carry
on the business of the Partnership for the purposes described in Section
1.03 hereof and to conduct the activities of the Partnership as set forth
in Article V hereof.  No financial institution or any other person, firm,
or corporation dealing with the Managing General Partner shall be required
to ascertain whether the Managing General Partner is acting in accordance
with this Agreement, but such financial institution or such other person,
firm, or corporation shall be protected in relying solely upon the deed,
transfer, or assurance of and the execution of such instrument or
instruments by the Managing General Partner.  The Managing General Partner
shall devote so much of its time to the business of the Partnership as in
its judgment the conduct of the Partnership's business

                              31
<PAGE>
shall reasonably require and shall not be obligated to do or perform any
act or thing in connection with the business of the Partnership not
expressly set forth herein.  The Managing General Partner may engage in
business ventures of any nature and description independently or with
others and neither the Partnership nor any of its Investor Partners shall
have any rights in and to such independent ventures or the income or
profits derived therefrom.  However, except as otherwise provided herein,
the Managing General Partner and any of its Affiliates may pursue business
opportunities that are consistent with the Partnership's investment
objectives for their own account only after they have determined that such
opportunity either cannot be pursued by the Partnership because of
insufficient funds or because it is not appropriate for the Partnership
under the existing circumstances.

    6.02  Authority of Managing General Partner.  The Managing General
Partner is specifically authorized and empowered, on behalf of the
Partnership, and by consent of the Investor Partners herein given, to do
any act or execute any document or enter into any contract or any
agreement of any nature necessary or desirable, in the opinion of the
Managing General Partner, in pursuance of the purposes of the
Partnership.  Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, in
addition to any and all other powers conferred upon the Managing General
Partner pursuant to this Agreement and the Act, and except as otherwise
prohibited by law or hereunder, the Managing General Partner shall have
the power and authority to:

            (a)  Acquire leases and other interests in oil and/or gas
    properties in furtherance of the Partnership's business;

            (b)  Enter into and execute pooling agreements, farm out
    agreements, operating agreements, unitization agreements, dry and bottom
    hole and acreage contribution letters, construction contracts, and any
    and all documents or instruments customarily employed in the oil and gas
    industry in connection with the acquisition, sale, exploration,
    development, or operation of oil and gas properties, and all other
    instruments deemed by the Managing General Partner to be necessary or
    appropriate to the proper operation of oil or gas properties or to
    effectively and properly perform its duties or exercise its powers
    hereunder;

            (c)  Make expenditures and incur any obligations it deems
    necessary to implement the purposes of the Partnership; employ and
    retain such personnel as it deems desirable for the conduct of the
    Partnership's activities, including employees, consultants, and
    attorneys; and exercise on behalf of the Partnership, in such manner
    as the Managing General Partner in its sole judgment deems best, of
    all rights, elections, and obligations granted to or imposed upon the
    Partnership;

            (d)  Manage, operate, and develop any Partnership property, and
    enter into operating agreements with respect to properties acquired by
    the Partnership, including an operating agreement with the Managing
    General Partner as described in the Prospectus, which agreements may
    contain such terms, provisions, and conditions as are usual and
    customary within the industry and as the Managing General Partner shall
    approve;

            (e)  Compromise, sue, or defend any and all claims in favor of
    or against the Partnership;

                              32
<PAGE>
            (f)  Subject to the provisions of Section 8.04 hereof, make or
    revoke any election permitted the Partnership by any taxing authority;

            (g)  Perform any and all acts it deems necessary or appropriate
    for the protection and preservation of the Partnership assets;

            (h)  Maintain at the expense of the Partnership such insurance
    coverage for public liability, fire and casualty, and any and all other
    insurance necessary or appropriate to the business of the Partnership
    in such amounts and of such types as it shall determine from time to
    time;

            (i)  Buy, sell, or lease property or assets on behalf of the
    Partnership;

            (j)  Enter into agreements to hire services of any kind or
    nature;

            (k)  Assign interests in properties to the Partnership;

            (l)  Enter into soliciting dealer agreements and perform all of
    the Partnership's obligations thereunder, to issue and sell Units
    pursuant to the terms and conditions of this Agreement, the Subscription
    Agreements, and the Prospectus, to accept and execute on behalf of the
    Partnership Subscription Agreements, and to admit original and
    substituted Partners; and

            (m)  Perform any and all acts, and execute any and all documents
    it deems necessary or appropriate to carry out the purposes of the
    Partnership. 

    6.03  Certain Restrictions on Managing General Partner's Power and
Authority.  Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Agreement to the
contrary, neither the Managing General Partner nor any Affiliate of the
Managing General Partner shall have the power or authority to, and shall
not, do, perform, or authorize any of the following:

            (a)  Borrow any money in the name or on behalf of the
    Partnership;

            (b)  Use any revenues from Partnership operations for the
    purposes of acquiring Leases in new or unrelated Prospects or paying any
    Organization and Offering Expenses; provided, however, that revenues
    from Partnership operations may be used for other Partnership
    operations, including without limitation for the purposes of drilling,
    completing, maintaining, recompleting, and operating wells on existing
    Partnership Prospects and acquiring and developing new Leases to the
    extent such Leases are considered by the Managing General Partner in its
    sole discretion to be a part of a Prospect in which the Partnership then
    owns a Lease;

            (c)  Without having first received the prior consent of the
    holders of a majority of the then outstanding Units entitled to vote,




                              33
<PAGE>
                (i)   sell all or substantially all of the assets of the
            Partnership (except upon liquidation of the Partnership pursuant
            to Article IX hereof), unless cash funds of the Partnership are
            insufficient to pay the obligations and other liabilities of the
            Partnership;

                (ii)  dispose of the good will of the Partnership;

                (iii) do any other act which would make it impossible to
            carry on the ordinary business of the Partnership; or

                (iv)  agree to the termination or amendment of any operating
            agreement to which the Partnership is a party, or waive any
            rights of the Partnership thereunder, except for amendments to
            the operating agreement which the Managing General Partner
            believes are necessary or advisable to ensure that the operating
            agreement conforms to any changes in or modifications to the
            Code or that do not adversely affect the Investor Partners in
            any material respect;

            (d) Guarantee in the name or on behalf of the Partnership the
    payment of money or the performance of any contract or other obligation
    of any Person other than the Partnership;

            (e) Bind or obligate the Partnership with respect to any matter
    outside the scope of the Partnership business;

            (f) Use the Partnership name, credit, or property for other 
    than Partnership purposes;

            (g) Take any action, or permit any other person to take any
    action, with respect to the assets or property of the Partnership which
    does not benefit the Partnership, including, among other things,
    utilization of funds of the Partnership as compensating balances for its
    own benefit or the commitment of future production;

            (h) Benefit from any arrangement for the marketing of oil and
    gas production or other relationships affecting the property of the
    Managing General Partner and the Partnership, unless such benefits are
    fairly and equitably apportioned among the Managing General Partner, its

    Affiliates, and the Partnership;

            (i) Utilize Partnership funds to invest in the securities of
    another person except in the following instances:

                (1) investments in working interests or undivided lease
                    interests made in the ordinary course of the 
                    Partnership's business;

                (2) temporary investments made in compliance with Section
                    2.02(f) of this Agreement;

                (3) investments involving less than 5% of Partnership
                    capital which are a necessary and incidental part of
                    a property acquisition transaction; and

                (4) investments in entities established solely to limit the
                    Partnership's liabilities associated with the ownership

                              34
<PAGE>
                    or operation of property or equipment, provided, in such
                    instances duplicative fees and expenses shall be
                    prohibited.

            (j) Vote with respect to any Unit held by it; or

            (k) Sell, transfer, or assign its interest (except for a
    collateral assignment which may be granted to a bank or other financial
    institution) in the Partnership, or any part thereof, or otherwise to
    withdraw as Managing General Partner of the Partnership without one
    hundred twenty (120) days prior written notice and the written consent
    of Investor Partners owning a majority of the then outstanding Units.

    6.04  Indemnification of Managing General Partner.  The Managing General
Partner shall have no liability to the Partnership or to any Investor
Partner for any loss suffered by the Partnership which arises out of any
action or inaction of the Managing General Partner if the Managing General
Partner, in good faith, determined that such course of conduct was in the
best interest of the Partnership, that the Managing General Partner was
acting on behalf of or performing services for the Partnership, and that
such course of conduct did not constitute negligence or misconduct of the
Managing General Partner.  The Managing General Partner shall be
indemnified by the Partnership against any losses, judgments, liabilities,
expenses, and amounts paid in settlement of any claims sustained by it in
connection with the Partnership, provided that the Managing General
Partner has determined in good faith that the course of conduct which
caused the loss or liability was in the best interests of the Partnership,
that the Managing General Partner was acting on behalf of or performing
services for the Partnership, and that the same were not the result of
negligence or misconduct on the part of the Managing General Partner. 
Indemnification of the Managing General Partner is recoverable only from
the tangible net assets of the Partnership, including the insurance
proceeds from the Partnership's insurance policies and the insurance and
indemnification of the Partnership's subcontractors, and is not
recoverable from the Investor Partners.

    Notwithstanding the above, the Managing General Partner and any person
acting as a broker-dealer shall not be indemnified for liabilities arising
under Federal and state securities laws unless (a) there has been a
successful adjudication on the merits of each count involving securities
law violations, (b) such claims have been dismissed with prejudice on the
merits by a court of competent jurisdiction, or (c) a court of competent
jurisdiction approves a settlement of such claims against a particular
indemnitee and finds that indemnification of the settlement and the
related costs should be made, and the court considering the request for
indemnification has been advised of the position of the Securities and
Exchange Commission and of any state securities regulatory authority in
which securities of the Partnership were offered or sold as to
indemnification for violations of securities laws; provided however, the
court need only be advised of the positions of the securities regulatory
authorities of those states (i) which are specifically set forth in the
program agreement and (ii) in which plaintiffs claim they were offered or
sold program units. 

    In any claim for indemnification for Federal or state securities laws
violations, the party seeking indemnification shall place before the court
the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission   , the Massachusetts
Securities Division, and the Tennessee Securities Division     or respective


                              35
<PAGE>
state securities division, as the case may be, with respect to the issue
of indemnification for securities law violations. 

    The advancement of Partnership funds to a sponsor or its affiliates for
legal expenses and other costs incurred as a result of any legal action
for which indemnification is being sought is permissible only if the
Partnership has adequate funds available and the following conditions are
satisfied:

    (a)     the legal action relates to acts or omissions with respect
            to the performance of duties or services on behalf of the
            Partnership, and

    (b)     the legal action is initiated by a third party who is not a
            participant, or the legal action is initiated by a participant
            and a court of competent jurisdiction specifically approves
            such advancement, and

    (c)     the sponsor or its affiliates undertake to repay the advanced
            funds to the Partnership, together with the applicable legal
            rate of interest thereon, in cases in which such party is found
            not to be entitled to indemnification.

    The Partnership shall not incur the cost of the portion of any insurance
which insures the Managing General Partner against any liability as to
which the Managing General Partner is herein prohibited from being
indemnified. 

    6.05  Withdrawal.  (a)  Notwithstanding the limitations contained in
    Section 6.03(l) hereof, the Managing General Partner shall have the
    right, by giving written notice to the other Partners, to substitute in
    its stead as managing general partner any successor entity or any entity
    controlled by the Managing General Partner, provided that the successor
    Managing General Partner must have a tangible net worth of at least $5
    million, and the Investor Partners, by execution of this Agreement,
    expressly consent to such a transfer, unless it would adversely affect
    the status of the Partnership as a partnership for federal income tax
    purposes.

            (b) The Managing General Partner may not voluntarily withdraw
    from the Partnership prior to the Partnership's completion of its
    primary drilling and/or acquisition activities, and then only after
    giving 120 days written notice.  The Managing General Partner may not
    partially withdraw its property interests held by the Partnership
    unless such withdrawal is necessary to satisfy the bona fide request
    of its creditors or approved by a majority-in-interest vote of the
    Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner shall fully indemnify
    the Partnership against any additional expenses which may result from
    a partial withdrawal of property interests and such withdrawal may
    not result in a greater amount of direct costs or administrative costs
    being allocated to the Investor Partners.  The withdrawing Managing
    General Partner shall pay all expenses incurred as a result of its
    withdrawal.

    6.06  Management Fee.  The Partnership shall pay the Managing General
Partner, on the date the Partnership is organized (as set forth in Section
1.01), a one-time management fee equal to 2.5% of the total Subscriptions.


                              36
<PAGE>
    6.07  Tax Matters and Financial Reporting Partner.  The Managing General
Partner shall serve as the Tax Matters Partner for purposes of Code
Sections 6221 through 6233 and as the Financial Reporting Partner.  The
Partnership may engage its accountants and/or attorneys to assist the Tax
Matters Partner in discharging its duties hereunder.


                           ARTICLE VII

                        Investor Partners

    7.01  Management.  No Investor Partner shall take part in the control
or management of the business or transact any business for the
Partnership, and no Investor Partner shall have the power to sign for or
bind the Partnership.  Any action or conduct of Investor Partners on
behalf of the Partnership is hereby expressly prohibited.  Any Investor
Partner who violates this Section 7.01 shall be liable to the remaining
Investor Partners, the Managing General Partner, and the Partnership for
any damages, costs, or expenses any of them may incur as a result of such
violation.  The Investor Partners hereby grant to the Managing General
Partner or its successors or assignees the exclusive authority to manage
and control the Partnership business in its sole discretion and to thereby
bind the Partnership and all Partners in its conduct of the Partnership
business.  Investor Partners shall have the right to vote only with
respect to those matters specifically provided for in these Articles.  No
Investor Partner shall have the authority to:

            (a) Assign the Partnership property in trust for creditors or
    on the assignee's promise to pay the debts of the Partnership;

            (b) Dispose of the goodwill of the business;

            (c) Do any other act which would make it impossible to carry on
    the ordinary business of the Partnership;

            (d) Confess a judgment;

            (e) Submit a Partnership claim or liability to arbitration or
    reference;

            (f) Make a contract or bind the Partnership to any agreement or
    document;

            (g) Use the Partnership's name, credit, or property for any
    purpose;

            (h) Do any act which is harmful to the Partnership's assets or
    business or by which the interests of the Partnership shall be imperiled
    or prejudiced; or

            (i) Perform any act in violation of any applicable law or
    regulations thereunder, or perform any act which is inconsistent with
    the terms of this Agreement.

    7.02  Indemnification of Additional General Partners.  The Managing
General Partner agrees to indemnify each of the Additional General
Partners for the amounts of obligations, risks, losses, or judgments of
the Partnership or the Managing General Partner which exceed the amount of
applicable insurance coverage and amounts which would become available

                              37
<PAGE>
from the sale of all Partnership assets.  Such indemnification applies to
casualty losses and to business losses, such as losses incurred in
connection with the drilling of an unproductive well, to the extent such
losses exceed the Additional General Partners' interest in the
undistributed net assets of the Partnership.  If, on the other hand, such
excess obligations are the result of the negligence or misconduct of an
Additional General Partner, or the contravention of the terms of the
Partnership Agreement by the Additional General Partner, then the
foregoing indemnification by the Managing General Partner shall be
unenforceable as to such Additional General Partner and such Additional
General Partner shall be liable to all other Partners for damages and
obligations resulting therefrom.

    7.03 Assignment of Units.

            (a) An Investor Partner may transfer all or any portion of his
    Units and the transferee shall become a Substituted Investor Partner
    (subject to all duties and obligations of an Investor Partner, including
    those contained in Section 4.04 herein, except to the extent excepted
    in the Act) subject to the following conditions (any transfer of such
    Units satisfying such conditions being referred to herein as a
    "Permitted Transfer"):

                (i)   Except in the case of a transfer of Units at death or
            involuntarily by operation of law, the transferor and transferee
            shall execute and deliver to the Partnership such documents and
            instruments of conveyance as may be necessary or appropriate in
            the opinion of counsel to the Partnership to effect such
            transfer and to confirm the agreement of the transferee to be
            bound by the provisions of this Article VII.  In any case not
            described in the preceding sentence, the transfer shall be
            confirmed by presentation to the Partnership of legal evidence
            of such transfer, in form and substance satisfactory to counsel
            to the Partnership.  In all cases, the Partnership shall be
            reimbursed by the transferor and/or transferee for all costs and
            expenses that it reasonably incurs in connection with such
            transfer;

                (ii) The transferor and transferee shall furnish the
            Partnership with the transferee's taxpayer identification 
            number and sufficient information to determine the transferee's
            initial tax basis in the Units transferred; and

                (iii) The written consent of the Managing General Partner
            to such transfer shall have been obtained, the granting or
            denial of which shall be within the absolute discretion of the
            Managing General Partner.

            (b) A Person who acquires one or more Units but who is not
    admitted as a Substituted Investor Partner pursuant to Section 7.03(c)
    hereof shall be entitled only to allocations and distributions with
    respect to such Units in accordance with this Agreement, but shall have
    no right to any information or accounting of the affairs of the
    Partnership, shall not be entitled to inspect the books or records of
    the Partnership, and shall not have any of the rights of an Additional
    General Partner or a Limited Partner under the Act or the Agreement.



                              38
<PAGE>
            (c)  Subject to the other provisions of this Article VII, a
    transferee of Units may be admitted to the Partnership as a Substituted
    Investor Partner only upon satisfaction of the conditions set forth
    below in this Section 7.03(c):

                (i)   The Managing General Partner consents to such
                      admission, which consent can be withheld in its
                      absolute discretion;

                (ii)  The Units with respect to which the transferee
                      is being admitted were acquired by means of a
                      Permitted Transfer;

                (iii)  The transferee becomes a party to this Agreement
                       as a Partner and executes such documents and
                       instruments as the Managing General Partner may
                       reasonably request (including, without
                       limitation, amendments to the Certificate of
                       Limited Partnership) as may be necessary or
                       appropriate to confirm such transferee as a
                       Partner in the Partnership and such transferee's
                       agreement to be bound by the terms and conditions
                       hereof;

                (iv)   The transferee pays or reimburses the Partnership
                       for all reasonable legal, filing, and publication 
                       costs that the Partnership incurs in connection with
                       the admission of the transferee as a Partner with 
                       respect to the transferred Units; and

                (v)    If the transferee is not an individual of legal
                       majority, the transferee provides the Partnership
                       with evidence satisfactory to counsel for the
                       Partnership of the authority of the transferee to
                       become a Partner and to be bound by the terms 
                       and conditions of this Agreement.

                (vi)   In any calendar quarter in which a Substituted
                       Investor Partner is admitted to the Partnership, the
                       Managing General Partner shall amend the certificate
                       of limited partnership to effect the substitution of
                       such Substituted Investor Partners, although the
                       Managing General Partner may do so more frequently. 
                       In the case of assignments, where the assignee does
                       not become a Substituted Investor Partner, the
                       Partnership shall recognize the assignment not later
                       than the last day of the calendar month
                       following receipt of notice of assignment and
                       required documentation.

            (d) Each Investor Partner hereby covenants and agrees with the
    Partnership for the benefit of the Partnership and all Partners that
    (i) he is not currently making a market in Units and (ii) he will not
    transfer any Unit on an established securities market or a secondary
    market (or the substantial equivalent thereof) within the meaning of
    Code Section 7704(b) (and any regulations, proposed regulations, revenue
    rulings, or other official pronouncements of the Service or Treasury
    Department that may be promulgated or published thereunder).  Each
    Investor Partner further agrees that he will not transfer any Unit to
    any Person unless such Person agrees to be bound by this Section 7.03
    and to transfer such Units only to Persons who agree to be similarly
    bound.

    7.04 Prohibited Transfers.


                              39
<PAGE>
            (a) Any purported Transfer of Units that is not a Permitted
    Transfer shall be null and void and of no effect whatever; provided,
    that, if the Partnership is required to recognize a transfer that is not
    a Permitted Transfer (or if the Managing General Partner, in its sole
    discretion, elects to recognize a transfer that is not a Permitted
    Transfer), the interest transferred shall be strictly limited to the
    transferor's rights to allocations and distributions as provided by this
    Agreement with respect to the transferred Units, which allocations and
    distributions may be applied (without limiting any other legal or
    equitable rights of the Partnership) to satisfy the debts, obligations,
    or liabilities for damages that the transferor or transferee of such
    Units may have to the Partnership.

            (b) In the case of a transfer or attempted transfer of Units
    that is not a Permitted Transfer, the parties engaging or attempting to
    engage in such transfer shall be liable to indemnify and hold harmless
    the Partnership and the other Partners from all cost, liability, and
    damage that any of such indemnified Persons may incur (including,
    without limitation, incremental tax liability and lawyers fees and
    expenses) as a result of such transfer or attempted transfer and efforts
    to enforce the indemnity granted hereby.

    7.05  Withdrawal by Investor Partners.  Neither a Limited Partner nor
an Additional General Partner may withdraw from the Partnership, except as
otherwise provided in this Agreement.

    7.06  Removal of Managing General Partner.

            (a) The Managing General Partner may be removed at any time,
    upon ninety (90) days prior written notice, with the consent of Investor
    Partners owning a majority of the then outstanding Units, and upon the
    selection of a successor managing general partner or partners, within
    such ninety-day period by Investor Partners owning a majority of the
    then outstanding Units.

            (b) Any successor Managing General Partner may be removed upon
    the terms and conditions provided in this Section.

            (c) In the event a managing general partner is removed, its
    respective interest in the assets of the Partnership shall be determined
    by independent appraisal by a qualified independent petroleum
    engineering consultant who shall be selected by mutual agreement of the
    Managing General Partner and the incoming sponsor.  Such appraisal will
    take into account an appropriate discount to reflect the risk of
    recovery of oil and gas reserves, and, at its election, the removed
    managing general partner's interest in the Partnership assets may be
    distributed to it or the interest of the managing general partner in the
    Partnership may be retained by it as a Limited Partner in the successor
    limited partnership; provided, however, that if immediate payment to the
    removed managing general partner would impose financial or operational
    hardship upon the Partnership, as determined by the successor managing
    general partner in the exercise of its fiduciary duties to the
    Partnership, payment (plus reasonable interest) to the removed managing
    general partner may be postponed to that time when, in the determination
    of the successor managing general partner, payment will not cause a
    hardship to the Partnership.  The cost of such appraisal shall be borne
    by the Partnership.  The successor managing general partner shall have
    the option to purchase at least 20% of the removed

                              40
<PAGE>
    managing general partner's interest for the value determined by the
    independent appraisal.  The removed managing general partner, at the
    time of its removal shall cause, to the extent it is legally possible,
    its successor to be transferred or assigned all its rights, obligations,
    and interests in contracts entered into by it on behalf of the
    Partnership.  In any event, the removed managing general partner shall
    cause its rights, obligations, and interests in any such contract to
    terminate at the time of its removal.

            (d) Upon effectiveness of the removal of the managing general
    partner, the assets, books, and records of the Partnership shall be
    surrendered to the successor managing general partner, provided that the
    successor managing general partner shall have first (i) agreed to accept
    the responsibilities of the managing general partner, and (ii) made
    arrangements satisfactory to the original managing general partner to
    remove such managing general partner from personal liability on any
    Partnership borrowings or, if any Partnership creditor will not consent
    to such removal, agreed to indemnify the original managing general
    partner for any subsequent liabilities in respect to such borrowings. 
    Immediately after the removal of the managing general partner, the
    successor managing general partner shall prepare, execute, file for
    recordation, and cause to be published, such notices or certificates as
    may be required by the Act.

    7.07  Calling of Meetings.  Investor Partners owning 10% or more of the
then outstanding Units entitled to vote shall have the right to request
that the Managing General Partner call a meeting of the Partners.  The
Managing General Partner shall call such a meeting and shall deposit in
the United States mails within fifteen days after receipt of such request,
written notice to all Investor Partners of the meeting and the purpose of
the meeting, which shall be held on a date not less than thirty nor more
than sixty days after the date of mailing of such notice, at a reasonable
time and place.  Investor Partners shall have the right to submit
proposals to the Managing General Partner for inclusion in the voting
materials for the next meeting of Investor Partners for consideration and
approval by the Investor Partners.  Investor Partners shall have the right
to vote in person or by proxy.

    7.08  Additional Voting Rights.  Investor Partners shall be entitled to
all voting rights granted to them by and under this Agreement and as
specified by the Act.  Each Unit is entitled to one vote on all matters;
each fractional Unit is entitled to that fraction of one vote equal to the
fractional interest in the Unit.  Except as otherwise provided herein or
in the Prospectus, at any meeting of Investor Partners, a vote of a
majority of Units represented at such meeting, in person or by proxy, with
respect to matters considered at the meeting at which a quorum is present
shall be required for approval of any such matters.  In addition, except
as otherwise provided in this Section and in Section 5.07(m), holders of
a majority of the then outstanding Units may, without the concurrence of
the Managing General Partner, vote to (a) approve or disapprove the sale
of all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership, (b) dissolve
the Partnership, (c) remove the Managing General Partner and elect a new
managing general partner, (d) amend the Agreement, (e) elect a new
managing general partner if the managing general partner elects to
withdraw from the Partnership, and (f) cancel any contract for services
with the Managing General Partner or any Affiliates without penalty upon
sixty days' notice.  The Partnership shall not participate in a Roll-Up
unless the Roll-Up is approved by at least 66 2/3% in interest of the

                              41
<PAGE>
Investor Partners.  A majority in interest of the then outstanding Units
entitled to vote shall constitute a quorum.  In determining the requisite
percentage in interest of Units necessary to approve a matter on which the
Managing General Partner and its Affiliates may not vote or consent, any
Units owned by the Managing General Partner and its Affiliates shall not
be included.  With respect to the merger or consolidation of the
Partnership or the sale of all or substantially all of the assets of the
Partnership, Investor Partners shall have the right to exercise
dissenter's rights in accordance with Section 31-1-123 of the West
Virginia Corporation Law.

    7.09  Voting by Proxy.  The Investor Partners may vote either in person
or by proxy.

    7.10  Conversion of Additional General Partner Interests into Limited
Partner Interests.

            (a) As provided herein, Additional General Partners may elect
    to convert, transfer, and exchange their interests for Limited Partner
    interests in the Partnership upon receipt by the Managing General
    Partner of written notice of such election.  An Additional General
    Partner may request conversion of his interests for Limited Partner
    interests at any time         one year following the closing of the
    securities offering which relates to the Agreement and the disbursement
    to the Partnership of the proceeds of such securities offering.       

            (b) The Managing General Partner shall notify all Additional
    General Partners at least 30 days prior to any material change in the
    amount of the Partnership's insurance coverage.  Within this 30-day
    period, and notwithstanding Section 7.10(a), Additional General Partners
    shall have the right to immediately convert their Units into Units of
    limited partnership interest by giving written notice to the Managing
    General Partner.

            (c) The Managing General Partner shall convert the interests of
    all Additional General Partners in a particular Partnership to interests
    of Limited Partners in that Partnership upon completion of drilling of
    that Partnership.

            (d) The Managing General Partner shall cause the conversion to
    be effected as promptly as possible as prudent business judgment
    dictates. Conversion of an Additional General Partnership interest to
    a Limited Partnership interest in a particular Partnership shall be
    conditioned upon a finding by the Managing General Partner that such
    conversion will not cause a termination of the Partnership for federal
    income tax purposes, and will be effective upon the Managing General
    Partner's filing an amendment to its Certificate of Limited 
    Partnership.  The Managing General Partner is obligated to file an
    amendment to its Certificate at any time during the full calendar month
    after receipt of the required notice of the Additional General Partner
    and a determination of the Managing General Partner that the conversion
    will not constitute a termination of the Partnership for tax purposes. 
    Effecting conversion is subject to the satisfaction of the condition
    that the electing Additional General Partner provide written notice to
    the Managing General Partner of such intent to convert.  Upon such
    transfer and exchange, such Additional General Partners shall be Limited
    Partners; however, they will

                              42
<PAGE>
    remain liable to the Partnership for any additional Capital
    Contribution(s) required for their proportionate share of any
    Partnership obligation or liability arising prior to the conversion.

            (e) Limited Partners may not convert and/or exchange their
    interests for Additional General Partner interests.

    7.11 Unit Repurchase Program.  

            (a) Beginning with the third anniversary of the date of the
first cash distribution of the Partnership, Investor Partners may tender
their Units to the Managing General Partner for repurchase, subject to the
Managing General Partner's financial ability to repurchase and the
Managing General Partner's receipt of an opinion of counsel that the
Managing General Partner's repurchase of Units pursuant to this Section
will not cause the Partnership to be treated as a "publicly traded
partnership" for purposes of Code Sections 469 and 7704.  Failure to
receive such opinion shall preclude the Managing General Partner from
making any offers to repurchase Units.  Subject to such financial
condition and legal opinion, the Managing General Partner shall offer to
annually repurchase for cash a minimum of 10% of the Units originally
subscribed to in the Partnership.  

            (b) The Unit Repurchase Program shall be subject to the
following conditions:

            (i)  The Managing General Partner must receive written
notification
            from the particular Investor Partner of such Partner's intention
to
            exercise the repurchase right; and

            (ii)  The Managing General Partner shall provide the Investor
            Partner a written offer of a specified price for purchase of the
            particular Units within 30 days of the Managing General
Partner's
            receipt of written notification; and 

            (iii) The Managing General Partner's offer shall remain open for
            30 days after the Managing General Partner's mailing of the
offer to
            the Investor Partner.

            (c) The Managing General Partner shall not favor one particular
Partnership of which it is a Managing General Partner over another in the
repurchase of Units.  Each Partnership shall stand on equal footing before
the Managing General Partner.  To the extent that the Managing General
Partner is unable, due to its financial condition or limitations imposed
by the Code or the Managing General Partner's loan agreement(s) with
banks, to repurchase all Units tendered, each tendering Investor Partner
shall be entitled to have his Units repurchased on a "first come-first
served" basis, regardless of Partnership, provided that the Managing
General Partner determines that the repurchase of a particular Investor
Partner's Units will not result in the termination of the Partnership for
federal income tax purposes and in the Partnership's being treated as a
"publicly traded partnership."  If more than 10% of the Units of a
particular Partnership are tendered during that Partnership's taxable
year, Units shall be purchased on a "first come-first served" basis with
respect to that Partnership.  

            (d) The offer price which the Managing General Partner shall
make shall be a cash amount equal to three times cash distributions
attributable to the tendered Unit from production for the 12 months prior
to the month in which the above-referenced written notification is

                              43
<PAGE>
actually received by the Managing General Partner at its corporate
offices.  The Managing General Partner may, in its sole and absolute
discretion, increase the offer price for interests tendered for sale.  

            (e)  Upon any repurchase, the Managing General Partner shall
hold such purchased Units for its own use and not for resale and it shall
not create a market in the Units.

    7.12  Liability of Partners.  Except as otherwise provided in this
Agreement or as otherwise provided by the Act, each General Partner shall
be jointly and severally liable for the debts and obligations of the
Partnership.  In addition, each Additional General Partner shall be
jointly and severally liable for any wrongful acts or omissions of the
Managing General Partner and/or the misapplication of money or property of
a third party by the Managing General Partner acting within the scope of
its apparent authority to the extent such acts or omissions are chargeable
to the Partnership.


                          ARTICLE VIII

                         Books and Records

    8.01  Books and Records.

            (a) For accounting and income tax purposes, the Partnership
shall operate on a calendar year.

            (b) The Managing General Partner shall keep just and true
    records and books of account with respect to the operations of the 
    Partnership and shall maintain and preserve during the term of the 
    Partnership and for four years thereafter all such records, books of
    account, and other relevant Partnership documents.  The Managing General
    Partner shall maintain for at least six years all records necessary to 
    substantiate the fact that Units were sold only to purchasers for whom 
    such Units were suitable.  Such books shall be maintained at the 
    principal place of business of the Partnership and shall be kept on the
    accrual method of accounting.

            (c) The Managing General Partner shall keep or cause to be kept
    complete and accurate books and records with respect to the
    Partnership's business, which books and records shall at all times be
    kept at the principal office of the Partnership.  Any records maintained
    by the Partnership in the regular course of its business, including the
    names and addresses of Investor Partners, books of account, and records
    of Partnership proceedings, may be kept on or be in the form of RAM
    disks, magnetic tape, photographs, micrographics, or any other
    information storage device, provided that the records so kept are
    convertible into clearly legible written form within a reasonable period
    of time.  The books and records of the Partnership shall be made
    available for review by any Investor Partner or his representative at
    any reasonable time.

            (d) (i)   An alphabetical list of the names, addresses and
            business telephone numbers of the Investor Partners of the 
            Partnership along with the number of Units held by each of them 
            (the "participant list") shall be maintained as a part of the 
            books and records of the Partnership and shall be  available for

            the inspection by any Investor Partner

                              44
<PAGE>
            or its designated agent at the home office of the Partnership
            upon the request of the Investor Partner;

                (ii)  The participant list shall be updated at least
            quarterly to reflect changes in the information contained
            therein;

                (iii) A copy of the participant list shall be mailed to any
            Investor Partner requesting the participant list within ten days
            of the request.  The copy of the participant list shall be
            printed in alphabetical order, on white paper, and in a readily
            readable type size (in no event smaller than 10-point type).  A
            reasonable charge for copy work may be charged by the
            Partnership.

                (iv)  The purposes for which an Investor Partner may request
            a copy of the participant list include, without limitation,
            matters relating to voting rights under the Partnership
            Agreement and the exercise of Investor Partners' rights under
            federal proxy laws; and

                (v)   If the Managing General Partner of the Partnership 
            neglects or refuses to exhibit, produce, or mail a copy of the
            participant list as requested, the Managing General Partner
            shall be liable to any Investor Partner requesting the list for
            the costs, including attorneys fees, incurred by that Investor
            Partner for compelling the production of the participant list,
            and for actual damages suffered by any Investor Partner by
            reason of such refusal or neglect.  It shall be a defense that
            the actual purpose and reason for the requests for inspection or
            for a copy of the participant list is to secure the list of
            Investor Partners or other information for the purpose of
            selling such list or information or copies thereof, or of using
            the same for a commercial purpose other than in the interest of
            the applicant as an Investor Partner relative to the affairs of
            the Partnership.  The Managing General Partner may require the
            Investor Partner requesting the participant list to represent
            that the list is not requested for a commercial purpose
            unrelated to the Investor Partner's interest in the
            Partnership.  The remedies provided hereunder to Investor
            Partners requesting copies of the participant list are in
            addition to, and shall not in any way limit, other remedies
            available to Investor Partners under federal law, or the laws
            of any state.

    8.02  Reports.  The Managing General Partner shall deliver to each
Investor Partner the following financial statements and reports at the
times indicated below:

            (a) Within 75 days after the end of the first six months of
    each fiscal year (for such six month period) and within 120 days after
    the end of each fiscal year (for such year), financial statements,
    including a balance sheet and statements of income, Partners' equity,
    and cash flows, all of which shall be prepared in accordance with
    generally accepted accounting principles.  The annual financial
    statements shall be accompanied by (i) a report of an independent
    certified public accountant designated by the Managing General Partner
    stating that an audit of such financial statements has been made in
    

                              45
<PAGE>
    accordance with generally accepted auditing standards and that in
    its opinion such financial statements present fairly the financial
    condition, results of operations, and cash flow of the Partnership in
    accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and (ii) a
    reconciliation of such financial statements with the information
    furnished to the Investor Partners for federal income tax reporting
    purposes.

            (b) Annually by March 15 of each year, a report containing such
    information as may be deemed to enable each Investor Partner to prepare
    and file his federal income tax return and any required state income tax
    return.

            (c) Annually within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year
    beginning with the fiscal year ending December 31, 1996 [1997 with
    respect to Partnerships designated as "PDC 1997-  Limited Partnership"],
    (i) a summary of the computations of the total estimated proved oil and
    gas reserves of the Partnership as of the end of such fiscal year and
    the dollar value thereof at then existing prices and a computation of
    each Investor Partner's interest in such value, such reserve
    computations to be based upon engineering reports prepared by qualified
    independent petroleum engineers, (ii) an estimate of the time required
    for the extraction of such proved reserves and the present worth thereof
    (discounted at a rate generally accepted in the oil and gas industry and
    undiscounted), and (iii) a statement that because of the time period
    required to extract such reserves the present value of revenues to be
    obtained in the future is less than if such revenues were immediately
    receivable.  Each such reported shall be prepared in accordance with
    customary and generally accepted standards and practices for petroleum
    engineers and shall be prepared by a recognized independent petroleum
    engineer selected from time to time by the Managing General Partner. 
    No later than 90 days following the occurrence of an event resulting in
    a reduction in an amount of 10% or more of the estimated value of the
    proved oil and gas reserves as last reported to the Investor Partners,
    other than a reduction resulting from production, a new summary
    conforming to the requirements set forth above in this Section 8.02(c)
    shall be delivered to the Investor Partners.

            (d) Within 75 days after the end of the first six months of 
    each fiscal year and within 120 days after the end of each fiscal
    year, (i) a summary itemization, by type and/or classification, of
    any transaction of the Partnership since the date of the last such
    report with the Managing General Partner or any Affiliate thereof
    and the total fees, compensation, and reimbursement paid by the
    Partnership (or indirectly on behalf of the Partnership) to the
    Managing General Partner and its Affiliates, and (ii) a schedule
    reflecting (A) the total costs of the Partnership (and, where
    applicable, the costs pertaining to each Lease) and the costs paid by
    the Managing General Partner and by the Investor Partners and (B) the
    total revenues of the Partnership and the revenues received by or
    credited to the accounts of the Managing General Partner
    and the Investing Partners.  Each semi-annual report delivered by the
    Managing General Partner may contain summary estimates of the
    information described in subdivision (i) of Section 8.02(c).

            (e) Monthly within 15 days after the end of each calendar month
    while the Partnership is participating in the drilling and

                              46
<PAGE>
    completion of wells in which it has an interest until the end of such
    activity, and thereafter for a period of three years within 75 days
    after the end of the first six months of each fiscal year and within 120
    days after the end of each fiscal year, (i) a description of each
    Prospect or field in which the Partnership owns Leases including the
    cost, location, number of acres under lease, and the interest owned
    therein by the program (provided that after the initial description of
    each such Prospect or field has been provided to the Investor Partners
    only material changes, if any, with respect to such Prospect or field
    need be described), (ii) a description of all farmins and farmouts of
    the Partnership made since the date of the last such report, including
    the reason therefor, the location and timing thereof, the person to whom
    made and the terms thereof, and (iii) a summary of the wells drilled by
    the Partnership, indicating whether each of such wells has been
    completed, a statement of the cost of each well completed or abandoned
    and the reason for abandoning any well after commencement of production.

    Each report delivered by the Managing General Partner may contain
    summary estimates of the information described in subsection (iii).

            (f)      Such other reports and financial statements as
    the Managing General Partner shall determine from time to time.

            (g)      Concurrently with their transmittal to Investor
    Partners and as required, the Managing General Partner shall file a
    copy of each such report with the California Commissioner of
    Corporations and with the securities divisions of other states.

    8.03  Bank Accounts.  All funds of the Partnership shall be deposited
in such separate bank account or accounts, short term obligations of the
U.S. Government or its agencies, or other interest-bearing investments and
money market or liquid asset mutual funds as shall be determined by the
Managing General Partner.  All withdrawals therefrom shall be made upon
checks signed by the Managing General Partner or any person authorized to
do so by the Managing General Partner.

    8.04  Federal Income Tax Elections.

            (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section 8.04, all
    elections required or permitted to be made by the Partnership under the
    Code shall be made by the Managing General Partner in its sole
    discretion.  Each Partner agrees to provide the Partnership with all
    information necessary to give effect to any election to be made by the
    Partnership.

            (b) The Partnership shall elect to currently deduct IDC as an
    expense for income tax purposes and shall require any partnership, joint
    venture, or other arrangement in which it is a party to make such an
    election.


                            ARTICLE IX

                       Dissolution; Winding-up

    9.01  Dissolution.

            (a) Except as otherwise provided herein, the retirement,
    withdrawal, removal, death, insanity, incapacity, dissolution, or

                              47
<PAGE>
    bankruptcy of any Investor Partner shall not dissolve the Partnership. 
    The successor to the rights of such Investor Partner shall have all the
    rights of an Investor Partner for the purpose of settling or
    administering the estate or affairs of such Investor Partner; provided,
    however, that no successor shall become a substituted Investor Partner
    except in accordance with Article VII hereof; provided, further, that
    upon the withdrawal of an Additional General Partner, the Partnership
    shall be dissolved and wound up unless at that time there is at least
    one other General Partner, in which event the business of the
    Partnership shall continue to be carried on.  Neither the expulsion of
    any Investor Partner nor the admission or substitution of an Investor
    Partner shall work a dissolution of the Partnership.  The estate of a
    deceased, insane, incompetent, or bankrupt Investor Partner shall be
    liable for all his liabilities as an Investor Partner.

            (b)  The Partnership shall be dissolved upon the earliest to
    occur of:  (i) the written consent of the Investor Partners owning a
    majority of the then-outstanding Units to dissolve and wind up the 
    affairs of the Partnership; (ii) subject to the provisions of Subsection

    (c) below, the retirement, withdrawal, removal, death, adjudication of 
    insanity or incapacity, or bankruptcy (or, in the case of a corporate 
    managing general partner, the withdrawal, removal, filing of a 
    certificate of dissolution, liquidation, or bankruptcy) of the Managing 
    General Partner; (iii) the sale, forfeiture, or abandonment of all or
    substantially all of the Partnership's property; (iv) December 31, 2046;
    (v) a dissolution event described in Subsection (a) above; or (vi) any
    event causing dissolution of the Partnership under the Act.

            (c) In the case of any event described in Subsection (b)(ii)
    above, if a successor Managing General Partner is selected by Partners
    owning a majority of the then outstanding Units within ninety (90) days
    after such 9.01(b)(ii) event, and if such Investor Partners agree,
    within such 90 day period to continue the business of the Partnership,
    or if the remaining managing general partner, if any, continues the
    business of the Partnership, then the Partnership shall not be
    dissolved.

            (d) If the retirement, withdrawal, removal, death, insanity,
    incapacity, dissolution, liquidation, or bankruptcy of any Partner, or
    the assignment of a Partner's interest in the Partnership, or the
    substitution or admission of a new Partner, shall be deemed under the
    Act to cause a dissolution of the Partnership, then, except as provided
    in Section 9.01(c), the remaining Partners may, in accordance with the
    Act, continue the Partnership business as a new partnership and all such
    remaining Partners agree to be bound by the provisions of this
    Agreement.

    9.02  Liquidation.  Upon a dissolution and final termination of the
Partnership, the Managing General Partner, or in the event there is no
Managing General Partner, any other person or entity selected by the
Investor Partners (hereinafter referred to as a "Liquidator") shall cause
the affairs of the Partnership to be wound up and shall take account of
the Partnership's assets (including contributions, if any, of the Managing
General Partner pursuant to Section 3.01(e) herein) and liabilities, and
the assets shall, subject to the provisions of Section 9.03(b) herein, be
liquidated as promptly as is consistent with obtaining the fair market
value thereof, and the proceeds therefrom (which dissolution and

                              48
<PAGE>
liquidation may be accomplished over a period spanning one or more tax
years in the sole discretion of the Managing General Partner or
Liquidator), to the extent sufficient therefor, shall be applied and
distributed in accordance with Section 9.03.

    9.03  Winding-up.

            (a) Upon the dissolution of the Partnership and winding up of
    its affairs, the assets of the Partnership shall be distributed as
follows:

                (i)   all of the Partnership's debts and liabilities to
            persons other than the Managing General Partner shall be paid
            and discharged;

                (ii)  all outstanding debts and liabilities to the Managing
            General Partner shall be paid and discharged;

                (iii) assets shall be distributed to the Partners to the
            extent of their positive Capital Account balances, pro rata, in
            accordance with such positive Capital Account balances; and

                (iv)  any assets remaining after the Partners' Capital
            Accounts have been reduced to zero pursuant to Section 9.03(c)
            herein shall be distributed 80% to the Investor Partners and 20%
            to the Managing General Partner.

            (b) Distributions pursuant to this Section 9.03 shall be made
    in cash or in kind to the Partners, at the election of the Partners. 
    Notwithstanding the provision of this Section 9.03(b), in no event shall
    the Partners reserve the right to take in kind and separately dispose
    of their share of production.

            (c) Any in kind property distributions to the Investor Partners
    shall be made to a liquidating trust or similar entity for the benefit
    of the Investor Partners, unless at the time of the distribution:

                (1) the Managing General Partner shall offer the individual
            Investor Partners the election of receiving in kind property
            distributions and the Investor Partners accept such offer after
            being advised of the risks associated with such direct
            ownership; or

                (2) there are alternative arrangements in place which assure
            the Investor Partners that they will not, at any time, be 
            responsible for the operation or disposition of Partnership
            properties.

    The winding up of the affairs of the Partnership and the distribution
of its assets shall be conducted exclusively by the Managing General
Partner or the Liquidator, who is hereby authorized to do any and all acts
and things authorized by law for these purposes.


                         ARTICLE X

                      Power of Attorney


                              49
<PAGE>
    10.01  Managing General Partner as Attorney-in-Fact.  The  undersigned
makes, constitutes, and appoints the Managing General Partner the true and
lawful attorney for the undersigned, and in the name, place, and stead of
the undersigned from time to time to make, execute, sign, acknowledge, and
file:

            (a)  Any notices or certificates as may be required under the 
    Act and under the laws of any other state or jurisdiction in which the
    Partnership shall engage, or seek to engage, to do business and to do
    such other acts as are required to constitute the Partnership as a
    limited partnership under such laws.

            (b)  Any amendment to the Agreement pursuant to and which
    complies with Section 11.09 herein.

            (c)  Such certificates, instruments, and documents as may be
    required by, or may be appropriate under the laws of any state or other
    jurisdiction in which the Partnership is doing or intends to do business
    and with the use of the name of the Partnership by the Partnership.

            (d)  Such certificates, instruments, and documents as may be
    required by, or as may be appropriate for the undersigned to comply
    with, the laws of any state or other jurisdiction to reflect a change
    of name or address of the undersigned.

            (e)  Such certificates, instruments, and documents as may be
    required to be filed with the Department of Interior (including any
    bureau, office or other unit thereof, whether in Washington, D.C. or in
    the field, or any officer or employee thereof), as well as with any
    other federal or state agencies, departments, bureaus, offices, or
    authorities and pertaining to (i) any and all offers to lease, leases
    (including amendments, modifications, supplements, renewals, and
    exchanges thereof) of, or with respect to, any lands under the
    jurisdiction of the United States or any state including without
    limitation lands within the public domain, and acquired lands, and
    provides for the leasing thereof; (ii) all statements of interest and
    holdings on behalf of the Partnership or the undersigned; (iii) any
    other statements, notices, or communications required or permitted to
    be filed or which may hereafter be required or permitted to be filed
    under any law, rule, or regulation of the United States, or any state
    relating to the leasing of lands for oil or gas exploration or
    development; (iv) any request for approval of assignments or transfers
    of oil and gas leases, any unitization or pooling agreements and any
    other documents relating to lands under the jurisdiction of the United
    States or any state; and (v) any other documents or instruments which
    said attorney-in-fact in its sole discretion shall determine should be
    filed.

            (f)  Any further document, including furnishing verified copies
    of the Agreement and/or excerpts therefrom, which said attorney-in-fact
    shall consider necessary or convenient in connection with any of the
    foregoing, hereby giving said attorney-in-fact full power and authority
    to do and perform each and every act and thing whatsoever requisite and
    necessary to be done in and about the foregoing as fully as the
    undersigned might and could do if personally present, and hereby
    ratifying and confirming all that said attorney-in-fact shall lawfully
    do to cause to be done by virtue hereof.

                              50
<PAGE>
    10.02  Nature as Special Power.  The foregoing grant of authority:

            (a) is a special Power of Attorney coupled with an interest, is
    irrevocable, and shall survive the death of the undersigned;

            (b) shall survive the delivery of any assignment by the
    undersigned of the whole or any portion of his Units; except that where
    the assignee thereof has been approved by the Managing General Partner
    for admission to the Partnership as a substitute general or limited
    Partner as the case may be, the Power of Attorney shall survive the
    delivery of such assignment for the sole purpose of enabling said
    attorney-in-fact to execute, acknowledge, and file any instrument
    necessary to effect such substitution; and

            (c) may be exercised by said attorney-in-fact with full power of
    substitution and resubstitution and may be exercised by a listing of all
    of the Partners executing any instrument with a single signature of said
    attorney-in-fact.


                                ARTICLE XI

                          Miscellaneous Provisions

    11.01  Liability of Parties.  By entering into this Agreement, no party
shall become liable for any other party's obligations relating to any
activities beyond the scope of this Agreement, except as provided by the
Act.  If any party suffers, or is held liable for, any loss or liability
of the Partnership which is in excess of that agreed upon herein, such
party shall be indemnified by the other parties, to the extent of their
respective interests in the Partnership, as provided herein.

    11.02  Notices.  Any notice, payment, demand, or communication required
or permitted to be given by any provision of this Agreement shall be
deemed to have been sufficiently given or served for all purposes if
delivered personally to the party or to an officer of the party to whom
the same is directed or sent by registered or certified mail, postage and
charges prepaid, addressed as follows (or to such other address as the
party shall have furnished in writing in accordance with the provisions of
this Section):  If to the Managing General Partner, 103 East Main Street,
Bridgeport, West Virginia 26330; if to an Investor Partner, at such
Investor Partner's address for purposes of notice which is set forth on
Exhibit A attached hereto.  Unless otherwise expressly set forth in this
Agreement to the contrary, any such notice shall be deemed to be given on
the date on which the same was deposited in a regularly maintained
receptacle for the deposit of United States mail, addressed and sent as
aforesaid.

    11.03  Paragraph Headings.  The headings in this Agreement are inserted
for convenience and identification only and are in no way intended to
describe, interpret, define, or limit the scope, extent, or intent of this
Agreement or any provision hereof.

    11.04  Severability.  Every portion of this Agreement is intended to be
severable.  If any term or provision hereof is illegal or invalid by any
reason whatsoever, such illegality or invalidity shall not affect the
validity of the remainder of this Agreement.


                              51
<PAGE>
    11.05  Sole Agreement.  This Agreement constitutes the entire
understanding of the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter
hereof and no amendment, modification, or alteration of the terms hereof
shall be binding unless the same be in writing, dated subsequent to the
date hereof and duly approved and executed by the Managing General Partner
and such percentage of Investor Partners as provided in Section 11.09 of
this Agreement.

    11.06  Applicable Law.  This Agreement, which shall be governed
exclusively by its terms, is intended to comply with the Code and with the
Act and shall be interpreted consistently therewith.

    11.07  Execution in Counterparts.  This Agreement may be executed in any
number of counterparts with the same effect as if all parties hereto had
all signed the same document.  All counterparts shall be construed
together and shall constitute one agreement.

    11.08  Waiver of Action for Partition.  Each of the parties irrevocably
waives, during the term of the Partnership, any right that it may have to
maintain any action for partition with respect to the Partnership and the
property of the Partnership.

    11.09  Amendments.

            (a) Unless otherwise specifically herein provided, this
    Agreement shall not be amended without the consent of the Investor 
    Partners owning a majority of the then outstanding Units entitled to
    vote.

            (b) The Managing General Partner may, without notice to, or
    consent of, any Investor Partner, amend any provisions of these
    Articles, or consent to and execute any amendment to these Articles, to
    reflect:

                (i) A change in the name or location of the principal place
            of business of the Partnership;

                (ii)   The admission of substituted or additional Investor
            Partners in accordance with these Articles;

                (iii) A reduction in, return of, or withdrawal of, all or a
            portion of any Investor Partner's Capital Contribution;

                (iv)   A correction of any typographical error or omission;

                (v)   A change which is necessary in order to qualify the
            Partnership as a limited partnership under the laws of any other
            state or which is necessary or advisable, in the opinion of the
            Managing General Partner, to ensure that the Partnership will be
            treated as a partnership and not as an association taxable as a
            corporation for federal income tax purposes;

                (vi)   A change in the allocation provisions, in accordance
            with the provisions of Section 3.02(l) herein, in a manner that,
            in the sole opinion of the Managing General Partner (which
            opinion shall be determinative), would result in the most
            favorable aggregate consequences to the Investor

                              52
<PAGE>
            Partners as nearly as possible consistent with the allocations
            contained herein, for such allocations to be recognized for
            federalincome tax purposes due to developments in the federal
            income tax laws or otherwise; or

                (vii) Any other amendment similar to the foregoing;

            provided, however, that the Managing General Partner shall have
            no authority, right, or power under this Section to amend the
            voting rights of the Investor Partners.

    11.10  Consent to Allocations and Distributions.  The methods herein set
forth by which allocations and distributions are made and apportioned are
hereby expressly consented to by each Partner as an express condition to
becoming a Partner.

    11.11  Ratification.  The Investor Partner whose signature appears at
the end of this Article hereby specifically adopts and approves every
provision of this Agreement to which the signature page is attached.

    11.12  Substitution of Signature Pages.  This Agreement has been
executed in duplicate by the undersigned Investor Partners and one
executed copy of the signature page is attached to the undersigned's copy
of this Agreement.  It is agreed that the other executed copy of such
signature page may be attached to an identical copy of this Agreement
together with the signature pages from counterpart Agreements which may be
executed by other Investor Partners.

    11.13  Incorporation by Reference.  Every exhibit, schedule, and other
appendix attached to this Agreement and referred to herein is hereby
incorporated in this Agreement by reference.

                                                           *  *  *  *  *



























                              53
<PAGE>
                         SIGNATURE PAGE

         IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have executed this Agreement as
of
the day and year first written above.


MANAGING GENERAL PARTNER:                    INITIAL LIMITED PARTNER:

Petroleum Development Corporation
103 East Main Street
Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330
                          Steven R. Williams
                          103 East Main Street Inc.
                          Bridgeport, West Virginia 26330

By:________________________________                           
         Steven R. Williams
            President

INVESTOR PARTNERS

COMPLETE TO INVEST AS ADDITIONAL GENERAL PARTNER

         ADDITIONAL GENERAL PARTNER(S):

NUMBER OF UNITS            Name:__________________________________
  PURCHASED               (Print Name)

___________________        ______________________________________
                          (Signature)
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE

$__________________        Address:_______________________________

______________________________________________________________________

         By:  Petroleum Development Corporation

         By:     __________________________________

         its     ______________________________
                     Attorney-in-Fact

COMPLETE TO INVEST AS LIMITED PARTNER

         LIMITED PARTNER(S):


NUMBER OF UNITS                                      
Name:__________________________________
  PURCHASED                                           (Print Name)

______________________________________
                                                      (Signature)
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE

$__________________

Address:_______________________________

_______________________________________

                              54
<PAGE>

                          By:  Petroleum Development Corporation

                          By: __________________________________

                          its______________________________
                                   Attorney-in-Fact




















































                              55
<PAGE>
                              EXHIBIT A

                                 TO

                   AGREEMENT OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
                                 OF
                   PDC 1996-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,
                   [PDC 1997-___ LIMITED PARTNERSHIP,]
                   A WEST VIRGINIA LIMITED PARTNERSHIP


                                                 Number of
Names and Addresses of Investors                         Nature of Interest 
  
            Units  













































                              56

<PAGE>
APPENDIX B TO PROSPECTUS

                   SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT
               PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership
               [PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership]

      I hereby agree to purchase ______ Unit(s) in the PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership [PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership] (the "Partnership") at
$20,000 per Unit.  Enclosed please find my check in the amount of
$________.  My completion and execution of this Subscription Agreement
also constitutes my execution of the Limited Partnership Agreement and the
Certificate of Limited Partnership of the Partnership.  If this
Subscription is accepted, I agree to be bound and governed by the
provisions of the Limited Partnership Agreement of the Partnership.  With
respect to this purchase, being aware that a broker may sell to me only if
I qualify according to the express standards stated herein and in the
Prospectus, I represent that:

      (a)       I have received a copy of the Prospectus for the
Partnership.

      (b)       I have a net worth of not less than $225,000 (exclusive of
home,
furnishings and automobiles); or I have a net worth of not less than
$60,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles) and had during my
last tax year or estimate that I will have 1996 [1997] taxable income as
defined in Section 63 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 of at least
$60,000, without regard to an investment in the Partnership. 

      (c)       If a resident of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, California, 
Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota,
Mississippi, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio,
Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont,
Washington, or Wisconsin, I am aware of and satisfy the additional
suitability and other requirements stated in Appendix C to the Prospectus. 


      (d)       If a resident of California, I acknowledge and understand
that the offering may not comply with all the rules set forth in Title 10
of the California Administrative Code; the following are some, but not
necessarily all, of the possible deviations from the California rules: 
Program selling expenses may exceed the established limit; and the
compensation formula varies from the California rules.  Even in light of
such non-compliance, I affirmatively state that I still want to invest in
the Partnership.  

      (e)       Except as set forth in (f) below, I am purchasing Units for
my own account.  

      (f)       If a fiduciary, I am purchasing for a person or entity
having the appropriate income and/or net worth specified in (c) or (d)
above.

      (g)  I certify that the number shown as my Social Security or Taxpayer
Identification Number on the signature page is correct.   

      The above representations do not constitute a waiver of any rights
that I may have under the Acts administered by the Securities and Exchange
Commission or by any state regulatory agency administering statutes
bearing on the sale of securities.
<PAGE>
           (i)  The purchase of Units as an Additional General Partner
involves a risk of unlimited liability to the extent that the
Partnership's liabilities exceed its insurance proceeds, the Partnership's
assets, and indemnification by the Managing General Partner, as described
in "Risk Factors" in the Prospectus.

           (ii)  The NASD requires the Soliciting Dealer or registered
representative to inform potential investors of all pertinent facts
relating to the liquidity and marketability of the Units, including the
following:  (i) the risks involved in the offering, including the
speculative nature of the investment and the speculative nature of
drilling for oil and gas; (ii) the financial hazards involved in the
offering, including the risk of losing my entire investment; (iii) the
lack of liquidity of this investment; (iv) the restrictions of
transferability of the Units; and (v) the tax consequences of the
investment.

      Investors are required to execute their own subscription agreements. 
The Managing General Partner will not accept any subscription agreement
that has been executed by someone other than the investor or in the case
of fiduciary accounts by someone who does not have the legal power of
attorney to sign on the investor's behalf.

      The Managing General Partner may not complete a sale of Units to an
investor until at least five business days after the date the investor
receives a final prospectus.  In addition, the Managing General Partner
will send each investor a confirmation of purchase.

Signature and Power of Attorney

      I hereby appoint Petroleum Development Corporation, with full power of
substitution, my true and lawful attorney to execute, file, swear to and
record any Certificate(s) of Limited Partnership or amendments thereto
(including but not limited to any amendments filed for the purpose of the
admission of any substituted Partners) or cancellation thereof, including
any other instruments which may be required by law in any jurisdiction to
permit qualification of the Partnership as a limited partnership or for
any other purpose necessary to implement the Limited Partnership
Agreement, and as more fully described in Article X of the Limited
Partnership Agreement.

      If a resident of California, I am aware of and satisfy the additional
suitability requirements stated in Appendix C to the Prospectus and
acknowledge the receipt of California Rule 260.141.11 at pages C-2, C-3,
C-4 and C-5 of Appendix C to the Prospectus.

Date:  _________________, 199__.

_____________________________                             
____________________________________
             Signature                                                     
   
              Signature

_____________________________                             
____________________________________
      Please Print Name                                    Please Print Name

_____________________________                             
____________________________________
      Social Security or Tax                                          Social
Security or Tax
      Identification Number                                          
Identification Number

                                                                B-2
<PAGE>
      I utilize the calendar year as my Federal income tax year, unless
indicated otherwise as follows:  _________________________.

Mailing Address:

________________________________________________________________________
                                                              Street
____________________   ______________________________   ____________
City                                             State                     
   
                      Zip Code

Address for Distributions and Notices, if different from above:

________________________________________________________________________
                                                              Street
_________________________________________________________________________
City            State                                      Zip Code (Account
or
Reference No.)

Business Telephone No. (  ) _________  Home Telephone No. (  ) __________


Type of Units Purchased:
IF NO SELECTION IS MADE, THE
PARTNERSHIP CANNOT ACCEPT YOUR
SUBSCRIPTION AND WILL HAVE TO   [ ] Units as an Additional General Partner 

SUBSCRIPTION AND WILL HAVE TO   [ ] Units as a Limited Partner
RETURN THIS SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT
AND YOUR MONEY TO YOU.

                                 Title to Units to be held:

[ ] Individual Ownership                          
[ ] Joint Tenants with Right
    of Survivorship
                                                                           

(both persons must sign)
 [ ] Tenants in Common (both                                               

 [ ] Other _______________
     persons must sign)


                                                                         
                     TO BE COMPLETED BY PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

    Petroleum Development Corporation, as the Managing General Partner of
the Partnership, hereby accepts this Subscription and agrees to hold and
invest the same pursuant to the terms and conditions of the Limited
Partnership Agreement of the Partnership.

ATTEST:                                                 PETROLEUM
DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION



______________________________                         

By:____________________________
             Secretary
                                                       
Title:______________________________

                                                       
Date:_______________________________





                                                                B-3
<PAGE>
                                                                         

                              TO BE COMPLETED BY REGISTERED REPRESENTATIVE
                              (For Commission and Other Purposes)

      I hereby represent that I have discharged my affirmative obligations
under Sections 3(b) and 4(d) of Appendix F to the NASD's Rules of Fair
Practice and specifically have obtained information from the above-named
subscriber concerning his/her net worth, annual income, federal income tax
bracket, investment portfolio and other financial information and have
determined that an investment in the Partnership is suitable for such
subscriber, that such subscriber is or will be in a financial position to
realize the benefits of this investment, and that such subscriber has a
fair market net worth sufficient to sustain the risks for this investment. 
I have also informed the subscriber of all pertinent facts relating to the
liquidity and marketability of an investment in the Partnership, of the
risks of unlimited liability regarding an investment as an Additional
General Partner, and of the passive loss limitations for tax purposes of
an investment as a Limited Partner.


______________________________                            
____________________________________
Name of Brokerage Firm         Office Number    FC  RR  AE Number

________________________________                          
____________________________________
Registered Representative Office Address      FC  RR  AE  Name (Please
Print)

____________________________________
City               State        Zip Code  FC  RR  AE  Social Security
Number

_______________________________,199_
Area Code             Telephone Number    FC  RR  AE  Signature   Date





















                                                                B-3
<PAGE>
APPENDIX C TO PROSPECTUS
                                  PDC 1996-1997 DRILLING PROGRAM
                                 SPECIAL SUBSCRIPTION INSTRUCTIONS


      Checks for Units should be made payable to "PNC Bank, N.A. as Escrow
Agent for PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership [PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership]"
and should be given to the subscriber's broker for submission to the
Dealer Manager and Escrow Agent.  The minimum subscription is $5,000. 
Subscriptions are payable only in cash upon subscription.  In the event
that a subscriber purchases Units in a particular Partnership on more than
one occasion during an offering period, the minimum purchase on each
occasion is $5,000 (one-quarter Unit).

Signature Requirement.

      -    Investors are required to execute their own subscription
           agreements. The Managing General Partner will not accept any
           subscription  agreement that has been executed by someone other
           than the investor or in the case of fiduciary accounts someone
           who does not have the legal power of attorney to sign on the
           investor's behalf.

Transfer of Units by Missouri Residents.

      -    The Commissioner of Securities of Missouri classifies the
           securities (the Units) as being ineligible for any transactional
           exemption under the Missouri Uniform Securities Act (Section
           409.402(b), RsMo. 1969).  Therefore, unless the securities are
           again registered, the offer for sale or resale thereof in the
           State of Missouri may be subject to the sanctions of the Act.

Subscribers of Limited Partnership Interests:

      -    If a New Hampshire resident, I have either: (1) a net worth of
           not less than $250,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings, and
           automobiles), or (2) a net worth of not less than $125,000
           (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles), $50,000 in
           income, and some portion of my estimated taxable income for the
           current year will be subject to federal income tax at a rate of
           not less than 31%.

      -    If a North Carolina resident, I have either:  (1) a net worth
           of not less than $225,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings and
           automobiles), or (2) a net worth of not less than $60,000
           (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles) and estimated
           1996 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership"
           and 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited
           Partnership" taxable income as defined in Section 63 of the
           Internal Revenue Code of 1986 of $60,000 or more without regard
           to an investment in a Partnership.

      -    If a Pennsylvania resident, I have either:  (1) a net worth of at
           least $225,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles)
           or (2) a net worth of at least $60,000 (exclusive of home,
           furnishings and automobiles) and a taxable income in 1995 for
           Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1996
           for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" of
           $60,000 or estimate that I will have an annual taxable income of
           $60,000 during my current tax year; or that I am purchasing in a
           fiduciary capacity for a person or entity having such net worth
           or such taxable income.    My investment in the Partnership will
           not be equal to or more than 10% of my net worth.    
           <PAGE>
Additional General Partner Subscribers:

      -    If a resident of Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas, Indiana, Iowa,
           Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, 
           Mississippi, Missouri, New Mexico, North Carolina, Ohio,
           Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas,
           Vermont, or Wisconsin, I (i) have an individual or joint minimum
           net worth with my spouse of $225,000 or more, without regard to
           the investment in the program, (exclusive of home, home
           furnishings and automobiles) and a combined minimum gross income
           of $100,000 ($120,000 for Arizona residents) or more for the
           current year and for the two previous years; or (ii) have an
           individual or joint minimum net worth with my spouse in excess of
           $1,000,000, inclusive of home, home furnishings and automobiles;
           or (iii) have an individual or joint minimum net worth with my
           spouse in excess of $500,000, exclusive of home, home
           furnishings and automobiles; or (iv) have a combined minimum
           gross income of $200,000 in the current year and the two previous
           years.    If I am a Michigan or Pennsylvania resident, my
           investment in the Partnership will not be equal to or more than
           10% of my net worth.

      -    If resident of Washington, I (i) have net worth, or a joint net
           worth with my spouse, of not less than $1,000,000 at the time of
           the purchase or (ii) have an individual income in excess of
           $200,000 in each of the two most recent years or joint income
           with my spouse in excess of $300,000 in each of those years and
           have a reasonable expectation of reaching the same income level
           in the current year.


                           ATTENTION CALIFORNIA INVESTORS

      -    A resident of California who subscribes for Units of general
           partnership interest must represent that he (i) has a net
           worth of not less than $250,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings
           and automobiles) and had annual gross income during 1995 for
           Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1996
           for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" of
           $120,000 or more, or expects to have gross income in 1996 for
           Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1997
           for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" of
           $120,000 or more, or (ii) has a net worth of not less than
           $500,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles), or
           (iii) has a net worth of not less than $1,000,000, or (iv)
           expects to have gross income in 1996 for Partnerships
           designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1997 for
           Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" of not
           less than $200,000.

      -    A resident of California who subscribes for Units of limited
           partnership interest must represent that he (1) has a net worth
           of not less than $250,000 (exclusive of home, furnishings and
           automobiles) and expects to have gross income in 1996 for
           Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership and 1997
           for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" of
           $65,000 or more, or (2) has net worth of not less than $500,000
           (exclusive of home, furnishings and automobiles), or (3) has a
           net worth of not less than $1,000,000, or (4) expects to have
           gross income in 1996 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_
           Limited Partnership" and 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC
           1997-_ Limited Partnership" of not less than $200,000.


                                        C-2
<PAGE>
      -    If a resident of California, I am aware that:  IT IS
            UNLAWFUL TO CONSUMMATE A SALE OR TRANSFER OF THIS SECURITY, OR
           ANY INTEREST THEREIN, OR TO RECEIVE ANY CONSIDERATION THEREFOR,
           WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT OF THE COMMISSIONER OF
           CORPORATIONS OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, EXCEPT AS PERMITTED IN
           THE COMMISSIONER'S RULES.

      As a condition of qualification of the Units for sale in the State of
California, the following rule is hereby delivered to each California
purchaser.

      California Administrative Code, Title 10, CH. 3, Rule 260.141.11. 
Restriction on transfer.  (a) The issuer of a security upon which a
restriction on transfer has been imposed pursuant to Sections 260.102.6,
260.102.141.10, and 260.534.10 shall cause a copy of this Section to be
delivered to each issuee or transferee of such security at the time the
certificate evidencing the security is delivered to the issuee or
transferee.

      (b)       It is unlawful for the holder of any such security to
consummate a sale or transfer of such security, or any interest therein,
without the prior written consent of the Commissioner (until this condition
is removed pursuant to Section 260.141.12 of these rules), except:

           (1)  to the issuer;

           (2)  pursuant to the order or process of any court;

           (3)  to any person described in Subdivision (i) of Section 
                25102 of the Code or Section 260.105.14 of these rules;

           (4)  to the transferor's ancestors, descendants or spouse, or
                any custodian or trustee for the account of the transferor's
                ancestors, descendants, or spouse; or to a transferee by a
                trustee or custodian for the account of the transferee or
                the transferee's ancestors, descendants or spouse;

           (5)  to the holders of securities of the same class of the same
                issuer; 

           (6)  by way of gift or donation intervivos or on death;

           (7)  by or through a broker-dealer licensed under the Code
                (either acting as such or as a finder) to a resident of
                a foreign state, territory or country who is neither
                domiciled in this state to the knowledge of the
                broker-dealer, nor actually present in this state if
                the sale of such securities is not in violation of any
                securities law of the foreign state, territory or country
                concerned;

           (8)  to a broker-dealer licensed under the Code in a principal
                transaction, or as an underwriter or member of an
                underwriting syndicate or selling group; 

           (9)  if the interest sold or transferred is a pledge or other
                lien given by the purchaser to the seller upon a sale of
                the security for which the Commissioner's written consent
                is obtained or under this rule not required;

                                                                C-3
<PAGE>
           (10)       by way of a sale qualified under Section 25111, 25112,
      25113 or 25121 of the Code, of the securities to be transferred,
      provided that no order under Section 25140 or Subdivision (a) of
      Section 25143 is in effect with respect to such qualification;

           (11)       by a corporation to a wholly-owned subsidiary of such
      corporation, or by a wholly-owned subsidiary of a corporation to such
      corporation;

           (12)       by way of an exchange qualified under Section 25111,
      25112 or 25113 of the Code, provided that no order under Section 25140
      or Subdivision (a) of Section 25143 is in effect with respect to such
      qualification;

           (13)       between residents of foreign states, territories or
      countries who are neither domiciled nor actually present in this
      state;

           (14)       to the State Controller pursuant to the Unclaimed
      Property Law or to the administrator of the unclaimed property law
      of another state;

           (15)       by the State Controller pursuant to the Unclaimed
      Property Law or by the administrator of the unclaimed property law
      of another state if, in either such case, such person (i) discloses
      to potential purchasers at the sale that transfer of the securities
      is restricted under this rule, (ii) delivers to each purchaser a
      copy of this rule, and (iii) advises the Commissioner of the name
      of each purchaser; or

           (16)       by a trustee to a successor trustee when such
      transfer does not involve a change in the beneficial ownership of
      the securities;

provided that any such transfer is on the condition that any certificate
evidencing the security issued to such transferee shall contain the legend
required by this section.

      (c)       The certificates representing all such securities subject to
such a restriction on transfer, whether upon initial issuance or upon any
transfer thereof, shall bear on their face a legend, prominently stamped
or printed thereon in capital letters of not less than 10-point size,
reading as follows:

     "IT IS UNLAWFUL TO CONSUMMATE A SALE OR TRANSFER OF THIS SECURITY,
      OR ANY INTEREST THEREIN, OR TO RECEIVE ANY CONSIDERATION THEREFOR,
      WITHOUT THE PRIOR WRITTEN CONSENT OF THE COMMISSIONER OF CORPORATIONS
      OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA, EXCEPT AS PERMITTED IN THE COMMISSIONER'S
      RULES."

      As a condition of qualification of the Units for sale in the State of
California, each California subscriber through the execution of the
Subscription Agreement acknowledges his understanding that the California
Department of Corporations has adopted certain regulations and guidelines
which apply to oil and gas interests offered to the public in the State of
California.







                                     C-4
FEDERAL AND STATE TAX TABLES

Table 1 - Federal Taxes
<TABLE>
<S>                 <S>                   <S>            <S>              <S>
Head                                   Married       Married        
of                                   Individual      Joint            Marginal
Household          Single              Return        Return           Tax Rate

0 to               0 to                0 to           0 to  
$31,250            $23,500             $19,500        $39,500           15.0%

$31,250 to         $23,500 to          $19,500 to     $39,500 to
$80,750            $56,550             $47,125        $94,250            28.0%

$80,750 to         $56,550 to          $47,125 to     $94,2500 to
$130,800           $117,950            $71,800        $143,600           31.0% 

$130,800 to        $117,950 to         $71,800 to     $143,600 to
$256,500           $256,500            $128,250       $256,500           36.0%

$256,500           $256,500            $128,520       $256,500           39.6%
</TABLE>
Source:  1995 Research Institute of America ("RIA") Federal Tax Handbook;
IRC Section 1(a) - Federal Tax Rates.


                                                Table 2 - State Income Taxes
<TABLE>
<S>            <S>        <S>               <S>               <S>           <S>
            Federal                                       Federal       
            Income                                        Income          Top 
            Used As     Top State                         Used As        State 
            State Tax   Tax                               State Tax       Tax 
State        Base        Rate               State           Base          Rate 
Alabama        No        5.0%              Missouri          Yes          6.0%
Arizona        Yes       6.9%              Montana           Yes         11.0%
Arkansas       No        7.0%              Nebraska          Yes          6.99%
California     Yes      11.0%              New Hampshire     No           5.0%
Colorado       Yes       5.0%              New Jersey        No           6.65%
Connecticut    Yes       4.5%              New Mexico        Yes          8.5%
Delaware       Yes       7.7%              New York          Yes          7.875%
D.C.           Yes       9.5%              North Carolina    Yes          7.75%
Georgia        Yes       6.0%              North Dakota      Yes         12.0%
Hawaii         Yes      10.0%              Ohio              Yes          7.5%
Idaho          Yes       8.2%              Oklahoma          Yes          7.0%
Illinois       Yes       3.0%              Oregon            Yes          9.0%
Indiana        Yes       3.4%              Pennsylvania      No           2.8%
Iowa           Yes       9.98%             Rhode Island      Yes         10.89%*
Kansas         Yes       6.45%             South Carolina    Yes          7.0%
Kentucky       Yes       6.0%              Tennessee         No           6.0%
Louisiana      Yes       6.0%              Utah              Yes          7.2%
Maine          Yes       8.5%              Vermont           Yes          9.9%**
Maryland       Yes       8.0%              Virginia          Yes          5.75%
Massachusetts  Yes      12.0%              West Virginia     Yes          6.5%
Michigan       Yes       4.4%              Wisconsin         Yes          6.93%
Minnesota      Yes       8.5%              *27.5% of Federal Tax
Mississippi    No        5.0%              **25.0% of Federal Tax

No personal income tax in:  Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Texas,
Washington, and Wyoming.

+ Maryland state tax is 5% plus county tax = 8% maximum Maryland state
income tax.
</TABLE>
Source:  1995 RIA All States Tax Handbook.
                                                                C-5
<PAGE>
                                                   Table 3 - Self-Employment Tax

<TABLE>
<S>                                                                           <S>

   
Medicare portion of self-employment tax                                      2.9%
Self-employment tax rate for those
 with self-employment income
 below the threshold ($61,200 for 1995)                                     12.4%
Total self-employment tax rate for those
 with self-employment income below $61,200                                  15.3%
</TABLE>
For self-employment tax purposes, losses from one business may offset the
income of another.  Self-employed individuals might be able to use an
investment as an Additional General Partner in the Program to lower their
self-employment tax.  Self-employed individuals who are Additional General
Partner might be able to realize additional tax savings, since deductions
from the Program might be used to reduce self-employment income of
Additional General Partners for tax purposes.  If total self-employment
income is above $61,200, the reduction would be 2.9% of the amount
deducted (the Medicare tax).  Below $61,200, the savings would be 15.3% of
the amount deducted.  Married couples with one self-employed partner may
wish to invest in the name of the self-employed partner to maximize the
tax benefit.
  



































                                                                C-6
<PAGE>
APPENDIX D TO THE PROSPECTUS


                                         METZGER, HOLLIS, GORDON & 
    
   
Alprin    
                                                         1275 K Street, NW
                                                       Washington, DC 20005







                                                                May 31, 1996



Petroleum Development Corporation
103 East Main Street
Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330

      Re:       PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program

Dear Sirs:

      We have acted as counsel for PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program, in
connection with the offer and sale of securities (the "Units") in a series
of limited partnerships, PDC 1996-A Limited Partnership, PDC 1996-B
Limited Partnership, PDC 1996-C Limited Partnership, PDC 1996-D Limited
Partnership, PDC 1997-A Limited Partnership, PDC 1997-B Limited
Partnership, PDC 1997-C Limited Partnership, and PDC 1997-D Limited
Partnership (the "Partnerships") to be organized as limited partnerships
under the West Virginia Uniform Limited Partnership Act and in connection
with the preparation and filing of a registration statement on Form S-1
(the "Registration Statement").  Capitalized terms used herein shall have
the meaning ascribed to such terms in the Registration Statement, unless
otherwise provided.

      We have examined and are familiar with: (i) the Registration
Statement,
including a prospectus (the "Prospectus"), (ii) the Partnerships' form of
limited partnership agreement (the "Partnership Agreement"), and (iii)
such other documents and instruments as we have considered necessary for
purposes of the opinions hereinafter set forth.

      In our examination we have assumed the authenticity of original
documents, the accuracy of copies and the genuineness of signatures.  We
have relied upon the representations and statements of the Managing
General Partner of the Partnerships and its affiliates with respect to the
factual determinations underlying the legal conclusions set forth herein,
including a representation of Petroleum Development Corporation as to its
net worth.  We have not attempted to verify independently such
representations and statements.

      Please note that we are opining only as to the matters expressly set
forth herein, and no opinion should be inferred as to any other matters. 
We are unable to render opinions as to a number of federal income tax
issues relating to an investment in Units and the operations of the
Partnerships.  Finally, we are not expressing any opinion with respect to
the amount of allowable losses or credits that may be generated by the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
Many 31, 1996
Page D-2

Partnerships or the amount of each Investor Partner's share of allowable
losses or credits from the Partnerships' activities.

      This Appendix D to the Prospectus constitutes our opinion as to all
material tax considerations of the offering.  In our opinion, each of the
legal conclusions rendered in this Appendix D to the Prospectus is correct
in all material respects as of the date of this opinion, under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, the rules and regulations
promulgated thereunder, and existing interpretations thereof.

      The following opinion and statements are based upon the provisions of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), including
revisions to the Code effected by the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1990
(the "1990 Act"), which was enacted into law on November 5, 1990, the
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, the Energy Policy Act of 1992
(the "Energy Act"), the Revenue Reconciliation Act of 1993 (the "RRA 93"),
enacted into law on August 10, 1993, and the Uruguay Round Agreements Act
("GATT"), enacted into law on December 8, 1994, existing and proposed
regulations thereunder, current administrative rulings, and court
decisions.  The federal income tax law is uncertain as to many of the tax
matters material to an investment in the Partnership, and it is not
possible to predict with certainty how the law will develop or how the
courts will decide various issues if they are litigated.  While this
opinion fairly states our views as Counsel concerning the tax aspects of
an investment in the Partnership, both the Service and the courts may
disagree with our position on certain issues.

      Moreover, uncertainty exists concerning some of the federal income tax
aspects of the transactions being undertaken by the Partnership.  Some of
the tax positions being taken by the Partnership may be challenged by the
Internal Revenue Service (the "Service") and there is no assurance that
any such challenge will not be successful.  Thus, there can be no
assurance that all of the anticipated tax benefits of an investment in the
partnership will be realized.

      Our opinions are based upon the transactions described in the
Prospectus (the "Transaction") and upon facts as they have been
represented to us or determined by us as of the date of the opinion.  Any
alteration of the facts may adversely affect the opinions rendered.  In
our opinion, the preponderance of the material tax benefits, in the
aggregate, will be realized by the Investor Partners.  It is possible,
however, that some of the tax benefits will be eliminated or deferred to
future years.

      Because of the factual nature of the inquiry, and in certain cases the
lack of clear authority in the law, it is not possible to reach a judgment
as to the outcome on the merits (either favorable or unfavorable) of
certain material federal income tax issues as described more fully herein.

                       SUMMARY OF CONCLUSIONS

      Opinions expressed:  The following is a summary of the specific
opinions expressed by us with respect to Tax Considerations discussed
herein.  TO BE FULLY UNDERSTOOD, THE COMPLETE DISCUSSION OF THESE MATTERS
SHOULD BE READ BY EACH PROSPECTIVE INVESTOR PARTNER.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-3

      1.   The material federal income tax benefits in the aggregate from an
investment in the Partnership will be realized.

      2.   The Partnership will be treated as a partnership for federal
income tax purposes and not as a corporation and not as an association
taxable as a corporation.

      3.   To the extent the Partnership's wells are timely drilled and
amounts are timely paid, the Partners will be entitled to their pro rata
share of the Partnership's IDC paid in 1996, with respect to Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership", and 1997 with respect to
Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership."

      4.   Neither the at risk nor the adjusted basis rules will limit the
deductibility of losses generated from the Partnership.

      5.   Additional General Partners' interests will not be considered a
passive activity within the meaning of Code Section 469 and losses
generated while such general partner interest is so held will not be
limited by the passive activity provisions.

      6.   Limited Partners' interests (other than those held by Additional
General Partners who convert their interests into Limited Partners'
interests) will be considered a passive activity within the meaning of
Code Section 469 and losses generated therefrom will be limited by the
passive activity provisions.

      7.   The Partnership will not be terminated solely as the result of
the conversion of Partnership interests.

      8.   To the extent provided herein, the Partners' distributive shares
of Partnership tax items will be determined and allocated substantially in
accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement.

      9.   The Partnership will not be required to register with the Service
as a tax shelter.

      No opinion expressed:  Due to the lack of authority, or the
essentially factual nature of the question, we express no opinion on the
following:

      1.   The impact of an investment in the Partnership on an Investor's
alternative minimum tax, due to the factual nature of the issue.

      2.   Whether, under Code Section 183, the losses of the Partnership
will be treated as derived from "activities not engaged in for profit," and
therefore nondeductible from other gross income, due to the inherently
factual nature of a Partner's interest and motive in engaging in the
Transaction.

      3.   Whether each Partner will be entitled to percentage depletion
since such a determination is dependent upon the status of the Partner as an<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-4

independent producer.  Due to the inherently factual nature of such a
determination, counsel is unable to render an opinion as to the
availability of percentage depletion.

      4.   Whether any interest incurred by a Partner with respect to any
borrowings will be deductible or subject to limitations on deductibility,
due to the factual nature of the issue.  Without any assistance of the
Managing General Partner or any of its affiliates, some Partners may
choose to borrow the funds necessary to acquire a Unit and may incur
interest expense in connection with those loans.  Based upon the purely
factual nature of any such loans, we are unable to express an opinion with
respect to the deductibility of any interest paid or incurred thereon.

      5.   Whether the fees to be paid to the Managing General Partner and
to third parties will be deductible, due to the factual nature of the issue.
Due to the inherently factual nature of the proper allocation of expenses
among nondeductible syndication expenses, amortizable organization
expenses, amortizable "start-up" expenditures, and currently deductible
items, and because the issues involve questions concerning both the nature
of the services performed and to be performed and the reasonableness of
amounts charged, we are unable to express an opinion regarding such
treatment.

      General Information:  Certain matters contained herein are not
considered to address a material tax consequence and are for general
information, including the matters contained in sections dealing with gain
or loss on the sale of Units or of property, Partnership distributions,
tax audits, penalties, and state, local, and self-employment tax.

      Our opinions are also based upon the facts described in this
Prospectus
and upon certain representations made to us by the Managing General
Partner for the purpose of permitting us to render our opinions, including
the following representations with respect to the Program:

1.    The Partnership Agreement to be entered into by and among the Managing
      General Partner and Investor Partners and any amendments thereto will
      be duly executed and will be made available to any Investor Partner
      upon written request.  The Partnership Agreement will be duly recorded
      in all places required under the West Virginia Uniform Limited
      Partnership Act (the "Act") for the due formation of the Partnership
      and for the continuation thereof in accordance with the terms of the
      Partnership Agreement.  The Partnership will at all times be operated
      in accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the
      Prospectus, and the Act.

2.    No election will be made by the Partnership, Investor Partners, or
      Managing General Partner to be excluded from the application of the
      provisions of Subchapter K of the Code.
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-5

3.    The Partnership will own an operating mineral interest, as defined in
      the Code and in the Regulations, in all of the Drill Sites and none of
      the Partnership's revenues will be from non-working interests.

4.    The Investor Partners will not own, directly or indirectly,
      individually or in the aggregate, more than twenty percent (20%) of
the
      shares of the Managing General Partner, or of any affiliate (as that
      term is defined in Code Section 1504(a) and determined by application
      of the attribution rules of Code Section 318).

5.    The Managing General Partner will be independent of the Investor
      Partners and will not be merely a "dummy" acting as an agent for the
      Investor Partners.  The Managing General Partner has and will continue
      to have at all times during the existence of the Partnership a net
      worth in excess of $5,000,000 (excluding its interest in the
      Partnership or any other limited partnership).

6.    The respective amounts that will be paid to the General Partners as
      Drilling Fees, Operating Fees, and other fees will be amounts that
      would not exceed amounts that would be ordinarily paid for similar
      transactions between Persons having no affiliation and dealing with
      each other at "arms' length."

7.    The Managing General Partner will cause the Partnership to properly
      elect to deduct currently all Intangible Drilling and Development
      Costs.

8.    The Partnership will have a December 31 taxable year and will report
      its income on the accrual basis.

9.    The Drilling Agreement to be entered into by and among the Managing
      General Partner and the Partnership will be duly executed and will
      govern the drilling of the Partnership's Wells.  All Partnership wells
      will be spudded by not later than March 30, 1997 with respect to
      Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and March 30,
      1998 with respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited
      Partnership."  The entire amount to be paid to the Managing General
      Partner under the Operating Agreement is attributable to Intangible
      Drilling and Development Costs and does not include a profit for
      services performed or materials provided by third parties which are
      passed through at actual cost.

10.        The Operating Agreement will be duly executed and will govern the
           operation of the Partnership's Wells.

11.        Based upon the Managing General Partner's review of its
           experience with its previous drilling programs for the past
           several years and upon the intended operations of the
           Partnership, the Managing General Partner believes that the sum
           of (i) the aggregate deductions, including depletion deductions,
           and (ii) 350 percent of the aggregate credits from the

<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-6

           Partnership will not, as of the close of any of the first
           five years ending after the date on which Units are offered for
           sale, exceed two times the cash invested by the Partners in the
           Partnership as of such dates.  In that regard, the Managing
           General Partner has reviewed the economics of its similar oil
           and gas drilling programs for the past several years, and has
           represented that it has determined that none of those programs
           has resulted in a tax shelter ratio greater than two to one. 
           Further, the Managing General Partner has represented that the
           deductions and credits that are or will be represented as
           potentially allowable to an investor will not result in any
           Partnership having a tax shelter ratio greater than two to one
           and believes that no person could reasonably infer from
           representations made, or to be made, in connection with
           the offering of Units that such sums as of such dates will exceed
           two times the Partners' cash investments as of such dates.

12.        The Managing General Partner believes that at least 90% of the
           gross income of the Partnership will constitute income derived
           from the exploration, development, production, and/or marketing
           of oil and gas.  The Managing General Partner does not believe
           that any market will ever exist for the sale of Units and the
           Managing General Partner will not make a market for the Units. 
           Further, the Units will not be traded on an established
           securities market or the substantial equivalent thereof.

13.        The Partnership and each Partner will have the objective of
           carrying on business for profit and dividing the gain therefrom.

14.        The Managing General Partner does not anticipate the purchase of
           Units by tax-exempt investors or foreign investors.

      Our opinions are also subject to all the assumptions, qualifications,
and limitations set forth in the following discussion, including the
assumptions that each of the Partners has full power, authority, and legal
right to enter into and perform the terms of the Partnership Agreement and
to take any and all actions thereunder in connection with the transactions
contemplated thereby.

      Each prospective Investor should be aware that, unlike a ruling from
the Service, an opinion of counsel represents only such counsel's best
judgment.  THERE CAN BE NO ASSURANCE THAT THE SERVICE WILL NOT
SUCCESSFULLY ASSERT POSITIONS WHICH ARE INCONSISTENT WITH OUR OPINIONS SET
FORTH IN THIS DISCUSSION OR IN THE TAX REPORTING POSITIONS TAKEN BY THE
PARTNERS OR THE PARTNERSHIP.  EACH PROSPECTIVE INVESTOR SHOULD CONSULT HIS
OWN TAX ADVISOR TO DETERMINE THE EFFECT OF THE TAX ISSUES DISCUSSED HEREIN
ON HIS INDIVIDUAL TAX SITUATION.

                       PARTNERSHIP STATUS

      The Partnership will be formed as a limited partnership pursuant to
the Partnership Agreement and the laws of the State of West Virginia.  The<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-7

characterization of the Partnership as a partnership by state or local
law, however, will not be determinative of the status of the Partnership
for federal income tax purposes.  The availability of any federal income
tax benefits to an investor is dependent upon classification of the
Partnership as a partnership rather than as a corporation or as an
association taxable as a corporation for federal income tax purposes.

      NO TAX RULING WILL BE SOUGHT FROM THE SERVICE AS TO THE STATUS OF THE
PARTNERSHIP AS A PARTNERSHIP FOR FEDERAL INCOME TAX PURPOSES.

      Although no tax ruling will be sought from the Service, we are of the
opinion that the Partnership will be treated as a partnership for federal
income tax purposes, and not as a corporation or as an association taxable
as a corporation.  In the absence of a ruling from the Service, however,
there can be no assurance that the Service will not attempt to treat the
Partnership as a corporation or as an association taxable as a corporation
for federal income tax purposes.  If the Service were to prevail on this
issue, the tax benefits associated with taxation as a partnership would
not be available to the Partners.

      Although the Partnership will be validly organized as a limited
partnership under the laws of the state of West Virginia and will be
subject to the Act, whether it will be treated for federal income tax
purposes as a partnership or as a corporation or as an association taxable
as a corporation will be determined under the Code rather than local law. 
Commissioner v. Tower, 327 U.S. 280 (1946); Treas. Reg. Section
301.7701-1(c).  Thus, while local law will determine the legal
relationships between the Partners, the Partnership, and others, the
characterization of the Partnership for federal income tax purposes will
depend upon the application of the tests and standards set forth in the
Code and regulations.  Id.

A.  Association Taxable as a Corporation

      Under Treasury regulations, a partnership will be subject to federal
income tax as a corporation or as an association taxable as a corporation
when its corporate characteristics exceed its non-corporate
characteristics.  Treas. Reg. Section 301.7701-2(a)(1) provides that the
following characteristics are to be considered:  (i) associates, (ii) an
objective to carry on business and divide the gains therefrom, (iii)
continuity of life, (iv) centralization of management, (v) limited
liability, and (vi) free transferability of interests.  The Regulations
provide that, since associates and an objective to carry on business and
divide the profits therefrom are common to both corporations and
partnerships, an unincorporated organization is not classified as an
association unless it has at least three of the last four characteristics
noted above.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-8 

      Where participants under an operating agreement have the right to take
in kind their shares of the minerals produced, the sale of the minerals,
even though made by the operator, is a sale by or on behalf of the
individual participants and not for their joint profit.  Under rulings of
the Service, a joint profit motive is established only when the agreement
irrevocably vests the operator in his representative capacity with the
authority to extract and sell the minerals.  I.T. 3930, 1948-2 C.B. 126. 
Where the participants grant to the operator an option to purchase the
minerals produced, a question of representative capacity is not involved
and therefore a joint profit motive does not exist.  I.T. 3948, 1949-1
C.B. 161.

      The Service ruled on similar grounds in Rev. Rul. 68-344, 1968-1 C.B.
569, that where participants in an unincorporated organization formed to
operate a nuclear power plant had the right to and did take the
electricity produced in kind for separate disposition by each participant,
the organization lacked the objective to carry on business for joint
profit and was therefore taxable as a partnership and not as a
corporation.  The Tax Court in Madison Gas & Electric Co. v. Commissioner,
72 T.C. 521 (1979), aff'd, 633 F.2d 512 (7th Cir. 1980), found on similar
facts that a partnership existed, although the question whether the
organization was an association was not raised.

      Under the Partnership Agreement, the Partners will not reserve the
right to take in kind and separately dispose of their share of production. 
Accordingly, the Partnership will not lack an objective to carry on
business for joint profit.

      Continuity of Life.  Section 301.7701-2(b)(1) of the Regulations
provides that an organization will be deemed to have continuity of life if
the death, insanity, bankruptcy, retirement, resignation, or expulsion of
any member will not cause a dissolution of the organization.  On the other
hand, if the death, insanity, bankruptcy, retirement, resignation, or
expulsion of any member will cause a dissolution, continuity of life does
not exist.  Section 301.7701-2(b)(3) of the Regulations further provides
that an organization lacks continuity of life if it is a limited
partnership subject to a statute corresponding to the Uniform Limited
Partnership Act (the "ULPA").  The Service, in Rev. Rul. 93-45, 1993-24
IRB 58, determined that the Act corresponds to the ULPA for purposes of
Treas. Reg. Section 301.7701-2.

      Regulation Section 301.7701-2(b)(1) would prevent continuity of life
from existing in those cases where dissolution upon the withdrawal of a
general partner can be avoided by vote of a majority in interest (rather
than all) of the remaining partners.

      Section 9.01(b) of the Partnership Agreement provides that:

           The Partnership shall be dissolved upon the earliest to occur of:
           (i) the written consent of the Investor Partners owning a
           majority of the then-outstanding Units entitled to vote to
           dissolve and wind up the affairs of the Partnership; (ii) [unless<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-9

           a successor managing general partner is selected by the Partners
           or the remaining managing general partner (if any) continues the
           business of the Partnership] the retirement, withdrawal, removal,
           death, adjudication of insanity or incapacity, or bankruptcy (or,
           in the case of a corporate managing general partner, the
           withdrawal, removal, filing of a certificate of dissolution,
           liquidation, or bankruptcy) of a managing general partner; (iii)
           the sale, forfeiture, or abandonment of all or substantially all
           of the Partnership's property; (iv) December 31, 2046; or (v) any
           event causing dissolution of the Partnership under the Act.

      Rev. Proc. 89-12, as amplified by Rev. Proc. 91-13,  provides that the
Service will not rule that the corporate characteristic of continuity of
life is absent if, in the case of the removal of the general partner, the
partnership agreement permits holders of less than a majority of the
limited partnership interests to elect a new general partner to continue
the partnership.  The Partnership Agreement, at Section 7.06(a), requires
the consent of Partners holding a majority of the then-outstanding Units
for the admission of a successor General Partner.  Because it is unknown
what percentage of the Units will be held by Limited Partners, it is not
possible to determine whether the Partnership Agreement would satisfy the
criteria for lacking continuity of life as contained in Rev. Proc. 89-12,
as amplified by Rev. Proc. 91-13.  However, since the Partnership will be
terminated upon the occurrence of those events specified above, under the
Regulations the Partnership will lack the corporate characteristic of
continuity of life so long as the Partnership remains subject to the Act
and the Act corresponds to the ULPA.

      Centralization of Management.  An organization has centralized
management if any person (or group of persons that does not include all
members) has continuing exclusive authority to make the management
decisions necessary to conduct the business for which the organization was
formed.  Treas. Reg. Section 301.7701-2(c)(1).  Treas. Reg.
Section 301.7701-2(c)(4) provides that a limited partnership subject to a
statute corresponding to the ULPA generally does not have the corporate
characteristic of centralized management, but adds that "centralized
management ordinarily does exist in such a limited partnership if
substantially all the interests in the partnership are owned by the
limited partners."

      It is unclear how large the interests of the Managing General Partner
must be to avoid the corporate characteristic of centralized management. 
Under the terms of the Partnership Agreement, 20% of Partnership profits
and a somewhat greater percentage of Partnership capital at the
commencement of the Partnership will be attributable to the Managing
General Partner, thereby potentially resulting in "substantially all" of
the Partnership's interests being treated as owned by Limited Partners. 
Consequently, the Partnership may be deemed to possess the corporate
characteristic of centralized management, despite the fact that the
Partnership is subject to a statute corresponding to the ULPA.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-10

      Rev. Proc. 89-12, as amplified by Rev. Proc. 91-13, provides that the
Service will not rule that a partnership lacks centralized management if
limited partnership interests exceed 80% of the total interests in the
partnership.  Because it is unknown whether more than 80% of the total
interests in the Partnership will be held by Limited Partners, it is
unknown whether the Partnership could satisfy the revenue procedure's
centralized management requirements.

      Limited Liability.  Treas. Reg. Section 301.7701-2(d)(1) provides that
an organization possesses the corporate characteristic of limited
liability if under local law there is no member who is personally liable
for the debts of or claims against the organization.  Further, such
regulation provides that "[i]n the case of a limited partnership subject
to a statute corresponding to the Uniform Limited Partnership Act,
personal liability exists with respect to each general partner. . ."  Id.

      Notwithstanding that general rule, however, in the case of an
organization formed as a limited partnership, personal liability does not
exist with respect to a general partner when the general partner (i) has
no substantial assets (other than his interest in the partnership) which
could be reached by a creditor of the partnership, and (ii) is merely a
"dummy" acting as the agent of the limited partners.  Treas. Reg.
Section 301.7701-2(d)(2).  Further, the regulations provide that "[i]f the
limited partnership agreement provides that a general partner is not
personally liable to creditors for debts of the partnership . . . , it
shall be presumed that personal liability does not exist with respect to
that partner unless it is established that the provision is ineffective
under local law."  Id.

      While the Regulations do not define the term "dummy," the Tax Court
and the Court of Claims have focused on the meaning of the term.  In Zuckman
v. United States, 524 F.2d 729 (Ct. Cl. 1975), the court in essence
defined a "dummy" as one who is an agent of the limited partners.  The
sole corporate general partner in Zuckman was wholly-owned by an
individual limited partner.  In rejecting the government's argument that
the corporation was a dummy, the court noted that if the corporation were
a dummy, the limited partner for whom it acted would be personally liable
for the debts of the partnership.  Conversely, if not a dummy, the
corporate characteristic of limited liability would be lacking.  The
court's analysis virtually assures any limited partnership of lacking the
corporate characteristic of limited liability.

      In Phillip G. Larson v. Commissioner, 66 T.C. 159 (1976), acq. 1979-1
C.B. 1, the court applied a less restrictive analysis than that used by
the Court of Claims, defining a dummy as one controlled by the limited
partners.  Unlike the corporate general partner in Zuckman, the Larson
general partner was not owned by the limited partners and the Tax Court
held the general partner was not a dummy.

      In Rev. Proc. 89-12, as amplified by Rev. Proc. 91-13, the Service
stated that, for advance ruling purposes, a partnership will generally be<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-11

deemed to lack limited liability if the net worth of the corporate general
partners at the time of the ruling request equals at least 10 percent of
the total contributions to the limited partnership and is expected to
continue to equal that amount throughout the life of the partnership.

      Although the Managing General Partner may not have the net worth
required to obtain a ruling from the Service, the Managing General Partner
has represented that it will have, at the time of admission of the
Investor Partners, a net worth in excess of $5,000,000 exclusive of its
interests in the Partnership and receivables from the Partnership. 
Further, the Managing General Partner has represented that no agreement or
other arrangement exists or will exist between the Managing General
Partner and the Investor Partners which would be construed as creating a
"dummy" or an agency relationship within the meaning of the regulations. 
Accordingly, the Partnership will, in our opinion, lack the corporate
characteristic of limited liability.

      Free Transferability of Interests.  An organization will be considered
to possess the corporate characteristic of free transferability of
interests if all of its members (or those members owning substantially all
of the organization's interests) have the power to transfer all attributes
of their interests in the entity, to others who are not members of the
entity, without the consent of other members.  Treas. Reg.
Section 301.7701-2(e)(1).  Further, if such a transfer results in the
dissolution of the old organization and the formation of a new
organization under local law, free transferability does not exist.  Id.

      In Rev. Proc. 92-33, 1992-1 G.B. 782, the Service announced that it
would generally rule privately that a partnership lacks free
transferability of interests if, throughout the life of the partnership,
the partnership agreement expressly restricts (within the meaning of
Regulation Section 301.7701-2(e)(1)) the transferability of partnership
interests representing more than 20 percent of all interests in
partnership capital, income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit.  However,
the guideline does not represent substantive law and may not be followed
by the Service in all cases.

      Section 7.03(a)(iii) of the Partnership Agreement requires the written
consent of the Managing General Partner, "the granting or denial of which
shall be within the absolute discretion of the Managing General Partner,"
to effectuate the transfer of an Investor Partner's interest in the
Partnership.  Since the Investor Partners cannot transfer their interests
without the consent of the Managing General Partner, which can be withheld
in its absolute discretion, the corporate characteristic of free
transferability of interests will, in our opinion, be absent.

      Other Factors.  Section 301.7701-2 of the Treasury regulations
provides
that, in addition to the major characteristics set forth above, other
factors may be found in some cases which may be significant in classifying
an organization as an association.  Although the Service in Larson, supra,
argued that certain other factors should be considered in determining<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-12

whether a limited partnership should be classified as a partnership for
federal income tax purposes, the Tax Court rejected the Service's position
and held that such factors were either elements of the major factors
listed above or were not important in classifying the partnership for tax
purposes.

      In Rev. Proc. 85-22, 1985-1 C.B. 550, the Service stated that an
advance ruling will not be issued unless the partnership agreement
provides that, upon the dissolution and termination of the partnership,
the general partners are obligated to contribute to the Partnership an
amount equal to the lesser of (i) the deficit balance in the capital
accounts or (ii) the excess of 1.01% of the total limited partner capital
contributions over the capital previously contributed by the general
partners.  The Partnership Agreement provides, at section 3.01(e), that
the Managing
General Partner must restore any deficit balance in its Capital Account.

B.  Publicly Traded Partnerships

      The Revenue Act of 1987 (the "1987 Act") added Code Section 7704,
"Certain Publicly Traded Partnerships Treated as Corporations."  In
treating certain "publicly traded partnerships" ("PTPs") as corporations
for federal income tax purposes, Congress defined a PTP as any
partnership, interests in which are either traded on an established
securities market or readily tradable on a secondary market (or the
substantial equivalent thereof).  Code Section 7704(b).  Proposed
Regulation 1.7704-1(b) provides that an "established securities market"
includes a national securities exchange registered under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the "1934 Act"), a national securities
exchange exempt under the 1934 Act because of the limited volume of
transactions, certain foreign security laws, regional or local exchanges,
and an interdealer quotation system that regularly disseminates firm buy
or sell quotations by identified brokers or dealers.  The Managing General
Partner has represented that the Units will not be traded on an
established securities market.

      Notwithstanding the above general treatment of PTPs, Code
Section 7704(c) creates an exception to the treatment of PTPs as
corporations for any taxable year if 90% or more of the gross income of
the partnership for such taxable year consists of "qualifying income." 
Code Section 7704(c)(2).  For this purpose, qualifying income is defined
to include, inter alia, "income and gains derived from the exploration,
development, mining or production, processing, refining . . . or the
marketing of any mineral or natural resource . . ."  Code
Section 7704(d)(1)(E).  The Managing General Partner has represented that
it believes that, for all taxable years of the Partnership, 90% or more of
the Partnership's gross income will consist of such qualifying income.  

      Regarding the definition of PTPs contained in the Code, the Committee
Reports to the 1987 Act provide that PTPs include entities with respect to
which, inter alia, (i) "the holder of an interest has a readily available,
regular and ongoing opportunity to sell or exchange his interest through<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-13

a public means of obtaining or providing information of offers to buy,
sell or exchange interests," (ii) "prospective buyers and sellers have the
opportunity to buy, sell or exchange interests in a time frame and with
the regularity and continuity that the existence of a market maker would
provide," and (iii) there exists a "regular plan of redemptions or
repurchases, or similar acquisitions of interests in the partnership such
that holders of interests have readily available, regular and ongoing
opportunities to dispose of their interests."

      The Service issued proposed Regulation Section 1.7704-1 to clarify
when partnership interests that are not traded on an established securities
market will be treated as readily tradable on a secondary market or the
substantial equivalent thereof.  Essentially, the proposed Regulation
provides that such a situation occurs if partners are readily able to buy,
sell, or exchange their partnership interests in a manner that is
comparable, economically, to trading on an established securities market. 
In addition, Notice 88-75 and the proposed Regulation provide limited safe
harbors from the definition of a PTP in advance of the issuance of final
regulations.  It is unclear whether the limited safe harbors provided in
the Notice and proposed Regulation would result in the Units being treated
as not publicly traded and we express no opinion regarding this matter. 
However, the Managing General Partner's obligation to offer to purchase
any Units is conditioned upon the receipt by the Partnership from its
counsel of an opinion that such offers or obligations to offer will not
cause the Partnership to be treated as "publicly traded."

      Due to the presence of the opinion of counsel condition, the
Partnership, in our opinion, will not be treated as a PTP prior to the
time any such offers are made to Investor Partners.  Accordingly, the
Partnership, in our opinion, will not be treated as a corporation for
federal income tax purposes under Code Section 7704 in the absence of the
Partnership's interests being "readily tradable on a secondary market (or
the substantial equivalent thereof)."

      Notwithstanding the above, the Service may promulgate regulations or
release announcements which take the position that interests in
partnerships such as the Partnership are readily tradable on a secondary
market or the substantial equivalent thereof.  However, treatment of the
Partnership as a PTP should not result in its treatment as a corporation
for federal income tax purposes due to the exception contained in Code
Section 7704(c) relating to PTPs meeting the 90% of gross income test so
long as such gross income test is satisfied.

C.  Summary

      Based on the above, the Partnership may be considered to possess the
corporate characteristic of centralized management but should be
considered as not possessing the corporate characteristics of continuity
of life, limited liability, and free transferability of interests. 
Because the number of corporate characteristics listed in Treas. Reg.
Section 301.7701-2 that may be present should not exceed the number of<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-14

such characteristics that should be considered to be absent, in our
opinion the Partnership will be treated as a partnership and not as a
corporation or as an association taxable as a corporation for federal
income tax purposes.  Further, since any right of the Managing General
Partner to offer to purchase Units is conditioned upon the receipt of an
opinion of counsel that the Partnership will not be treated as a PTP, and
assuming the Partnership satisfies the 90% gross income test of Code
Section 7704, the Partnership, in our opinion, will be treated as a
partnership and not as a corporation for federal income tax purposes.  No
ruling, however, will be sought from the Service regarding the tax status
of the Partnership.  If challenged by the Service on this issue, the
Partners should prevail on the merits, and each Partner should be required
to report his proportionate share of the Partnership's items of income and
deductions on his individual federal income tax return.

      If in any taxable year the Partnership were to be treated for federal
income tax purposes as a corporation or as an association taxable as a
corporation, the Partnership income, gain, loss, deductions, and credits
would be reflected only on its "corporate" tax return rather than being
passed though to the Partners.  In such event, the Partnership would be
required to pay income tax at corporate rates on its net income, thereby
reducing the amount of cash available to be distributed to the Partners. 
Additionally, all or a portion of any distribution made to Partners would
be taxable as dividends, which would not be deductible by the Partnership
and which would generally be treated as ordinary portfolio income to the
Partners, regardless of the source from which such distributions were
generated.

      The discussion that follows is based on the assumption that the
Partnership will be classified as a partnership for federal income tax
purposes.

                  FEDERAL TAXATION OF THE PARTNERSHIP

      Under the Code, a partnership is not a taxable entity and,
accordingly, incurs no federal income tax liability.  Rather, a
partnership is a "pass-through" entity which is required to file
an information return with the Service.  In general, the character
of a partner's share of each item of income, gain, loss, deduction,
and credit is determined at the partnership level.  Each partner is
allocated a distributive share of such items in accordance with the
partnership agreement and is required to take such items into account
in determining the partner's income.  Each partner includes such amounts
in income for any taxable year of the partnership ending within or with
the taxable year of the partner, without regard to whether the partner
has received or will receive any cash distributions from the Partnership.

      A partnership anti-abuse regulation has recently been promulgated
under Reg. Section1.701-2 which authorizes the Service to recharacterize
a partnership transaction if (1) a partnership is formed or availed of in
connection with a transaction a principal purpose of which is to reduce<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-15

substantially the present value of the partners' aggregate federal income
tax liability, and (2) the transaction is inconsistent with the intent of
the Subchapter K partnership provisions.  Additionally, the regulation
permits the Service to treat a partnership as an aggregate of its
partners, in whole or in part, as appropriate, to carry out the purpose of
any provision of the Code or the regulations.  The scope of this
regulation is unclear at this time.  Accordingly, Counsel is unable to
express an opinion as to its effect, if any, on the Partnership.

                     REGISTRATION AS A TAX SHELTER

      The Code provides that certain investments must be registered as tax
shelters with the Service.  Registration numbers for such tax shelters
must be supplied to investors who are required to report the numbers on
their personal tax returns.  Any organizer of a "potentially abusive tax
shelter" and any person selling an interest in such shelter are required
to maintain a list of investors in such tax shelter to whom interests were
sold (together with other identifying information) and to make the list
available to the Service upon request.  Any tax shelter which is required
to be registered and any other plan or arrangement which is of a type
determined by the Regulations as having a potential for tax avoidance or
evasion is considered a potentially abusive tax shelter for this purpose.

      The registration requirements apply only to an investment with respect
to which any person could reasonably infer from the representations made,
or to be made, in connection with the offering for sale of interests in
the investment that the "tax shelter ratio" for any investor is greater
than two to one as of the close of any of the first five years ending
after the date on which such investment is offered for sale.

      The Managing General Partner has represented that, (i) based upon its
experience with its previous drilling programs and upon the intended
operations of the Partnership, it does not believe that the Partnership
will have a tax shelter ratio greater than two to one, (ii) the deductions
and credits that are or will be represented as potentially allowable to an
investor will not result in any Partnership having a tax shelter ratio
greater than two to one, and (iii) based upon a review of the economics of
its similar oil and gas drilling programs for the past several years, it
has determined that none of those programs has resulted in a tax shelter
ratio greater than two to one.  Accordingly, the Managing General Partner
does not intend to cause the Partnership to register with the Service as
a tax shelter.  Based on the foregoing representations, we are of the
opinion that the Partnership will not be required to register with the
Service as a tax shelter.

      If it is subsequently determined that the Partnership was required to
be registered with the Service as a tax shelter, the Partnership would be
subject to certain penalties under IRC Section 6707, including a penalty
ranging from $500 to 1% of the aggregate amount invested in Units for
failing to register and $100 for each failure to furnish to a Partner a
tax shelter registration number, and each Partner would be liable for a<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-16

$250 penalty for failure to include the tax registration number on his tax
return, unless such failure was due to reasonable cause.  A Partner also
would be liable for a penalty of $100 for failing to furnish the tax
shelter registration number to any transferee of his Partnership interest. 
Counsel can give no assurance that, if the Partnership is determined to be
a tax shelter which must be registered with the Service, the above
penalties will not apply.


               INTANGIBLE DRILLING AND DEVELOPMENT COSTS DEDUCTIONS

      Under Code Section 263(a), taxpayers are denied deductions for capital
expenditures, which expenditures are those that generally result in the
creation of an asset having a useful life which extends substantially
beyond the close of the taxable year.  See also Treas.
Reg.Section 1.461-1(a)(2).  In Indopco, Inc. v. Commissioner, 92-1 USTC
paragraph 50,113 (1992) the Supreme Court seemed to further limit the
capitalization criteria by stating that the costs should be capitalized
when they provide benefits that extend beyond one tax year. 
Notwithstanding these statutory and judicial general rules, Congress has
granted to the Treasury Secretary the authority to prescribe regulations
that would allow taxpayers the option of deducting, rather than
capitalizing, intangible drilling and development costs ("IDC").  Code
Section 263.  The Secretary's rules are embodied in Treas. Reg.
Section 1.612-4 and state that, in general, the option to deduct IDC
applies only to expenditures for drilling and development items that do
not have a salvage value.

      With respect to IDC incurred by a partnership, Code Section 703 and
Treas. Reg. Section 1.703-1(b) provide that the option to deduct such
costs is to be exercised at the partnership level and in the year in which
the deduction is to be taken.  All partners are bound by the partnership's
election.  The Managing General Partner has represented that the
Partnership will elect to deduct IDC in accordance with Treas. Reg.
Section 1.612-4.  In this regard, Additional General Partners will be
entitled to deduct IDC against any form of income in the year in which the
investment is made, provided wells are spudded within the first ninety
days of the following year; subject to the same provision, Limited
Partners will be entitled to deduct IDC against passive income.

A.  Classification of Costs

      In general, IDC consists of those costs which in and of themselves
have
no salvage value.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.612-4(a) provides examples of
items to which the option to deduct IDC applies, including all amounts
paid for labor, fuel, repairs, hauling, and supplies, or any of them,
which are used (i) in the drilling, shooting, and cleaning of wells, (ii)
in such clearing of ground, draining, road making, surveying, and
geological works as are necessary in the preparation for the drilling of
wells, and (iii) in the construction of such derricks, tanks, pipelines,
and other physical structures as are necessary for the drilling of wells<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-17

and the preparation of wells for the production of oil or gas.  The
Service, in Rev. Rul. 70-414, 1970-2 C.B. 132, set forth further
classifications of items subject to the option and those considered
capital in nature.  The ruling provides that the following items are not
subject to the election of Treas. Reg. Section 1.612-4(a):  (i) oil well
pumps (upon initial completion of the well), including the necessary
housing structures; (ii) oil well pumps (after the well has flowed for a
time), including the necessary housing structures; (iii) oil well
separators, including the necessary housing structures; (iv) pipelines
from the wellhead to oil storage tanks on the producing lease; (v) oil
storage tanks on the producing lease; (vi) salt water disposal equipment,
including any necessary pipelines; (vii) pipelines from the mouth of a gas
well to the first point of control, such as a common carrier pipeline,
natural gasoline plant, or carbon black plant; (viii) recycling equipment,
including any necessary pipelines; and (ix) pipelines from oil storage
tanks on the producing leasehold to a common carrier pipeline.

      A partnership's classification of a cost as IDC is not binding on the
government, which might reclassify an item labelled as IDC as a cost which
must be capitalized.  In Bernuth v. Commissioner, 57 T.C. 225 (1971),
aff'd, 470 F.2d 710 (2nd Cir. 1972), the Tax Court denied taxpayers a
deduction for that portion of a turnkey drilling contract price that was
in excess of a reasonable cost for drilling the wells in question under a
turnkey contract, holding that the amount specified in the turnkey
contract was not controlling.  Similarly, the Service, in Rev. Rul. 73-
211, 1973-1 C.B. 303, concluded that excessive turnkey costs are not
deductible as IDC:

      [O]nly that portion of the amount of the taxpayer's total investment
      that is attributable to intangible drilling and development costs
      that would have been incurred in an arm's-length transaction with an
      unrelated drilling contractor (in accordance with the economic
      realities of the transaction) is deductible [as IDC].

      To the extent the Partnership's prices meet the reasonable price
standards imposed by Bernuth, supra, and Rev. Rul 73-211, supra, and to
the extent such amounts are not allocable to tangible property, leasehold
costs, and the like, the amounts paid to the Managing General Partner
under the drilling contract should qualify as IDC and should be deductible
at the time described below under "B. Timing of Deductions."  That portion
of the amount paid to the Managing General Partner that is in excess of
the amount that would be charged by an independent driller under similar
conditions will not qualify as IDC and will be required to be capitalized.

      We are unable to express an opinion regarding the reasonableness or
proper characterization of the payments under the drilling agreement,
since the determination of whether the amounts are reasonable or excessive
is inherently factual in nature.  No assurance can be given that the
Service will not characterize a portion of the amount paid to the Managing
General Partner as an excessive payment, to be capitalized as a leasehold
cost, assignment fee, syndication fee, organization fee, or other cost,<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-18

and not deductible as IDC.  To the extent not deductible, such amounts
will be included in the Partners' bases of their interests in the
Partnership.

B.  Timing of Deductions

      As described above, Code Section 263(c) and Treas. Reg. Section
1.612-4
allow the Partnership to expense IDC as opposed to capitalizing such
amounts.  Even if the Partnership elects to expense the IDC, assuming a
taxpayer is otherwise entitled to such a deduction, the taxpayer may elect
to capitalize all or a part of the IDC and amortize same on a
straight-line basis over a sixty month period, beginning with the taxable
month in which such expenditure is made.  Code Section 59(e)(1) and
(2)(c).

      For taxpayers entitled to deduct IDC, the timing of such deduction can
vary, depending, in part, upon the taxpayer's method of accounting.  The
Managing General Partner has represented that the Partnership will use the
accrual method of accounting.  Under the accrual method, income is
recognized when all the events have occurred which fix the right to
receive such income and the amount thereof can be determined with
reasonable accuracy.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.451-1(a).  With respect to
deductions, recognition results when all events which establish liability
have occurred and the amount thereof can be determined with reasonable
accuracy. Treas. Reg. Section 1.461-1(a)(2). Regarding deductions, Code
Section 461(h)(1) provides that ". . . the all events test shall not be
treated as met any earlier than when economic performance with respect to
such item occurs."

      Code Section 461(i)(2), provides that, in the case of a "tax shelter,"
economic performance with respect to the act of drilling an oil or gas
well will ". . . be treated as having occurred within a taxable year if
drilling of the well commences before the close of the 90th day after the
close of the taxable year."  "Tax shelter," for purposes of Code
Section 461, is defined to include the Partnership.  However, with respect
to a tax shelter which is a partnership, the maximum deduction that would
be allowable for any prepaid expenses under this exception would be
limited to the partner's "cash basis" in the partnership.  Code
Section 461(i)(2)(B)(i).  Such "cash basis" equals the partner's adjusted
basis in the partnership, determined without regard to (i) any liability
of the partnership and (ii) any amount borrowed by the partner with
respect to the partnership which (I) was arranged by the partnership or by
any person who participated in the organization, sale, or management of
the partnership (or any person related to such person within the meaning
of Code Section 465(b)(3)(C)) or (II) was secured by any assets of the
partnership.  Code Section 461(i)(2)(C).  The Managing General Partner has
represented that, as Operator, it will commence drilling operations by
spudding each well on or before March 30, 1995 for Partnerships designated
"PDC 1994-_ Limited Partnership" and March 30, 1996 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1995-_ Limited Partnership" and will complete each well,
if completion is warranted, with due diligence thereafter.  Further, the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-19

Managing General Partner has represented that, in any event, the
Partnership will not have any such liability referred to in Code
Section 461(i)(2)(C), and the Partners will not so incur any such debt so
as to result in application of the limiting provisions contained in Code
Section 461(i)(2)(B)(i).

      Notwithstanding the above, the deductibility of any prepaid IDC will
be subject to the limitations of case law.  These limitations provide that
prepaid IDC is deductible when paid if (i) the expenditure constitutes a
payment that is not merely a deposit, (ii) the payment is made for a
business purpose, and (iii) deductions attributable to such outlay do not
result in a material distortion of income.  See Keller v. Commissioner, 79
T.C. 7 (1982), aff'd, 725 F.2d 1173 (8th Cir. 1984),  Rev. Rul. 71-252,
1971-1 C.B. 146, Pauley v. U.S., 63-1 U.S.T.C.  paragraph 9280 (S.D. Cal.
1963), Rev. Rul. 80-71, 1980-1 C.B. 106, Jolley v. Commissioner, 47 T.C.M.
1082 (1984), Dillingham v. U.S., 81-2 U.S.T.C. paragraph 9601 (W.D. Okla.
1981), and Stradlings Building Materials, Inc. v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 84
(1981).  Generally, these requirements may be met by a showing of a
legally binding obligation (i.e., the payment was not merely a deposit),
of a legitimate business purpose for the payment, that performance of the
services was required within a reasonable time, and of an arm's-length
price.  Similar requirements apply to cash basis taxpayers seeking to deduct
prepaid IDC.

      The Managing General Partner is unable to represent that all of the
Wells will be completed in 1996 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_
Limited Partnership" and 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership"; however, the Managing General Partner has
represented that any Well that is not completed in 1996 with respect to
Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and in 1997 with
respect to Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership" will
be spudded by not later than March 30, 1997 for Partnerships designated
"PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and March 30, 1998 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership," respectively.

      The Service has challenged the timing of the deduction of IDC when the
wells giving rise to such deduction have been completed in a year
subsequent to the year of prepayment.  The decisions noted above hold that
prepayments of IDC by a cash basis taxpayer are, under certain
circumstances, deductible in the year of prepayment if some work is
performed in the year of prepayment even though the well is not completed
that year.

      In Keller v. Commissioner, supra, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals
applied a three-part test for determining the current deductibility of
prepaid IDC by a cash basis taxpayer, namely whether (i) the expenditure
was a payment or a mere deposit, (ii) the payment was made for a valid
business purpose and (iii) the prepayment resulted in a material
distortion of income.  The facts in that case dealt with two different
forms of drilling contracts: footage or day-work contracts and turnkey
contracts.  Under the turnkey contracts, the prepayments were not
refundable in any event, but in the event work was stopped on one well the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-20

remaining unused amount would be applied to another well to be drilled on
a turnkey basis.  Contrary to the Service's argument that this
substitution feature rendered the payment a mere deposit, the court in
Keller concluded that the prepayments were indeed "payments" because the
taxpayer could not compel a refund.  The court further found that the
deduction clearly reflected income because under the unique
characteristics of the turnkey contract the taxpayer locked in the price
and shifted the drilling risk to the contractor, for a premium,
effectively getting its bargained for benefit in the year of payment. 
Therefore, the court concluded that the cash basis taxpayers in that case
properly could deduct turnkey payments in the year of payment.  With
respect to the prepayments under the footage or day-work contracts,
however, the court found that the payments were mere deposits on the facts
of the case, because the partnership had the power to compel a refund. 
The court was also unconvinced as to the business purpose for prepayment
under the footage or day-work contracts, primarily because the testimony
indicated that the drillers would have provided the required services with
or without prepayment.

      Under the terms of the Drilling and Operating Agreement, if amounts
paid by the Partnership prior to the commencement of drilling exceed
amounts due the Managing General Partner thereunder, the Managing General
Partner will not refund any portion of amounts paid by the Partnership,
but rather will create a credit once the actual costs incurred by the
Managing General Partner are compared to the amounts paid.  Further, the
Managing General Partner will expend such credit for additional IDC on
additional wells selected by the Managing General Partner.

      The Service has adopted the position that the relationship between the
parties may provide evidence that the drilling contract between the
parties requiring prepayment may not be a bona fide arm's-length
transaction, in which case a portion of the prepayment may be disallowed
as being a "non-required payment."  Section 4236, Internal Revenue Service
Examination Tax Shelters Handbook (6-27-85).  A similar position is taken
by the Service in the Tax Shelter Audit Technique Guidelines.  Internal
Revenue Service Examination Tax Shelter Handbook.

      The Service has formally adopted its position on prepayments to
related
parties in Revenue Ruling 80-71.  1980-1 C.B. 106.  In this ruling, a
subsidiary corporation, which was a general partner in an oil and gas
limited partnership, prepaid the partnership's drilling and completion
costs under a turnkey contract entered into with the corporate parent of
the general partner.  The agreement did not provide for any date for
commencing drilling operations and the contractor, which did not own any
drilling equipment, was to arrange for the drilling equipment for the
wells through subcontractors.  Revenue Ruling 71-252, supra, was factually
distinguished on the grounds of the business purpose of the transaction,
immediate expenditure of prepaid receipts, and completion of the wells
within two and one-half months.  Rev. Rul. 80-71 found that the prepayment
was not made in accordance with customary business practice and held on
the facts that the payment was deductible in the tax year that the related<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-21

 general contractor paid the independent subcontractor.

      However, in Tom B. Dillingham v. United States, 1981-2 USTC
paragraph 9601 (D.C. Okla. 1981), the court held that, on the facts before
it, a contract between related parties requiring a prepaid IDC did give
rise to a deduction in the year paid.  In that case, Basin Petroleum Corp.
("Basin") was the general partner of several drilling partnerships and
also served as the partnership operator and general contractor.  As
general contractor, Basin was to conduct the drilling of the wells at a
fixed price on a turnkey basis under an agreement that required payment
prior to the end of the year in question.  The stated reason for the
prepayment was to provide Basin with working capital for the drilling of
the wells and to temporarily provide funds to Basin for other operations. 
The agreement required drilling to commence within a reasonable period of
time, and all wells were completed within the following year.  Some of the
wells were drilled by Basin with its own rigs and some were drilled by
subcontractors.  The court stated:

           The fact that the owner and contractor is the general partner
           of the partnership-owner does not change this result where, as
           here, the Plaintiffs have shown that prepayment was required
           for a legitimate business purpose and the transaction was not
           a sham to merely permit Plaintiff to control the timing of the
           deduction.  IRC, Sec. 707(a).  Plaintiffs were entitled to
           rely upon Revenue Ruling 71-252 by reason of Income Tax
           Regulations 26 C.F.R. Section 601.601(d)(2)(v)(e) . . .

Notwithstanding the foregoing, no assurance can be given that the Service
will not challenge the current deduction of IDC because of the prepayment
being made to a related party.  If the Service were successful with such
challenge, the Partners' deductions for IDC would be deferred to later
years.

      The timing of the deductibility of prepaid IDC is inherently a factual
determination which is to a large extent predicated on future events.  The
Managing General Partner has represented that the Drilling and Operating
Agreement to be entered into with PDC by the Partnership will be duly
executed by and delivered to PDC, the Partnership, and PDC as attorney-in-
fact for the Partners and will govern the drilling, and, if warranted, the
completion of each of the Wells.  The Drilling and Operating Agreement
requires PDC to commence drilling operations by spudding each Well on or
before March 30, 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" and March 30, 1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership," and to complete each Well, if completion is
warranted, with due diligence thereafter.  Also, under the terms of the
Drilling and Operating Agreement, PDC, as general contractor, will not
refund any portion of amounts paid in the event actual costs are less than
the amounts paid but will apply any such amounts solely for payment of
additional drilling services to the Partners.  Based upon this
representation and others included within the opinion and assuming that
the Drilling and Operating Agreement will be performed in accordance with<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-22

its terms, we are of the opinion that the payment for IDC under the
Drilling and Operating Agreement, if made in 1996 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1997 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnerships," will be allowable as a
deduction in 1996 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited
Partnership" and 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited
Partnerships," subject to the other limitations discussed in this opinion. 
Although PDC will attempt to satisfy each requirement of the Service and
judicial authority for deductibility of IDC in 1996 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1996-_ Limited Partnership" and 1997 for Partnerships
designated "PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnerships," no assurance can be given
that the Service will not successfully contend that the IDC of a well
which is not completed until 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1996-_
Limited Partnership" and 1998 for Partnerships designated "PDC 1997-_
Limited Partnership" are not deductible in whole or in part until 1997 or
1998, respectively.  Further, to the extent drilling of the Partnership's
wells does not commence by March 30, 1997 for Partnerships designated "PDC
1996-_ Limited Partnership" and March 30, 1998 for Partnerships designated
"PDC 1997-_ Limited Partnership," the deductibility of all or a portion of
the IDC may be deferred under Code Section 461.

C.    Recapture of IDC

      IDC which has been deducted is subject to recapture as ordinary income
upon certain dispositions (other than by abandonment, gift, death, or tax-
free exchange) of an interest in an oil or gas property.  IDC previously
deducted that is allocable to the property (directly or through the
ownership of an interest in a partnership) and which would have been
included in the adjusted basis of the property is recaptured to the extent
of any gain realized upon the disposition of the property.  Recently
promulgated Treasury regulations (effective with respect to any
disposition occurring after March 13, 1995) provide that recapture is
determined at the partner level (subject to certain anti-abuse
provisions).  Treas. Reg. Section 1.1254-5(b).  Where only a portion of
recapture property is disposed of, any IDC related to the entire property
is recaptured to the extent of the gain realized on the portion of the
property sold.  In the case of the disposition of an undivided interest in
a property (as opposed to the disposition of a portion of the property) a
proportionate part of the IDC with respect to the property is treated as
allocable to the transferred undivided interest to the extent of any
realized gain.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.1254-1(c).

                         DEPLETION DEDUCTIONS

      The owner of an economic interest in an oil and gas property is
entitled to claim the greater of percentage depletion or cost depletion
with respect to oil and gas properties which qualify for such depletion
methods.  In the case of partnerships, the depletion allowance must be
computed separately by each partner and not by the partnership.  Code
Section 613A(c)(7)(D).  Notwithstanding this requirement, however, the
Partnership, pursuant to Section 3.01(d)(i) of the Partnership Agreement,<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-23

will compute a "simulated depletion allowance" at the Partnership level,
solely for the purposes of maintaining Capital Accounts.  Code Sections
613A(d)(2) and 613A(d)(4).

      Cost depletion for any year is determined by multiplying the number of
units (e.g., barrels of oil or Mcf of gas) sold during the year by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the cost of the mineral interest and
the denominator of which is the estimated recoverable units of reserve
available as of the beginning of the depletion period.  See Treas. Reg.
Section 1.611-2(a).  In no event can the cost depletion exceed the
adjusted basis of the property to which it relates.
 
      Percentage depletion is generally available only with respect to the
domestic oil and gas production of certain "independent producers."  In
order to qualify as an independent producer, the taxpayer, either directly
or through certain related parties, may not be involved in the refining of
more 50,000 barrels of oil (or equivalent of gas) on any day during the
taxable year or in the retail marketing of oil and gas products exceeding
$5 million per year in the aggregate.

      In general, (i) component members of a controlled group of
corporations,  (ii) corporations, trusts, or estates under common control
by the same or related persons and (iii) members of the same family (an
individual, his spouse and minor children) are aggregated and treated as
one taxpayer in determining the quantity of production (barrels of oil or
cubic feet of gas per day) qualifying for percentage depletion under the
independent producer's exemption.  Code Section 613A(c) (8).  No
aggregation is required among partners or between a partner and a
partnership.  An individual taxpayer is related to an entity engaged in
refining or retail marketing if he owns 5% or more of such entity.  Code
Section 613A(d)(3).

      Percentage depletion is a statutory allowance pursuant to which, under
current law, a minimum deduction equal to 15% of the taxpayer's gross
income from the property is allowed in any taxable year, not to exceed (i)
100% of the taxpayer's taxable income from the property (computed without
the allowance for depletion) or (ii) 65% of the taxpayer's taxable income
for the year (computed without regard to percentage depletion and net
operating loss and capital loss carrybacks).  Code Sections 613(a) and
613A(d)(1).  The rate of the percentage depletion deduction will vary with
the price of oil.  In the case of production from marginal properties, the
percentage depletion rate may be increased.  Section 613A(c)(6).  For
purposes of computing the percentage depletion deduction, "gross income
from the property" does not include any lease bonus, advance royalty, or
other amount payable without regard to production from the property.  Code
Section 613A(d)(5).  Depletion deductions reduce the taxpayer's adjusted
basis in the property.  However, unlike cost depletion, deductions under
percentage depletion are not limited to the adjusted basis of the
property; the percentage depletion amount continues to be allowable as a
deduction after the adjusted basis has been reduced to zero.
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-24

      Percentage depletion will be available, if at all, only to the extent
that a taxpayer's average daily production of domestic crude oil or
domestic natural gas does not exceed the taxpayer's depletable oil
quantity or depletable natural gas quantity, respectively.  Generally, the
taxpayer's depletable oil quantity equals 1,000 barrels and depletable
natural gas quantity equals 6,000,000 cubic feet.  Code Section 613A(c)(3)
and (4).  In computing his individual limitation, a Partner will be
required to aggregate his share of the Partnership's oil and gas
production with his share of production from all other oil and gas
investments.  Code Section 613A(c).  Taxpayers who have both oil and gas
production may allocate the deduction limitation between the two types of
production.

      The availability of depletion, whether cost or percentage, will be
determined separately by each Partner.  Each Partner must separately keep
records of his share of the adjusted basis in an oil or gas property,
adjust such share of the adjusted basis for any depletion taken on such
property, and use such adjusted basis each year in the computation of his
cost depletion or in the computation of his gain or loss on the
disposition of such property.  These requirements may place an
administrative burden on a Partner.  For properties placed in service
after 1986, depletion deductions, to the extent they reduce the basis of
an oil and gas property, are subject to recapture under Section 1254. 

      SINCE THE AVAILABILITY OF PERCENTAGE DEPLETION FOR A PARTNER IS
DEPENDENT UPON THE STATUS OF THE PARTNER AS AN INDEPENDENT PRODUCER, WE
ALSO ARE UNABLE TO EXPRESS AN OPINION ON THIS MATTER.  BECAUSE OF THE
FOREGOING, WE ARE UNABLE TO RENDER ANY OPINION AS TO THE AVAILABILITY OF
PERCENTAGE DEPLETION.  EACH PROSPECTIVE INVESTOR IS URGED TO CONSULT WITH
HIS PERSONAL TAX ADVISOR TO DETERMINE WHETHER PERCENTAGE DEPLETION WOULD
BE AVAILABLE TO HIM.


                       DEPRECIATION DEDUCTIONS

      The Partnership will claim depreciation, cost recovery, and
amortization deductions with respect to its basis in Partnership Property
as permitted by the Code.  For most tangible personal property placed in
service after December 31, 1986, the "modified accelerated cost recovery
system" ("MACRS") must be used in calculating the cost recovery
deductions.  Thus, the cost of lease equipment and well equipment, such as
casing, tubing, tanks, and pumping units, and the cost of oil or gas
pipelines cannot be deducted currently but must be capitalized and
recovered under "MACRS."  The cost recovery deduction for most equipment
used in domestic oil and gas exploration and production and for most of
the tangible personal property used in natural gas gathering systems is
calculated using the 200% declining balance method switching to the
straight-line method, a seven-year recovery period, and a half-year
convention.  
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-25
                         INTEREST DEDUCTIONS

      In the Transaction, the Investor Partners will acquire their interests
by remitting cash in the amount of $20,000 per Unit to the Partnership. 
In no event will the Partnership accept notes in exchange for a
Partnership interest.  Nevertheless, without any assistance of the
Managing General Partner or any of its affiliates, some Partners may
choose to borrow the funds necessary to acquire a Unit and may incur
interest expense in connection with those loans.  Based upon the purely
factual nature of any such loans, we are unable to express an opinion with
respect to the deductibility of any interest paid or incurred thereon.


                          TRANSACTION FEES

      The Partnership may classify a portion of the fees (the "Fees") to be
paid to third parties and to the Managing General Partner or to the
Operator and its affiliates (as described in the Prospectus under "Source
of Funds and Use of Proceeds") as expenses which are deductible as
organizational expenses or otherwise.  There is no assurance that the
Service will allow the deductibility of such expenses and counsel
expresses no opinion with respect to the allocation of the Fees to
deductible and nondeductible items.

      Generally, expenditures made in connection with the creation of, and
with sales of interests in, a partnership will fit within one of several
categories. 

      A partnership may elect to amortize and deduct its organizational
expenses (as defined in Code Section 709(b)(2) and in Treas. Reg.
Section 1.709-2(a)) ratably over a period of not less than 60 months
commencing with the month the partnership begins business.  Organizational
expenses are expenses which (i) are incident to the creation of the
partnership, (ii) are chargeable to capital account, and (iii) are of a
character which, if expended incident to the creation of a partnership
having an ascertainable life, would (but for Code Section 709(a)) be
amortized over such life.  Id.  Examples of organizational expenses are
legal fees for services incident to the organization of the partnership,
such as negotiation and preparation of a partnership agreement, accounting
fees for services incident to the organization of the partnership, and
filing fees.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.709-2(a).

      Under Code Section 709, no deduction is allowable for "syndication
expenses," examples of which include brokerage fees, registration fees,
legal fees of the underwriter or placement agent and the issuer (general
partners or the partnership) for securities advice and for advice
pertaining to the adequacy of tax disclosures in the prospectus or private
placement memorandum for securities law purposes, printing costs, and
other selling or promotional material.  These costs must be capitalized. 
Treas. Reg. Section 1.709-2(b).  Payments for services performed in
connection with the acquisition of capital assets must be amortized over
the useful life of such assets.  Code Section 263.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-26

      Under Code Section 195, no deduction is allowable with respect to
"start-up expenditures," although such expenditures may be capitalized and
amortized over a period of not less than 60 months.  Start-up expenditures
are defined as amounts (i) paid or incurred in connection with (I)
investigating the creation or acquisition of an active trade or business,
(II) creating an active trade or business, or (III) any activity engaged
in for profit and for the production of income before the day on which the
active trade or business begins, in anticipation of such activity becoming
an active trade or business, and (ii) which, if paid or incurred in
connection with the operation of an existing active trade or business (in
the same field as the trade or business referred to in (i) above), would
be allowable as a deduction for the taxable year in which paid or
incurred.  Code Section 195(c)(1).

      The Partnership intends to make payments to the Managing General
Partner, as described in greater detail in the Prospectus.  To be
deductible, compensation paid to a general partner must be for services
rendered by the partner other than in his capacity as a partner or for
compensation determined without regard to partnership income.  Fees which
are not deductible because they fail to meet this test may be treated as
special allocations of income to the recipient partner (see Pratt v.
Commissioner, 550 F.2d 1023 (5th Cir. 1977)), and thereby decrease the net
loss or increase the net income among all partners.

      To the extent these expenditures described in the Prospectus are
considered syndication costs (such as the fees paid to brokers and broker-
dealers, and the fees paid for printing the Prospectus and possibly all or 
a portion of the Managing General Partner's management fee), they will be
nondeductible by the Partnership.  To the extent attributable to
organization fees (such as the amounts paid for legal services incident to
the organization of the Partnership), the expenditures may be amortizable
over a period of not less than 60 months, commencing with the month the
Partnership begins business, if the Partnership so elects; if no election
is made, no deduction is available.  Finally, to the extent any portion of
the expenditures would be treated as "start-up," they could be amortized
over a 60 month or longer period, provided the proper election was made.

      Due to the inherently factual nature of the proper allocation of
expenses among nondeductible syndication expenses, amortizable
organization expenses, amortizable "start-up" expenditures, and currently
deductible items, and because the issues involve questions concerning both
the nature of the services performed and to be performed and the
reasonableness of amounts charged, we are unable to express an opinion
regarding such treatment.  If the Service were to successfully challenge
the Managing General Partner's allocations, a Partner's taxable income
could be increased, thereby resulting in increased taxes and in liability
for interest and penalties.

<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-27
                      BASIS AND AT RISK LIMITATIONS

     A Partner's share of Partnership losses will not be allowed as a
deduction to the extent such share exceeds the amount of the Partner's
adjusted tax basis in his Units.  A Partner's initial adjusted tax basis
in his Units will generally be equal to the cash he has invested to
purchase his Units.  Such adjusted tax basis will generally be increased
by (i) additional amounts invested in the Partnership, including his share
of net income, (ii) additional capital contributions, if any, and (iii)
his share of Partnership borrowings, if any, based on the extent of his
economic risk of loss for such borrowings.  Such adjusted tax basis will
generally be reduced, but not below zero by (i) his share of loss, (ii)
his depletion deductions on his share of oil and gas income (until such
deductions exhaust his share of the basis of property subject to
depletion), (iii) distributions of cash and the adjusted basis of property
other than cash made to him, and (iv) his share of reduction in the amount
of indebtedness previously included in his basis.

      In addition, Code Section 465 provides, in part, that, if an
individual
or a closely held C (i.e., regularly taxed) corporation engages in any
activity to which Code Section 465 applies, any loss from that activity is
allowed only to the extent of the aggregate amount with respect to which
the taxpayer is "at risk" for such activity at the close of the taxable
year.  Code Section 465(a)(1).  A closely held C corporation is a
corporation, more than fifty percent (50%) of the stock of which is owned,
directly or indirectly, at any time during the last half of the taxable
year by or for not more than five (5) individuals.  Code
Sections 465(a)(1)(B), 542(a)(2).  For purposes of Code Section 465, a
loss is defined as the excess of otherwise allowable deductions
attributable to an activity over the income received or accrued from that
activity.  Code Section 465(d).  Any such loss disallowed by Code
Section 465 shall be treated as a deduction allocable to the activity in
the first succeeding taxable year.  Code Section 465(a)(2).

      Code Section 465(b)(1) provides that a taxpayer will be considered as
being "at risk" for an activity with respect to amounts including (i) the
amount of money and the adjusted basis of other property contributed by
the taxpayer to the activity, and (ii) amounts borrowed with respect to
such activity to the extent that the taxpayer (I) is personally liable for
the repayment of such amounts, or (II) has pledged property, other than
property used in the activity, as security for such borrowed amounts (to
the extent of the net fair market value of the taxpayer's interest in such
property).  No property can be taken into account as security if such
property is directly or indirectly financed by indebtedness that is
secured by property used in the activity.  Code Section 465(b)(2). 
Further, amounts borrowed by the taxpayer shall not be taken into account
if such amounts are borrowed (i) from any person who has an interest
(other than an interest as a creditor) in such activity, or (ii) from a
related person to a person (other than the taxpayer) having such an
interest.  Code Section 465(b)(3).
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-28

      Related persons for purposes of Code Section 465(b)(3) are defined to
include related persons within the meaning of Code Section 267(b) (which
describes relationships between family members, corporations and
shareholders, trusts and their grantors, beneficiaries and fiduciaries,
and similar relationships), Code Section 707(b)(1) (which describes
relationships between partnerships and their partners) and Code Section 52
(which describes relationships between persons engaged in businesses under
common control).  Code Section 465(b)(3)(C).

      Finally, no taxpayer is considered at risk with respect to amounts for
which the taxpayer is protected against loss through nonrecourse
financing, guarantees, stop loss agreements, or other similar
arrangements.  Code Section 465(b)(4).

      The Code provides that a taxpayer must recognize taxable income to the
extent that his "at risk" amount is reduced below zero.  This recaptured
income is limited to the sum of the loss deductions previously allowed to
the taxpayer, less any amounts previously recaptured.  A taxpayer may be
allowed a deduction for the recaptured amounts included in his taxable
income if and when he increases his amount "at risk" in a subsequent
taxable year.

      The Treasury has published proposed regulations relating to the at
risk provisions of Code Section 465.  These proposed regulations provide
that a taxpayer's at risk amount will include "personal funds" contributed
by the taxpayer to an activity.  Prop. Treas. Reg. Section 1.465-22(a). 
"Personal funds" and "personal assets" are defined in Prop. Treas. Reg.
Section 1.465-9(f) as funds and assets which (i) are owned by the
taxpayer, (ii) are not acquired through borrowing, and (iii) have a basis
equal to their fair market value. 

      In addition to a taxpayer's amount at risk being increased by the
amount of personal funds contributed to the activity, the excess of the
taxpayer's share of all items of income received or accrued from an
activity during a taxable year over the taxpayer's share of allowable
deductions from the activity for the year will also increase the amount at
risk.  Prop. Treas. Reg. Section 1.465-22.  A taxpayer's amount at risk
will be decreased by (i) the amount of money withdrawn from the activity
by or on behalf of the taxpayer, including distributions from a
partnership, and (ii) the amount of loss from the activity allowed as a
deduction under Code Section 465(a).  Id.

      The Partners will purchase Units by tendering cash to the Partnership.

To the extent the cash contributed constitutes the "personal funds" of the
Partners, the Partners should be considered at risk with respect to those
amounts.  To the extent the cash contributed constitutes "personal funds,"
in our opinion, neither the at risk rules nor the adjusted basis rules
will limit the deductibility of losses generated from the Partnership.

<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-29
                     PASSIVE LOSS AND CREDIT LIMITATIONS

A.  Introduction

      Code Section 469 provides that the deductibility of losses generated
from passive activities will be limited for certain taxpayers.  The
passive activity loss limitations apply to individuals, estates, trusts,
and personal service corporations as well as, to a lesser extent, closely
held C corporations.  Code Section 469(a)(2).

      The definition of a "passive activity" generally encompasses all
rental activities as well as all activities with respect to which the
taxpayer does not "materially participate."  Code Section 469(c). 
Notwithstanding this general rule, however, the term "passive activity"
does not include "any working interest in any oil or gas property which
the taxpayer holds directly or through an entity which does not limit the
liability of the taxpayer with respect to such interest."  Code Section
469(c)(3),(4).

      A passive activity loss ("PAL") is defined as the amount (if any) by
which the aggregate losses from all passive activities for the taxable
year exceed the aggregate income from all passive activities for such
year.  Code Section 469(d)(1).

      Classification of an activity as passive will result in the income and
expenses generated therefrom being treated as "passive" except to the
extent that any of the income is "portfolio" income and except as
otherwise provided in regulations.  Code Section 469(e)(1)(A).  Portfolio
income is income from, inter alia, interest, dividends, and royalties not
derived in the ordinary course of a trade or business.  Income that is
neither passive nor portfolio is "net active income." Code
Section 469(e)(2)(B).

      With respect to the deductibility of PALs, individuals and personal
service corporations will be entitled to deduct such amounts only to the
extent of their passive income whereas closely held C corporations (other
than personal service corporations) can offset PALs against both passive
and net active income, but not against portfolio income.  Code
Section 469(a)(1), (e)(2).  In calculating passive income and loss,
however, all activities of the taxpayer are aggregated.  Code
Section 469(d)(1).  PALs disallowed as a result of the above rules will be
suspended and can be carried forward indefinitely to offset future passive
(or passive and active, in the case of a closely held C corporation)
income.  Code Section 469(b).

      Upon the disposition of an entire interest in a passive activity in a
fully taxable transaction not involving a related party, any passive loss
that was suspended by the provisions of the Code Section 469 passive
activity rules is deductible from either passive or non-passive income. 
The deduction must be reduced, however, by the amount of income or gain
realized from the activity in previous years.
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-30

      As noted above, a passive activity includes an activity with respect
to which the taxpayer does not "materially participate."  A taxpayer will be
considered as materially participating in a venture only if the taxpayer
is involved in the operations of the activity on a "regular, continuous,
and substantial" basis.  Code Section 469(h)(1).  With respect to the
determination as to whether a taxpayer's participation in an activity is
material, temporary regulations issued by the Service provide that, except
for limited partners in a limited partnership, an individual will be
treated as materially participating in an activity if and only if (i) the
individual participates in the activity for more than 500 hours during
such year, (ii) the individual's participation in the activity for the
taxable year constitutes substantially all of the participation in such
activity of all individuals for such year, (iii) the individual
participates in the activity for more than 100 hours during the taxable
year, and such individual's participation in such activity is not less
than the participation in the activity of any other individual for such
year, (iv) the activity is a trade or business activity of the individual,
the individual participates in the activity for more than 100 hours during
such year, and the individual's aggregate participation in all significant
participation activities of this type during the year exceeds 500 hours,
(v) the individual materially participated in the activity for 5 of the
last 10 years, or (vi) the activity is a personal service activity and the
individual materially participated in the activity for any 3 preceding
years.  Temp. Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-5T(a).

      Notwithstanding the above, and except as may be provided in
regulations, Code Section 469(h)(2) provides that no limited partnership
interest will be treated as an interest with respect to which a taxpayer
materially participates.  The temporary regulations create several
exceptions to this rule and provide that a limited partner will not be
treated as not materially participating in an activity of the partnership
of which he is a limited partner if the limited partner would be treated
as materially participating for the taxable year under paragraph (a)(1),
(5), or (6) of Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-5T (as described in (i), (v), and
(vi) of the above paragraph) if the individual were not a limited partner
for such taxable year.  Temp. Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-5T(e).  For
purposes of this rule, a partnership interest of an individual will not be
treated as a limited partnership interest for the taxable year if the
individual is an Additional General Partner in the partnership at all
times during the partnership's taxable year ending with or within the
individual's taxable year.  Id.

B.  General Partner Interests

      Due to the factual nature of the applicability of the material
participation factors to an Additional General Partner's participation in
the activities of the Partnership, we cannot express an opinion with
respect to whether such participation will be material.  However, the
"working interest" exception to the passive activity rules applies without
regard to the level of the taxpayer's participation.  Nevertheless, the
presence or absence of material participation may be relevant for purposes<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-31

of determining whether the investment interest expense rules of Code
Section 163(d) apply to limit the deductibility of interest incurred in
connection with any borrowings of an Additional General Partner.

      As noted above, the term "passive activity" does not include any
working interest in any oil or gas property which the taxpayer holds
directly or through an entity which does not limit the taxpayer's
liability with respect to such interest.  Temp. Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-
1T(e)(4)(v) describes an interest in an entity that limits a taxpayer's
liability with respect to the drilling or operation of a well as (i) a
limited partnership interest in a partnership in which the taxpayer is not
a general partner, (ii) stock in a corporation, or (iii) an interest in
any other entity that, under applicable state law, limits the interest
holder's potential liability.  For purposes of this provision,
indemnification agreements, stop loss arrangements, insurance, or any
similar arrangements or combinations thereof are not taken into account in
determining whether a taxpayer's liability is limited.  Id.

      The Joint Committee on Taxation's General Explanation of the Tax
Reform Act of 1986 (the "Bluebook") indicates that a "working interest"
is an interest with respect to an oil and gas property that is burdened
with the cost of development and operation of the property, and that
generally has characteristics such as responsibility for signing
authorizations for expenditures with respect to the activity, receiving
periodic drilling and completion reports and reports regarding the amount
of oil extracted, voting rights proportionate to the percentage of the
working interest possessed by the taxpayer, the right to continue activities
if the present operator decides to discontinue operations, a proportionate
share of tort liability with respect to the property and some responsibility
to share in further costs with respect to the property in the event a
decision is made to spend more than amounts already contributed.  The
Regulations define a working interest as "a working or operating mineral
interest in any tract or parcel of land (within the meaning of Section
1.612-4(a))."  Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-1(e)(4)(iv).  Under Treas. Reg.
Section 1.614-2(b), an operating mineral interest is defined as

      a separate mineral interest as described in section 614(a), in
      respect of which the costs of production are required to be taken
      into account by the taxpayer for purposes of computing the
      limitation of 50 percent of the taxable income from the property in
      determining the deduction for percentage depletion computed under
      section 613, or such costs would be so required to be taken into
      account if the . . . well . . . were in the production stage.  The
      term does not include royalty interests or similar interests, such
      as production payments or net profits interests.  For the purpose of
      determining whether a mineral interest is an operating mineral
      interest, "costs of production" do not include intangible drilling
      and development costs, exploration expenditures under section 615,
      or development expenditures under section 616.  Taxes, such as
      production taxes, payable by holders of nonoperating interests are
      not considered costs of production for this purpose.  A taxpayer may
      not aggregate<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-32

      operating mineral interests and nonoperating mineral interests such as
      royalty interests.

      The Managing General Partner has represented that the Partnership will
acquire and hold only operating mineral interests, as defined in Code
Section 614(d) and the regulations thereunder, and that none of the
Partnership's revenues will be from non-working interests.

      To the extent that the Additional General Partners (in their capacity
as general partners) have working interests in the activities of the
Partnership for purposes of Code Section 469, we are of the opinion that
an Additional General Partner's interest in the Partnership (as a general
partner) will not be considered a passive activity within the meaning of
Code Section 469 and losses generated while such general partner interest
is held will not be limited by the passive activity provisions.

      Notwithstanding this general rule, however, for purposes of Code
Section 469, the economic performance rules of Code Section 461 are
applied in a different manner from that described above in "Intangible
Drilling and Development Costs Deductions."  Economic performance under
the passive loss rules is defined in Temp. Treas. Reg. Section 1.469-
1T(e)(4)(ii)(C)(2)(ii) as economic performance within the meaning of Code
Section 461(h), without regard to Code Section 461(i)(2) (which contains
the spudding rule).  Accordingly, if an Additional General Partner's
interest is converted to that of a limited partner after the end of the
year in which economic performance is deemed to occur (under Code
Section 461), but prior to the spudding date provided in Code
Section 461(i)(2), any post-conversion losses will be passive,
notwithstanding the availability of such losses (under Code Section 461)
in a year in which the taxpayer held the interest in an entity that did
not limit his liability.

      Notwithstanding the above, there can be no assurance that the Service
will not contend that all general partner interests should be regarded as
interests in a passive activity from the Partnership's inception due to
the conversion feature contained in the Partnership Agreement.  However,
due to the exposure to unlimited liability for Partnership obligations
incurred prior to such conversion, an attack by the Service with respect
to the foregoing should not be successful.  In addition, the temporary
regulations, at Section 1.469-1T(e)(4)(iii), example (1), respect the
nature of a general partnership interest prior to its conversion into
limited partnership form:

           A, a calendar year individual, acquires on January 1, 1987, a
           general partnership interest in P, a calendar year partnership
           that holds a working interest in an oil or gas property. 
           Pursuant to the partnership agreement, A is entitled to
           convert the general partnership interest into a limited
           partnership interest at any time.  On December 1, 1987,
           pursuant to a contract with D, an independent drilling
           contractor, P commences drilling a single well pursuant to the
           working interest.  Under<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-33

           the drilling contract, P pays D for the drilling only as the work
           is performed.  All drilling costs are deducted by P in the year
           in which they are paid.  At the end of 1987, A converts the
           general partnership interest into a limited partnership interest,
           effective immediately.  The drilling of the well is completed on
           February 28, 1988.

Since, in the example, A holds the working interest through an entity that
does not limit A's liability throughout 1987 and through an entity that
does limit A's liability in 1988, the example in the regulation concludes
that A's interest in P's well is not an interest in a passive activity for
1987 but is an interest in a passive activity for 1988.

      If an Additional General Partner converts his interest to a Limited
Partner interest pursuant to the terms of the Partnership Agreement, the
character of a subsequently generated tax attribute will be dependent
upon, inter alia, the nature of the tax attribute and whether there arose,
prior to conversion, losses to which the working interest exception
applied.

      Assuming the activities of a converting partner will not result in the
Partner's being treated as materially participating under Temp. Treas.
Reg. Section 1.469-5T(a)(1), (5), or (6), as described above, the Limited
Partner's activity after conversion should be treated as a passive
activity.  Code Section 469(c)(1).  Accordingly, any loss arising
therefrom should be treated as a PAL under Code Section 469(d), with the
benefits thereof limited by Code Section 469(a)(1), as described above. 
However, Code Section 469(c)(3)(B) provides that, if a taxpayer has any
loss from any taxable year from a working interest in any oil or gas
property that is treated as a non-passive loss, then any net income from
such property for any succeeding taxable year is to be treated as income
that is not from a passive activity.  Consequently, assuming that a
converting Additional General Partner has losses from working interests
which are treated as non-passive, income from the Partnership allocable to
the Partner after conversion would be treated as income that is not from
a passive activity.

C.  Limited Partner Interests

      If an Investor Partner (other than an Additional General Partner who
converts his interest into that of a Limited Partner) invests in the
Partnership as a Limited Partner, in the opinion of counsel, his
distributive share of the Partnership's losses will be treated as PALs,
the availability of which will be limited to the Partner's passive income
thereon.  If the Partner does not have sufficient passive income to
utilize the PAL, the disallowed PAL will be suspended and may be carried
forward (but not back) to be deducted against passive income arising in
future years.  Further, upon the complete disposition of the interest to
an unrelated party, in a fully taxable transaction such suspended losses
will be available, as described above.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-34

      Regarding Partnership income, Limited Partners should generally be
entitled to offset their distributive shares of such income with
deductions from other passive activities, except to the extent such
Partnership income is portfolio income.  Since gross income from interest,
dividends, annuities, and royalties not derived in the ordinary course of
a trade or business is not passive income, a Limited Partner's share of
income from royalties, income from the investment of the Partnership's
working capital, and other items of portfolio income will not be treated
as passive income.  In addition, Code Section 469(l)(3) grants the
Secretary of the Treasury the authority to prescribe regulations requiring
net income or gain from a limited partnership or other passive activity to
be treated as not from a passive activity.

D.  Publicly Traded Partnerships

      Notwithstanding the above, Code Section 469(k) treats net income from
PTPs as portfolio income under the PAL rules.  Further, each partner in a
PTP is required to treat any losses from a PTP as separate from income and
loss from any other PTP and also as separate from any income or loss from
passive activities.  Id.  Losses attributable to an interest in a PTP that
are not allowed under the passive activity rules are suspended and carried
forward, as described above.  Further, upon a complete taxable disposition
of an interest in a PTP, any suspended losses are allowed (as described
above with respect to the passive loss rules).  As noted above, we have
opined that the Partnership will not be a PTP. 

      In the event the Partnership were treated as a PTP, any net income
would be treated as portfolio income and each Partner's loss therefrom
would be treated as separate from income and loss from any other PTP and
also as separate from any income or loss from passive activities.  Since
the Partnership should not be treated as a PTP, the provisions of Code
Section 469(k), in our opinion, will not apply to the Partners in the
manner outlined above prior to the time that such Partnership becomes a
PTP.  However, unlike the PTP rules of Code Section 7704, the passive
activity rules of Code Section 469 do not provide an exception for
partnerships that pass the 90% test of Code Section 7704.  Accordingly, if
the Partnership were to be treated as a PTP under the passive activity
rules, passive losses could be used only to offset passive income from the
Partnership.


                        CONVERSION OF INTERESTS

      Code Section 708 provides that a partnership will be considered as
terminated for federal income tax purposes if, inter alia, there is "a
sale or exchange of 50 percent or more of the total interest in
partnership capital and profits" within a 12 month period.  If a
conversion of an Additional General Partner's interest into a Limited
Partner interest were treated as a "sale or exchange" for purposes of Code
Section 708, the Partnership would be terminated for federal income tax
purposes if 50% or more of the profits and capital interests in the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-35

Partnership were sold or exchanged within a 12 month period.

      In Rev. Rul. 84-52, 1984-1 C.B. 157, the Service ruled that the
conversion of a general partnership interest into a limited partnership
interest in the same partnership will not give rise to the recognition of
gain or loss under Code Section 741 or Section 1001.  The ruling noted
that, under Code Section 721, no gain or loss is recognized by a
partnership or any of its partners upon the contribution of property to
the partnership in exchange for an interest therein.  Consequently, the
partnership will not be terminated under Code Section 708 since (i) the
business of the partnership will continue after the conversion and (ii)
pursuant to Treas. Reg. Section 1.708-1(b)(1)(ii) a transaction governed
by Code Section 721 is not treated as a sale or exchange for purposes of
Code Section 708.  In the ruling, the Service also concluded that the
partners' bases in their partnership interests would be changed to the
extent of any change in their shares of the partnership's liabilities.  To
the extent that a deemed distribution exceeds a partner's adjusted basis,
gain will be recognized to the extent of such excess.

      If Rev. Rul. 84-52, supra, is not overruled, revoked, or modified, the
Partnership, in our opinion, will not be terminated under Code Section 708
solely as a result of the conversion of Partnership interests.  In the
event a constructive termination does occur, however, there will be a
deemed distribution of the Partnership's assets to the Partners and a
recontribution by such Partners to the Partnership.  This constructive
termination could have adverse federal income tax consequences, including
(i) the reallocation of basis of the assets, (ii) the recognition of
income by any Partner receiving a constructive distribution (including a
reduction in his share of Partnership liabilities) that exceeds his basis,
(iii) the loss of percentage depletion, if any, and (iv) the loss of
elections made by the Partnership.

      Code Section 1245(a) provides that, inter alia, when Section 1245
property is disposed of, the amount by which the lower of (i) the
property's recomputed basis or (ii) the amount realized (on the sale,
exchange, or involuntary conversion) of the property or the fair market
value (on any other disposition) of the property exceeds the property's
adjusted basis is to be treated as ordinary income.  Code
Section 1245(b)(3) provides that, if the basis of the property in the
hands of the transferee is determined by reference to its basis in the
hands of the transferor by reason of, inter alia, Code Section 721, then
the gain taken into account for purpose of Code Section 1245(a) is not to
exceed the gain taken into account by the transferor of such property
(without regard to Code Section 1245(b)).  To the extent the conversion of
General Partner interests to Limited Partner interests is governed by Code
Section 721, the converting Partner will only be required to include in
ordinary income the amount of gain he otherwise would recognize with
respect to the "Section 1245" property attributable to him.

      Code Section 752(b) treats any decrease in a partner's share of
partnership liabilities as a distribution of money to the partner by the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-36

partnership.  If, under the applicable regulatory or statutory provisions,
a converting partner's share of liabilities is deemed to decrease, such
decrease will result in gain to the partner to the extent it exceeds the
partner's basis in his partnership interest.  Code Section 1254(a)
provides, in part, that when a property is disposed of, the taxpayer must
recapture as ordinary income any gain on disposition in an amount equal to
the aggregate of amounts deductible as IDC, in excess of the amount
deductible without regard to Code Section 263, and depletion.  Code
Section 1254 (a) (1).  Code Section 1254(b) provides that rules similar to
the rules of subsections (b) and (c) of Code Section 1245 are to be
applied for purposes of Code Section 1254.  Consequently, to the extent
that a Partner could recognize ordinary income under Code Section 1245
upon conversion, the Partner could also recognize ordinary income under
Code Section 1254.  

      Losses arising from the holding of working interests in oil and gas
properties directly or through an entity that does not limit the holder's
liability are not subject to the passive loss rules.  Temporary and
Proposed Regulations provide that, if the form of ownership is converted
from a type that does not limit liability to a type that does limit
liability, the portion of any losses (including those arising from the
deduction of IDC) attributable to services or materials which have not yet
been provided at the time of such conversion will constitute losses from
a passive activity.  Thus, in our opinion, if a Partner were to convert
his general partner interest to that of a limited partner prior to the
time that all of the services or materials comprising the IDC of a well
had been provided, at the time of the conversion such services and
materials will constitute losses from a passive activity and be subject to
the passive loss limitations.  Similarly in such a situation, a portion of
the income from the well would constitute passive income.  If the
conversion were to occur after the filing of the Partnership's information
tax return but prior to the completion of the drilling and development of
a well, an amended return might have to be filed, which might also require
the Investors to file amended returns.  Further, the Code provides that if
a taxpayer has any loss attributable to a working interest which is
treated in any taxable year as a loss which is not from a passive
activity, then any net income attributable to the working interest in any
succeeding taxable year is treated as income of the taxpayer which is not
from a passive activity.  Accordingly, if an Additional General Partner
converts his interest into a Limited Partner interest, any income from
that interest with respect to which he claimed deductions will be treated
as nonpassive income.


                          ALTERNATIVE MINIMUM TAX

      For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1992, Code 55 imposes
on noncorporate taxpayers a two-tiered, graduated rate schedule for
alternative minimum tax ("AMT") equal to the sum of (i) 26% of so much of
the "taxable excess" as does not exceed $175,000, plus (ii) 28% of so much
of the "taxable excess" as exceeds $175,000.  Code Section 55(b)(1)(A)(i).<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-37

 "Taxable excess" is defined as so much of the alternative minimum taxable
income ("AMTI") for the taxable year as exceeds the exemption amount. 
Code Section 55(b)(1)(A)(ii).  AMTI is generally defined as the taxpayer's
taxable income, increased or decreased by certain adjustments and items of
tax preference.  Code Section 55(b)(2).

      The exemption amount for noncorporate taxpayers is (i) $45,000 in the
case of a joint return or a surviving spouse, (ii) $33,750 in the case of
an individual who is not a married individual or a surviving spouse, and
(iii) $22,500 in the case of a married individual who files a separate
return or an estate or trust.  Such amounts are phased out as a taxpayer's
AMTI increases above certain levels.  Code Section 55(d)(1) and (3).

      The corporate AMT is similar to that of the individual AMT, with the
corporation's regular taxable income increased or decreased by certain
adjustments and items of tax preference, resulting in AMTI.  The AMTI is
reduced by $40,000 (which amount is phased-out as AMTI increases from
$150,000 to $310,000) with the balance being taxed at twenty percent
(20%).  Code Section 55(b), (d).  The excess of this figure over the
regular tax liability is the AMT.

      Individuals subject to the AMT are generally allowed a credit, equal
to the portion of the AMT imposed by Code Section 55 arising as a result of
deferral preferences (or equal to the entire AMT in the case of corporate
AMT for use against the taxpayer's future regular tax liability (but not
the minimum tax liability).  Code Section 53.  However, for corporate
taxpayers after 1989, AMT arising from exclusion preferences is also
included in the credit.  Code Section 53(d)(1)(B).

      Under the AMT provisions, adjustments and items of tax preference that
may arise from a Partner's acquisition of an interest in the Partnership
include the following:

      1.  For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1992, taxpayers
which do not meet the definition of an integrated oil company as defined
in Code Section 291(b)(4) are not subject to the preference item for
"excess IDC."  Code Section 57(a)(2)(E)(i).  The benefit of the
elimination of the preference is limited in any taxable year to an amount
equal to 40 percent of the alternative minimum taxable income for the year
computed as if the prior law "excess IDC" preference item has not been
eliminated.  Code Section 57(a)(2)(E)(ii).  Excess IDC is defined as the
excess of (i) IDC paid or incurred (other than costs incurred in drilling
a nonproductive well) with respect to which a deduction is allowable under
Code Section 263(c) for the taxable year over (ii) the amount which would
have been allowable for the taxable year if such costs had been
capitalized and (I) amortized over a 120 month period beginning with the
month in which production from such well begins or (II) recovered through
cost depletion.  Code Section 57(a)(2)(B).  However, any portion of the
IDC to which an election under Code Section 59(e) applies will not be
treated as an item of tax preference under Code Section 57(a).  Code
Section 59(e)(6).  With respect to IDC paid or incurred, corporate and
individual taxpayers are<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-38

allowed to make the Code Section 59(e) election and, for regular tax and
AMT purposes, deduct such expenditures over the 60 month period beginning
with the month in which such expenditure is paid or incurred.  Code
Section 59(e)(1).

      2.  For taxable years beginning after December 31, 1992, the
preference item for excess depletion is repealed for other than integrated
oil companies.  Code Section 57(a)(1).

      3.  Each Partner's AMTI will be increased (or decreased) by the amount
by which the depreciation deductions allowable under Code Sections 167 and
168 with respect to such property exceeds (or is less than) the
depreciation determined under the alternative depreciation system using
the one hundred fifty percent (150%) declining balance method switching to
the straight-line method, when that produces a greater deduction, in lieu
of the straight-line method otherwise prescribed by the ADS.  Code
Section 56(a)(1).  No ACE depreciation adjustment is necessary with
respect to a corporate Partner for property placed in service in taxable
years beginning after December 31, 1993.  Code Section 56(g)(4)(A)(i).

      4.  AMTI for a corporate Partner will be increased by seventy-five
percent (75%) of the excess of the taxpayer's "adjusted current earnings"
("ACE") over the AMTI amount (computed without the ACE adjustment and
without the net operating loss deduction).  Code Section 56(g)(1).  As
noted above, both corporate and individual taxpayers may elect this method
of amortization for regular tax purposes.  For years beginning after
December 31, 1992, for corporations other than integrated oil companies,
the ACE adjustments for percentage depletion and IDC are repealed.  Code
Sections 56(g)(4)(F) and (D)(i), respectively.  The IDC modification
applies to IDCs paid or incurred in taxable years beginning after December
31, 1992.

      Due to the inherently factual nature of the applicability of the AMT
to a Partner, we are unable to express an opinion with respect to such
issues.  Due to the potentially significant impact of a purchase of Units
on an Investor's tax liability, investors should discuss the implications
of an investment in the Partnership on their regular and AMT liabilities
with their tax advisors prior to acquiring Units.


                     GAIN OR LOSS ON SALE OF PROPERTIES

      Gain from the sale or other disposition of property is realized to the
extent of the excess of the amount realized therefrom over the property's
adjusted basis; conversely, loss is realized in an amount equal to the
excess of the property's adjusted basis over the amount realized from such
a disposition.  Code Section 1001(a).  The amount realized is defined as
the sum of any money received plus the fair market value of the property
(other than money) received.  Code Section 1001(b).  Accordingly, upon the
sale or other disposition of the Partnership properties, the Partners will
realize gain or loss to the extent of their pro rata share of the<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-39

difference between the Partnership's adjusted basis in the property at the
time of disposition and the amount realized upon disposition.  In the
absence of nonrecognition provisions, any gain or loss realized will be
recognized for federal income tax purposes.

      Gain or loss recognized upon the disposition of property used in a
trade or business and held for more than one year will be treated as long
term capital gain or as ordinary loss.  Code Section 1231(a). 
Notwithstanding the above, however, any gain realized may be taxed as
ordinary income under one of several "recapture" provisions of the Code or
under the characterization rules relating to "dealers" in personal
property.

      Code Section 1254 generally provides for the recapture of capital
gains, arising from the sale of property which was placed in service after
1986, as ordinary income to the extent of the lesser of (i) the gain
realized upon sale of the property, or (ii) the sum of (I) all IDC
previously deducted and (II) all depletion deductions that reduced the
property's basis.  Code Section 1254(a)(1).

      Ordinary income may also result from the recapture, pursuant to Code
Section 1245, of depreciation on the Partnership properties.  Such
recapture is the amount by which (i) the lower of (I) the recomputed basis
of the property, or (II) the amount realized on the sale of the property
exceeds (ii) the property's adjusted basis.  Code Section 1245(a)(1). 
Recomputed basis is generally the property's adjusted basis increased by
depreciation and amortization deductions previously claimed with respect
to the property.  Code Section 1245(a)(2).


                      GAIN OR LOSS ON SALE OF UNITS

      If the Units are capital assets in the hands of the Partners, gain or
loss realized by any such holders on the sale or other disposition of a
Unit will be characterized as capital gain or capital loss.  Code
Section 1221.  Such gain or loss will be a long term capital gain or loss
if the Unit is held for more than one year and a short term capital gain
or loss if held for a shorter period.  However, the portion of the amount
realized by a Partner in exchange for a Unit that is attributable to the
Partner's share of the Partnership's "unrealized receivables" or
"substantially appreciated inventory items" will be treated as an amount
realized from the sale or exchange of property other than a capital asset. 
Code Section 751.

      Unrealized receivables are defined in Code Section 751(c) to include
". . . oil [or] gas  . . . property  . . . to the extent of the amount
which would be treated as gain to which section . . . 1245(a) . . . or
1254(a) would apply if  . . . such property had been sold by the
partnership at its fair market value."  A sale by the Partnership of the
Partnership's properties could give rise to treatment of the gain
thereunder as ordinary income as a result of Code Sections 1245(a) or
1254(a).  Accordingly, gain recognized by a Partner on the sale of a Unit<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-40

would be taxed as ordinary income to the Partner to the extent of his
share of the Partnership's gain on property that would be recaptured, upon
sale, under those statutes.

      Substantially appreciated inventory items are those "inventory items"
noted below, the fair market value of which exceeds 120% of the adjusted
basis to the partnership of such property, excluding any such inventory
property acquired with a principal purpose of avoiding Section751.  Code
Section 751(d)(1).  Property treated as an "inventory item" for purposes
of Code Section 751 includes (i) stock in trade of the partnership or
other property of a kind which would properly be included in its inventory
if on hand at the end of the taxable year, (ii) property held by the
partnership primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of its
trade or business, and (iii) any other partnership property which would
constitute neither a capital asset nor property used in a trade or
business under Code Section 1231.  Code Sections 751(d)(2) and 1221(1).

      Under the aforementioned provisions, a Partner would recognize
ordinary
income with respect to any deemed sale of assets under Code Section 751;
further, this ordinary income may be recognized even if the total amount
realized on the sale of a Unit is equal to or less than the Partner's
basis in the Unit.

      Any partner who sells or exchanges interests in a partnership holding
unrealized receivables (which include IDC recapture and other items) or
certain inventory items must notify the partnership of such transaction in
accordance with Regulations under Code Section 6050K and must attach a
statement to his tax return reflecting certain facts regarding the sale or
exchange.  Regulations promulgated by the service provide that such notice
to the partnership must be given in writing within 30 days of the sale or
exchange (or, if earlier, by January 15 of the calendar year following the
calendar year in which the exchange occurred), and must include names,
addresses, and taxpayer identification numbers (if known) of the
transferor and transferee and the date of the exchange.  Code Section 6721
provides that persons who fail to furnish this information to the
partnership will be penalized $50 for each such failure, or, if such
failure is due to intentional disregard to the filing requirement, the
person will be penalized the greater of (i) $100 or (ii) 10% of the
aggregate amount to be reported.  Furthermore, a partnership is required
to notify the Service of any sale or exchange of interests of which it has
notice, and to report the names and addresses of the transferee and the
transferor, along with all other required information.  The partnership
also is required to provide copies of the information it provides to the
Service to the transferor and the transferee.

      The tax consequences to an assignee purchaser of a Unit from a Partner
are not described herein.  Any assignor of a Unit should advise his
assignee to consult his own tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of
such assignment.
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-41

                       PARTNERSHIP DISTRIBUTIONS

      Under the Code, any increase in a partner's share of partnership
liabilities, or any increase in such partner's individual liabilities by
reason of an assumption by him of partnership liabilities is considered to
be a contribution of money by the partner to the partnership.  Similarly,
any decrease in a partner's share of partnership liabilities or any
decrease in such partner's individual liabilities by reason of the
partnership's assumption of such individual liabilities will be considered
as a distribution of money to the partner by the partnership.  Code
Section 752(a), (b).

      The Partners' adjusted bases in their Units will initially consist of
the cash they contribute to the Partnership.  Their bases will be
increased by their share of Partnership income and additional
contributions and decreased by their share of Partnership losses and
distributions.  To the extent that such actual or constructive
distributions are in excess of a Partner's adjusted basis in his
Partnership interest (after adjustment for contributions and his share of
income and losses of the Partnership), that excess will generally be
treated as gain from the sale of a capital asset.  In addition, gain could
be recognized to a distributee partner upon the disproportionate
distribution to a partner of unrealized receivables, substantially
appreciated inventory or, in some cases, Code Section 731 (c) marketable
securities, ie., actively traded financial instruments, foreign currencies
or interests in certain defined properties.  Further, the Partnership
Agreement prohibits distributions to any Investor Partner to the extent
such would create or increase a deficit in the Partner's Capital Account.


                      PARTNERSHIP ALLOCATIONS

      Allocations - General.  Generally, a partner's taxable income is
increased or decreased by his ratable share of partnership income or loss. 
Code Section 701.  However, the availability of these losses may be
limited by the at risk rules of Code Section 465, the passive activity
rules of Code Section 469, and the adjusted basis provisions of Code
Section 704(d).

      Code Section 704(b) provides that if a partnership agreement does not
provide for the allocation of each partner's distributive share of
partnership income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit, or if the allocation
of such items under the partnership agreement lacks "substantial economic
effect," then each partner's share of those items must be allocated "in
accordance with the partner's interest in the partnership."

      As discussed below, regulations under Code Section 704(b) define
substantial economic effect and prescribe the manner in which partners'
capital accounts must be maintained in order for the allocations contained
in the partnership agreement to be respected.  Notwithstanding these
provisions, special rules apply with respect to nonrecourse deductions<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-42

since, under the Regulations, allocations of losses or deductions
attributable to nonrecourse liabilities cannot have economic effect.

      The Service may contend that the allocations contained in the
Partnership Agreement do not have substantial economic effect or are not
in accordance with the Partners' interests in the Partnership and may seek
to reallocate these items in a manner that will increase the income or
gain or decrease the deductions allocable to a Partner.  We are of the
opinion that, to the extent provided herein, if challenged by the Service
on this matter, the Partners' distributive shares of partnership income,
gain, loss, deduction, or credit will be determined and allocated
substantially in accordance with the terms of the Partnership Agreement to
have substantial economic effect.

      Substantial Economic Effect.  Although a partner's share of
partnership
income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit is generally determined in
accordance with the partnership agreement, this share will be determined
in accordance with the partner's interest in the partnership (determined
by taking into account all facts and circumstances) and not by the
partnership agreement if the partnership allocations do not have
"substantial economic effect" and if the allocations are not respected
under the nonrecourse deduction provisions of the regulations.  Code
Section 704(b); Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-1(b)(2)(i), 1.704-2.

      Treasury regulations provide that:

           In order for an allocation to have economic effect, it must be
      consistent with the underlying economic arrangement of the partners. 
      This means that in the event there is an economic benefit or
      economic burden that corresponds to an allocation, the partner to
      whom the allocation is made must receive such economic benefit or
      bear such economic burden.

Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii).  The regulations further provide
that an allocation will have economic effect only if, throughout the full
term of the partnership, the partnership agreement provides (i) for the
determination and maintenance of partner's capital accounts in accordance
with specified rules contained therein, (ii) upon liquidation of the
partnership or a partner's interest in the partnership, liquidating
distributions are required to be made in accordance with the positive
capital account balances of the partners after taking into account all
capital account adjustments for the taxable year of the liquidation, and
(iii) either (I) a partner with a deficit balance in his capital account
following the liquidation is unconditionally obligated to restore the
amount of such deficit balance to the partnership by the end of the
taxable year of liquidation, or (II) the partnership agreement contains a
qualified income offset ("QIO") provision as provided in Treas. Reg.
Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d).  Treas. Reg. Sections 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(b)
and 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d).
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-43

      The capital account maintenance rules generally mandate that each
partner's capital account be increased by (i) money contributed by the
partner to the partnership, (ii) the fair market value (net of
liabilities) of property contributed by the partner to the partnership,
and (iii) allocations to the partner of partnership income and gain. 
Further, such capital account must be decreased by (i) money distributed
to the partner from the partnership, (ii) the fair market value (net of
liabilities) of property distributed to the partner from the partnership,
and (iii) allocations to the partner of partnership losses and deductions. 
Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv).

      Treas. Reg. Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iii) provides that an economic
effect
of an allocation is "substantial" if there is a reasonable possibility
that the allocation will affect substantially the dollar amounts to be
received by the partners from the partnership, independent of tax
consequences.  The economic effect of an allocation is not substantial if:

      at the time the allocation becomes part of the partnership
      agreement, (1) the after-tax economic consequences of at least one
      partner may, in present value terms, be enhanced compared to such
      consequences if the allocation (or allocations) were not contained
      in the partnership agreement, and (2) there is a strong likelihood
      that the after-tax economic consequences of no partner will, in
      present value terms, be substantially diminished compared to such
      consequences if the allocation (or allocations) were not contained
      in the partnership agreement.  In determining the after-tax economic
      benefit or detriment to a partner, tax consequences that result from
      the interaction of the allocation with such partner's tax attributes
      that are unrelated to the partnership will be taken into account.

Treas. Reg. 1.704-1(b)(2)(iii)(a).

      While the Service stated that it will not rule on whether an
allocation provision in a partnership agreement has substantial economic
effect, several Technical Advice Memoranda ("TAMs") shed light on the
Service's position on such matter.  Notwithstanding the potential similarity
between TAM and a taxpayer's particular fact pattern, it should be noted
that TAMs may not be used or cited as precedent.  Code Section 6110(j)(3),
Treas. Reg. Sections 301.6110-2(a) and -7(b).  Nevertheless, TAMs do serve
to illustrate the Service's position on certain specific cases.  The TAMs
relating to substantial economic effect focus on the tax avoidance purpose
of any such above-described allocations and on the partnership plan for
distributions upon liquidation.  Illustrative of the Service's approach is
TAM 8008054, in which the Service concluded that an allocation to the
partners solely of items that the partnership had elected to expense (IDC)
had as its principal purpose tax avoidance.  The Service suggested that,
had the allocation affected the parties' liquidation rights, the
allocation would have had substantial economic effect:  "In general,
substantial economic effect has been found where all allocations of items
of income, gain, loss, deduction or credit increase or decrease the
respective capital accounts of the partners and distribution of assets<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-44

made upon liquidation is made in accordance with capital accounts."  The
ruling noted that the investors "should have been allocated their share of
costs over the intangible drilling costs."  Id.  The question whether
economic effect is "substantial" is one of fact which may depend in part
on the timing of income and deductions and on consideration of the
investors' tax attributes unrelated to their investment in Units, and thus
is not a question upon which a legal opinion can ordinarily be expressed. 
However, to the extent the tax brackets of all Partners do not differ at
the time the allocation becomes part of the partnership agreement, the
economic effect of the allocation provisions should be considered to be
substantial.

      Code Section 613A(c)(7)(D) requires that the basis of oil and gas
properties owned by a partnership be allocated to the partners in
accordance with their interests in the capital or income of the
partnership.  Final Regulations issued under Code Section 613A(c)(7)(D)
indicate that such basis must be allocated in accordance with the
partners' interests in the capital of the partnership if their interests
in partnership income vary over the life of the partnership for any reason
other than for reasons such as the admission of a new partner.  Reg.
Section 1.613A-3(e)(2).  The terms "capital" and "income" are not defined
in the Code or in the Regulations under Section 613A.  The Regulations
under Code Section 704 indicate that if all partnership allocations of
income, gain, loss, and deduction (or items thereof) have substantial
economic effect, an allocation of the adjusted basis of an oil or gas
property among the partners will be deemed to be made in accordance with
the partners' interests in partnership capital or income and will
accordingly be recognized.

      Pursuant to the Partnership Agreement, (i) allocations will be made as
mandated by the Regulations, (ii) liquidating distributions will be made
in accordance with positive capital account balances, and (iii) a
"qualified income offset" provision applies.  However, while capital will
be owned 78.125% by the Investor Partners and 21.875% by the Managing
General Partner, IDC will be allocated 100% to the Investor Partners and
other tax items will be allocated 80% to the Investor Partners.  Except
with respect to those excess allocations, under the Partnership Agreement
the basis in oil and gas properties will be allocated in proportion to
each Partner's respective share of the costs which entered into the
Partnership's adjusted basis for each depletable property.  Such
allocations of basis appear reasonable and in compliance with the
Regulations under Section 704.  Nevertheless, the Service may contend that
the allocation to the Investors of IDC (100%) in excess of their capital
contributions (78.125%) or the allocation to the Managing General Partner
of other tax items (100% ranging to 0% upon the occurrence of certain
events) in excess of its capital contribution (21.875%) is invalid and may
reallocate such excess IDC or other items to the other Partners.  Any such
reallocation could increase an Investor Partner's tax liability.  However,
no assurance can be given, and we are unable to express an opinion, as to
whether any special allocation of an item which is dependent upon basis in
an oil and gas property will be recognized by the Service.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-45

      Allocation Shifts.  Section 3.02(a) of the Partnership Agreement
provides that the Managing General Partner will subordinate up to 50% of
its 20% share of Partnership cash distributions so that the Investor
Partner might receive cash distributions equal to a minimum of 10% per
year of their Subscriptions on a cumulative basis for the first five years
of Partnership well operations.  These shifts may trigger income to the
Partners to the extent such shift has the effect of reducing a Partner's
allocable share of "substantially appreciated inventory items" or
"unrealized receivables," as those terms are defined in Code Section 751.

      Nonrecourse Deductions.  As noted above, an allocation of loss or
deduction attributable to nonrecourse liabilities of a partnership cannot
have economic effect because the creditor alone bears any economic burden
that corresponds to such an allocation.  Nevertheless, the Temporary
Regulations provide a test under which certain allocations of nonrecourse
deductions will be deemed to be in accordance with the partners' interests
in the partnership.

      Nonrecourse deduction allocations will be deemed to be made in
accordance with partners' partnership interests if, and only if, four
requirements are satisfied.  First, the partners' capital accounts must be
maintained properly and the distribution of liquidation proceeds must be
in accordance with the partners' capital account balances.  Second,
beginning in the first taxable year in which there are nonrecourse
deductions, and thereafter throughout the full term of the partnership,
the partnership agreement must provide for allocation of nonrecourse
deductions among the partners in a manner that is reasonably consistent
with allocations, which have substantial economic effect, of some other
significant partnership item attributable to the property securing
nonrecourse liabilities of the partnership.  Third, beginning in the first
taxable year of the partnership in which the partnership has nonrecourse
deductions or makes a distribution of proceeds of a nonrecourse liability
that are allocable to an increase in minimum gain, and thereafter
throughout the full term of the partnership, the partnership agreement
contains a "minimum gain chargeback."  A partnership agreement contains a
"minimum gain chargeback" if, and only if, it provides that, subject to
certain exceptions, in the event there is a net decrease in partnership
minimum gain during a partnership taxable year, the partners must be
allocated items of partnership income and gain for that year equal to each
partner's share of the net decrease in partnership minimum gain during
such year.  A partner's share of the net decrease in partnership minimum
gain is the amount of the total net decrease multiplied by the partner's
percentage share of the partnership's minimum gain at the end of the
immediately preceding taxable year.  A partner's share of any decrease in
partnership minimum gain resulting from a revaluation of partnership
property (which would not cause a minimum gain chargeback) equals the
increase in the partner's capital account attributable to the revaluation
to the extent the reduction in minimum gain is caused by such revaluation. 
Similar rules apply with regard to partner nonrecourse liabilities and
associated deductions.  The fourth requirement of the nonrecourse
allocation test provides that all other material allocations and capital<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-46

account adjustments under the partnership agreement must be recognized
under the general allocation requirements of the regulations under IRC
Section 704(b).

      Under the Regulations, partners generally share nonrecourse
liabilities in accordance with their interests in partnership profits. 
However, the Regulations generally require that nonrecourse liabilities
be allocated among the partners first to reflect the partners' share of
minimum gain and Code Section 704(c) minimum gain.  Any remaining
nonrecourse liabilities are generally to be allocated in proportion to
the partner's interests in partnership profits.

      The Partnership Agreement, at Section 3.02, contains a minimum gain
chargeback.  Further, the Partnership Agreement provides for the
allocation of nonrecourse liabilities and deductions attributable thereto
among the Partners first, in accordance with their respective shares of
partnership minimum gain (within the meaning of Regulation Section 1.704-
2(b)(2); second, to the extent of each such Partner's gain under Code
Section 704(c) if the Partnership were to dispose of (in a taxable
transaction) all Partnership property subject to one or more nonrecourse
liabilities of the Partnership in full satisfaction of such liabilities
and for no other consideration; and third, in accordance with the
Partners' proportionate shares in the Partnership's profits.  Regulation
Section 1.752-3.  For this purpose, the Partnership Agreement provides for
the allocation of excess nonrecourse deductions of 90% to the Investor
Partners and 10% to the Managing General Partner.

      Retroactive Allocations.  To prevent retroactive allocations of
partnership tax attributes to partners entering into a partnership late in
the tax year, Code Section 706(d) provides that a partner's distributive
share of such attributes is to be determined by the use of methods
prescribed by the Treasury Secretary which take into account the varying
interests of the partners during the taxable year.

      The Partnership Agreement, at Section 3.04(c), provides that each
Partner's allocation of tax items other than "allocable cash basis items"
is to be determined under a method permitted by Code Section 706(d) and
the regulations thereunder.  With respect to "allocable cash basis items,"
Section 3.04(c) requires an allocation in accordance with the requirements
of Code Section 706(d).

      Accordingly, the Partnership allocations should be considered to be in
accordance with the provisions of Code Section 706(d).


                            PROFIT MOTIVE

      The existence of economic, nontax motives for entering into the
Transaction is essential if the Partners are to obtain the tax benefits
associated with an investment in the Partnership.<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-47

      Code Section 183(a) provides that where an activity entered into by an
individual is not engaged in for profit, no deduction attributable to that
activity will be allowed except as provided therein.  Should it be
determined that a Partner's activities with respect to the Transaction
fall within the "not for profit" ambit of Code Section 183, the Service
could disallow all or a portion of the deductions and credits generated by
the Partnership's activities.

      Code Section 183(d) generally provides for a presumption that an
activity is entered into for profit within the meaning of the statute
where gross income from the activity exceeds the deductions attributable
to such activity for three or more of the five consecutive taxable years
ending with the taxable year in question.  At the taxpayer's election,
such presumption can relate to three or more of the taxable years in the
5-year period beginning with the taxable year in which the taxpayer first
engages in the activity.  Temp. Treas. Reg. Section 12.9.  Whether an
activity is engaged in for profit is determined under Code Sections 162
(relating to trade or business deductions) and 212(1) and (2) (relating to
income producing deductions) except insofar as the above-described
presumption applies.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.183-1(a).

      To establish that he is engaged in either a trade or business or an
income producing activity, a Partner must be able to prove that he is
engaged in the Transaction with an "actual and honest profit objective,"
Fox v. Commissioner, 80 T.C. 972, 1006 (1983), aff'd sub nom., Barnard v.
Commissioner, 731 F.2d 230 (4th Cir. 1984), and that his profit objective
is bona fide.  Bessenyey v. Commissioner, 45 T.C. 261, 274 (1965), aff'd,
379 F.2d 252 (2d Cir. 1967), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 931 (1967).  The
inquiry turns on whether the primary purpose and intention of the Partner
in engaging in the activity is, in fact, to make a profit apart from tax
considerations.  Hager v. Commissioner, 76 T.C. 759, 784.  Such objective
need not be reasonable, only honest, and the question of objective is to
be determined from all the facts and circumstances.  Sutton v.
Commissioner, 84 T.C. 210 (1985), aff'd, 788 F.2d 695 (11th Cir. 1986). 
Among the factors that will normally be considered are:  (i) the manner in
which the taxpayer carries on the activity, (ii) the expertise of the
taxpayer or his advisors, (iii) the time and effort expended by the
taxpayer in carrying on the activity, (iv) whether an expectation exists
that the assets used in the activity may appreciate in value, (v) the
success of the taxpayer in carrying on similar or dissimilar activities,
(vi) the taxpayer's history of income or losses with respect to the
activity, (vii) the amount of occasional profits, if any, which are
earned, and (viii) the financial status of the taxpayer.  Treas. Reg.
Section 1.183-2(b).  Where application of such factors to a particular
activity is difficult, however, the Court will consider the totality of
the circumstances instead.  Estate of Baron v. Commissioner, 83 T.C. 542
(1984), aff'd, 798 F.2d 65 (2d Cir. 1986).

      As noted, the issue is one of fact to be resolved not on the basis of
any one factor but on the basis of all the facts and circumstances. 
Treas. Reg. Section 1.183-2(b).  Greater weight is given to objective
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-48

facts than the parties' mere statements of their intent.  Siegel v.
Commissioner, 78 T.C. 659, Engdahl v. Commissioner, 72 T.C. 659 (1979). 
Nevertheless, the Courts have recognized, in applying Code Section 183,
that "a taxpayer has the right to engage in a venture which has economic
substance even though his motivation in the early years of the venture may
have been to obtain a deduction to offset taxable income."  Lemmen v.
Commissioner, 77 T.C. 1326, 1346 (1981), acq., 1983-1 C.B. 1.

      Due to the inherently factual nature of a Partner's intent and motive
in engaging in the Transaction, we do not express an opinion as to the
ultimate resolution of this issue in the event of a challenge by the
Service.  Partners must, however, seek to make a profit from their
activities with respect to the Transaction beyond any tax benefits derived
from those activities or risk losing those tax benefits.


                           TAX AUDITS

      Subchapter C of Chapter 63 of the Code provides that administrative
proceedings for the assessment and collection of tax deficiencies
attributable to a partnership must be conducted at the partnership, rather
than the partner, level.  Partners will be required to treat Partnership
items of income, gain, loss, deduction, and credit in a manner consistent
with the treatment of each such item on the Partnership's returns unless
such Partner files a statement with the Service identifying the
inconsistency.  If the Partnership is audited, the tax treatment of each
item will be determined at the Partnership level in a unified partnership
proceeding.  Conforming adjustments to the Partners' own returns will then
occur unless such partner can establish a basis for inconsistent treatment
(subject to waiver by the Service).

      PDC will be designated the "tax matters partner" ("TMP") for the
Partnership and will receive notice of the commencement of a Partnership
proceeding and notice of any administrative adjustments of Partnership
items.  The TMP is entitled to invoke judicial review of administrative
determinations and to extend the period of limitations for assessment of
adjustments attributable to Partnership items.  Each Partner will receive
notice of the administrative proceedings from the TMP and will have the
right to participate in the administrative proceeding pursuant to tax
requirements of Regulation Section 301.6223(g) unless the Partner waives
such rights.

      The Code provides that, subject to waiver, partners will receive
notice of the administrative proceedings from the Service and will have the
right to participate in the administrative proceedings.  However, the Code
also provides that if a partnership has 100 or more partners, the partners
with less than a 1% profits interest will not be entitled to receive notice
from the Service or participate in the proceedings unless they are members
of a "notice group" (a group of partners having in the aggregate a 5% or
more profits interest in the partnership that requires the Service to send
notice to the group and that designates one of their members to receive
notice).  Any settlement agreement entered into between the Service and<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-49

one or more of the partners will be binding on such partners but will not
be binding on the other partners, except that settlement by the TMP may be
binding on certain partners, as described below.  The Service must, on
request, offer consistent settlement terms to the partners who had not
entered into the earlier settlement agreement.  If a partnership has more
than 100 partners, the TMP is empowered under the Code to enter into
binding settlement agreements on behalf of the partners with a less than
1% profits interest unless the partner is a member of a notice group or
notifies the Service that the TMP does not have the authority to bind the
partner in such a settlement.

      BY EXECUTING THE PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT EACH PARTNER RESPECTIVELY
REPRESENTS, WARRANTS, AND AGREES THAT HE WILL NOT FORM OR EXERCISE ANY
RIGHT AS A MEMBER OF A NOTICE GROUP AND WILL NOT FILE A STATEMENT
NOTIFYING THE SERVICE THAT THE TMP DOES NOT HAVE BINDING SETTLEMENT
AUTHORITY.  Such waiver is permitted under the partnership audit
provisions of the Code and will be binding on the Partners.

      The costs incurred by a Partner in responding to an administrative
proceeding will be borne solely by such Partner.


                            PENALTIES

      Under IRC Section 6662, a taxpayer will be assessed a penalty equal to
twenty percent (20%) of the portion of an underpayment of tax attributable
to negligence, disregard of a rule or regulation or a substantial
understatement of tax.  "Negligence" includes any failure to make a
reasonable attempt to comply with the tax laws.  IRC Section 6662(c).  The
regulations further provide that a position with respect to an item is
attributable to negligence if it lacks a reasonable basis.  Treas. Reg.
Section 1.6662-3(b)(1).  Negligence is strongly indicated where, for
example, a partner fails to comply with the requirements of IRC
Section 6662, which requires that a partner treat partnership items on its
return in a manner that is consistent with the treatment of such items on
the partnership return.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.6662-3(b)(1)(iii).  The
term "disregard" includes any careless, reckless or intentional disregard
of rules or regulations.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.6662-3(b)(2).  A taxpayer
who takes a position contrary to a revenue ruling or a notice will be
subject to a penalty for intentional disregard if the contrary position
fails to possess a realistic possibility of being sustained on its merits. 
Treas. Reg. Section 1.6562-3(b)(2).  An "understatement" is defined as the
excess of the amount of tax required to be shown on the return of the
taxable year over the amount of the tax imposed that is actually shown on
the return, reduced by any rebate.  IRC Section 6662(d)(2)(A).  An
understatement is "substantial" if it exceeds the greater of ten percent
(10%) of the tax required to be shown on the return for the taxable year
or $5,000 ($10,000 in the case of certain corporations).  IRC
Section 6662(d)(1)(A) and (B).
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-50

      Generally, for tax returns with due dates (determined without regard
to extensions) after December 31, 1993, the amount of an understatement is
reduced by the portion thereof attributable to (i) the tax treatment of
any item by the taxpayer if there is or was substantial authority for such
treatment, or (ii) any item if the relevant facts affecting the item's tax
treatment are adequately disclosed in the return or in a statement
attached to the return, and there is a reasonable basis for the tax
treatment of such item by the taxpayer. IRC Section 6662(d).  Disclosure
will generally be adequate if made on a properly completed Form 8275
(Disclosure Statement) or Form 8275R (Regulation Disclosure Statement)
Treas. Reg. Section 1.6662-4(f).  However, in the case of "tax shelters,"
there will be a reduction of the understatement only to the extent it is
attributable to the treatment of an item by the taxpayer with respect to
which there is or was substantial authority for such treatment and only if
the taxpayer reasonably believed that the treatment of such item by the
taxpayer was more likely than not the proper treatment.  Moreover, under
the GATT legislation, a corporation must generally satisfy a higher
standard to avoid a substantial understatement penalty in the case of a
tax shelter.  IRC Section 6662(d)(2)(C)(ii).  The term "tax shelter" is
defined for purposes of Code Section 6662 as a partnership or other
entity, any investment plan or arrangement, or any other plan or
arrangement, the principal purpose of which is the avoidance or evasion of
federal income tax.  IRC Section 6662(d)(2)(C)(ii).  It is important to
note that this definition of "tax shelter" differs from that contained in
Code Sections 461 and 6111, as discussed above.  A tax shelter item
includes an item of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit that is
directly or indirectly attributable to a partnership that is formed for
the principal purpose of avoiding or evading federal income tax.  The
existence of substantial authority is determined as of the time the
taxpayer's return is filed or on the last day of the taxable year to which
the return relates and not when the investment is made.  Treas. Reg.
Section 1.6662-4(d)(3)(iv)(C).  Substantial authority exists if the weight
of authorities supporting a position is substantial compared with the
weight of authorities supporting contrary treatment.  Treas. Reg.
Section 1.6662-4(d)(3)(i).  Relevant authorities included statutes,
Regulations, court cases, revenue rulings and procedures, and
Congressional intent.  However, among other things, conclusions reached in
legal opinions are not considered authority.  Treas. Reg. Section 1.6662-
4(d)(3)(iii).  The Secretary may waive all or a portion of the penalty
imposed under Code Section 6662 upon a showing by the taxpayer that there
was reasonable cause for the understatement and that the taxpayer acted in
good faith.  IRC Section 6664(d).

      Although not anticipated by PDC, there may not be substantial
authority for one or more reporting positions that the Partnership may
take in its federal income tax returns.  In such event, if the Partnership
does not disclose or if it fails to adequately disclose any such position,
or if such disclosure is deemed adequate but it is determined that there
was no reasonable basis for the tax treatment of such a partnership item,
the penalty will be imposed with respect to any substantial understatement
determined to have been made, unless the provisions of the Regulations<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-51

pertaining to waiver of the penalty become final and the Partnership is
able to show reasonable cause and good faith in making the understatement
as specified in such provisions.  If the Partnership makes a disclosure
for the purposes of avoiding the penalty, the disclosure is likely to
result in an audit of such return and a challenge by the Service of such
position taken.

      If it were determined that a Partner had underpaid tax for any taxable
year, such Partner would have to pay the amount of underpayment plus
interest on the underpayment from the date the tax was originally due. 
The interest rate on underpayments is determined by the Service based upon
the federal short term rate of interest (as defined in Code
Section 1274(d)) plus 3%, or 5% for large corporate underpayments, and is
compounded daily.  The rate of interest is adjusted monthly.  In addition,
Temporary Regulations provide that tax motivated transactions include,
among other items, certain overstatements of the value of property on a
return, losses disallowed by reason of the at-risk limitation, any use of
an accounting method that may result in a substantial distortion of income
for any period, and any deduction disallowed for an activity not entered
into for profit.  Although definitive Regulations have not been
promulgated, the determination of those transactions to be considered
"tax-motivated transactions" is to be made by taking into account the
ratio of tax benefits to cash invested, the method of promoting the
transaction, and other relevant transactions.  Thus, in the event an audit
of the Partnership's or of a Partner's tax return results in a substantial
underpayment of tax by such Partner due to an investment in the Units,
such Partner may be required to pay interest on such underpayment
determined at the higher interest rate.

      A partnership, for federal income tax purposes, is required to file an
annual informational tax return.  The failure to properly file such a
return in a timely fashion, or the failure to show on such return all
information under the Code to be shown on such return, unless such failure
is due to reasonable cause, subjects the partnership to civil penalties
under the Code in an amount equal to $50 per month multiplied by the
number of partners in the partnership, up to a maximum of $250 per partner
per year.  In addition, upon any willful failure to file a partnership
information return, a fine or other criminal penalty may be imposed on the
party responsible for filing the return.


                      ACCOUNTING METHODS AND PERIODS

      The Partnership will use the accrual method of accounting and will
select the calendar year as its taxable year.

      As discussed above, a taxpayer using the accrual method of accounting
will recognize income when all events have occurred which fix the right to
receive such income and the amount thereof can be determined with
reasonable accuracy.  Deductions will be recognized when all events which
establish liability have occurred and the amount thereof can be determined<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-52

with reasonable accuracy.  However, all events which establish liability
are not treated as having occurred prior to the time that economic
performance occurs.  Code Section 461(h).

      All partnerships are required to conform their tax years to those of
their owners; i.e., unless the partnership establishes a business purpose
for a different tax year, the tax year of a partnership must be (i) the
taxable year of one or more of its partners who have an aggregate interest
in partnership profits and capital of greater than 50%, (ii) if there is
no taxable year so described, the taxable year of all partners having
interests of 5% or more in partnership profits or capital, or (iii) if
there is no taxable year described in (i) or (ii), the calendar year. 
Code Section 706.  Until the taxable years of the Partners can be
identified, no assurance can be given that the Service will permit the
Partnership to adopt a calendar year.


              SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS; SELF-EMPLOYMENT TAX

      The Social Security Act and the Code exclude from the definition of
"net earnings from self-employment" a limited partner's (but not a general
partner's) distributive share of any item of income or loss from a
partnership other than a guaranteed payment for personal services actually
rendered.  The determination of whether a particular activity is a trade
or business for the purposes of the self-employment tax is based on all of
the facts and circumstances surrounding the activity.  Because of the
present uncertainty in the law, there can be no assurance that a General
Partner's share of income from the sale of production will not constitute
self-employment income.  PDC, in the preparation of the information tax
returns for the Partnership, will make the determination of whether to
report income from the sale of production as income from self-employment
based upon guidance from tax advisors.  Thus, a General Partner's share of
any income or loss attributable to his investment in Units may constitute
"net earnings from self-employment" for both social security and self-
employment tax purposes and, if any General Partners are receiving Social
Security benefits, their taxable income attributable to their investment
in the Units must be taken into account in determining any reduction in
benefits because of "excess earnings."


                         STATE AND LOCAL TAXES

      The opinions expressed herein are limited to issues of federal income
tax law and do not address issues of state or local law.  Investors are
urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the impact of state and
local laws on an investment in the Partnership.


                  PROPOSED LEGISLATION AND REGULATIONS
<PAGE>
Petroleum Development Corporation
May 31, 1996
Page D-53

      There can be no assurances that subsequent changes in the tax laws
(through new legislation, court decisions, Service pronouncements,
Treasury regulations, or otherwise) will or will not occur that may have
an impact, adverse or positive, on the tax effect and consequences of this
Transaction, as described above.

      We express no opinion as to any federal income tax issue or other
matter except those set forth or confirmed above.

      We hereby consent to the filing of this opinion as Appendix D to the
Prospectus and to all references to our firm in the Prospectus.

                                Sincerely,


                                /s/ METZGER, HOLLIS, GORDON &     Alprin
    

<PAGE>
             PART II.  INFORMATION NOT REQUIRED IN PROSPECTUS

Item 16.  Exhibits and Financial Schedules.

    (a)                  Exhibits.

         (1)(a)          Dealer Manager Agreement

         (1)(b).         Selling Dealer Agreement.     

         (3)(a).         Form of Limited Partnership Agreement (included as
                         Appendix A to the prospectus, which is filed as 
                         a part of this Registration Statement).

         (8).            Opinion of Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin    
                         as to various tax matters discussed in the
                         prospectus (included as Appendix D to the
                         prospectus, which is
                         filed as a part of this Registration Statement).

       

         (23)(a).        Consent of Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin
                              (included in Part II of Registration
                         Statement).

         (23)(b).        Consent of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP (included in 
                         Part II of Registration Statement).

         (23)(c).        Consent of Wright & Company, Inc. (included in
                         Part II of Registration Statement).

    (b)         Financial Statement Schedules:

                None.


Item 17.  Undertakings.

    The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:

    (1)  To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made,
a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:

           (i)  To include any prospectus required by section 10(a(3) of the
           Securities Act of 1933;

           (ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising
           after the effective date of the registration statement (or the
           most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually
           or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the
           information set forth in the registration statement;

           (iii) To include any material information with respect to the
           plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration
           statement or any material change to such information in the
           registration statement;

    (2)  That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the
Securities Act of 1933, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed
to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered
therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed
to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

    (3)  To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment
any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the
termination of the offering.

    (4)  The registrant will not identify to any third party any prospects
which will go into or are likely to be placed into the program, or are
representative of prospects which may be placed in the program, whether
such third party is a selling dealer or other party involved with making
or directing investment decisions regarding the purchase of program
interests, except to the extent such prospects have been identified in the
prospectus or an amendment thereto.
                                                               - 2 -<PAGE>
    (5)  To the extent a review of prospects or lease inventory is permitted
to third parties, it will be:

    (a)      only incidental to an underwriter's due diligence examination;

    (b)      no reference to any specific property (unless such property is
             described in the prospectus or an amendment) will appear in any
             analysis or report on the program prepared by such third party; 
            and

    (c)      any third party, prior to receiving permission to examine
             properties will agree to the above conditions, and registrant
             will file a copy of such agreement(s) as an exhibit to the
             registration statement.

    (6)      No prospective investors or their representatives will be
permitted to examine any prospects or inventory or data related thereto
which is not described in the prospectus or an amendment thereto.

    (7)      An annual report on Form 10-K will be filed at the conclusion
of the fiscal year following the year in which the registration statement is
declared effective.

    (8)      A Form 8-K or final SR to reflect the expenditure of the
proceeds of the offering will be filed.

    (9)      Any revised prospectuses required by the provisions of Section
10(a)(3) of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, will be filed as post-
effective amendments to the registration statement.

    (10)         For the purpose of determining any liability under said Act
(without thereby affecting the original effective date of this
registration statement for the purpose of Section 10(a)(3) of said Act)
each such post-effective amendment may be deemed to be a new registration
statement relating to the securities offered thereby, and the offering of
such securities at that time may be deemed to be the initial bona fide
offering thereof and that such post-effective amendment will comply with
the applicable forms and rules and regulations of the Commission in effect
at the time such post-effective amendment is filed.

    (11)         The prospectus will be supplemented at the close of any
partnership to state the number of participants in that partnership, the
amount of participation sold therein, the cumulative amount sold under all
partnerships formed under the subject registration statement, the amount
of interests to be offered in the next partnership and in succeeding
partnerships to be formed under this registration statement.

    (12)         The Registrant undertakes to send to each Investor Partner
at least on an annual basis a detailed statement of any transactions with
the Managing General Partner or its Affiliates, and of fees, commissions,
compensation, and other benefits paid, or accrued to the Managing General
Partner or its Affiliates for the fiscal year completed, showing the
amount paid or accrued to each recipient and the services performed.

                                                               - 3- 
<PAGE>
    (13)         The Registrant undertakes to send to the Investor Partners,
within 45 days after the close of each quarterly fiscal period, the 
information specified by the Form 10-Q, if such report is required to be
filed with the Commission.

    (14)         The Registrant undertakes to provide to the Investor
Partners the financial statements required by Form 10-K for the first full
fiscal year of operations of the Partnership.

    (15)         The undersigned Registrant hereby undertakes to provide to
the Underwriter at the closing specified in the underwriting agreements
certificates in such denominations and registered in such names as
required by the Underwriter to permit prompt deliver to each purchaser.

    The registrant undertakes to file a sticker supplement pursuant to Rule
424(c) under the Act during the distribution period describing each
property not identified in the prospectus at such time as there arises a
reasonable probability that such property will be acquired and to
consolidate all such stickers into a post-effective amendment filed at
least once every three months, with the information contained in such
amendment provided simultaneously to the existing Limited Partners.  Each
sticker supplement should disclose all compensation and fees received by
the General Partner(s) and its affiliates in connection with any such
acquisition.  The post-effective amendment shall include audited financial
statements meeting the requirements of Rule 3-05 of Regulation S-X only
for properties acquired during the distribution period.

    The registrant also undertakes to file, after the end of the
distribution period, a current report on Form 8-K containing the financial
statements and any additional information required by Rule 3-05 of
Regulation S-X, to reflect each commitment (i.e., the signing of a binding
purchase agreement) made after the end of the distribution period
involving the use of 10 percent or more (on a cumulative basis) of the net
proceeds of the offering and to provide the information contained in such
report to the Limited Partners at least once each quarter after the
distribution period of the offering has ended.

    Insofar as indemnification for liability arising under the Securities
Act of 1933 may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling
persons of the Registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions, or
otherwise, the Registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the
Securities and Exchange Commission such indemnification is against public
policy as expressed in the Act and is, therefore, unenforceable.  In the
event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other
than the payment by the Registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a
director, officer or controlling person of the Registrant in the
successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such
director, officer or controlling person in connection with the securities
being registered, the Registrant will, unless in the opinion of its
counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a
court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such
indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Act and
will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

                                                               - 4 -
<PAGE>
                                                            SIGNATURES

           Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the
Registrant has duly caused this Registration Statement to be signed on its
behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of
Bridgeport, State of West Virginia, on June 13, 1996.

                                               PDC 1996-1997 Drilling
Program
                                                                       
(Registrant)
                              By:      Petroleum Development Corporation,
                                       a Nevada corporation,
                                       Managing General Partner

                      
                                        /s/ Steven R. Williams
                               By:      Steven R. Williams, President
                                        of the Managing General Partner

      Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed by the following persons in the
capacities and on the dates indicated.
Signature                      Title                        Date


/s/ James N. Ryan       Chairman of the Board           June 13, 1996
James N. Ryan           (Principal Executive
                         Officer)


/s/ Steven R. Williams   President and Director         June 13, 1996
Steven R. Williams


/s/ Dale G. Rettinger    Executive Vice                 June 13, 1996
Dale G. Rettinger        President, Treasurer, 
                         and Director
                         (Principal Financial
                          Officer and Principal
                          Accounting Officer)

/s/ Roger J. Morgan      Secretary and Director         June 13, 1996
Roger J. Morgan



                              - 5 - 
<PAGE>
The following index lists the Exhibits which are being filed in connection
with this Form S-1.

<PAGE>
                                                           EXHIBIT INDEX


NUMBER                DESCRIPTION                                         
PAGE
   
(1)(a).               Dealer Manager Agreement

(1)(b).               Selling Dealer Agreement.    

       

(23)(a).              Consent of Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     
(included
                      in Part II of Registrant Statement).

(23)(b).              Consent of KPMG Peat Marwick LLP (included in Part 
                      II of Registration Statement).

(23)(c).              Consent of Wright & Company, Inc. (included in Part II
of
                      Registration Statement).


<PAGE>








                              EXHIBIT (1) (a)



                          Dealer-Manager Agreement
<PAGE>
                        PDC 1996-1997 Drilling Program

                           DEALER/MANAGER AGREEMENT


                                               , 1996



PDC Securities Incorporated
103 E. Main Street
Bridgeport, West Virginia  26330

Dear Sirs:

    The undersigned, Petroleum Development Corporation, a Nevada
corporation ("PDC"), the Managing General Partner of PDC 1996-1997
Drilling Program, a series of  limited partnerships to be organized under
the laws of West Virginia (the "Partnership"), hereby confirms and agrees
as follows:

    1. General.  This Agreement sets forth the understandings and
agreements between PDC and you whereby, subject to the terms and
conditions contained herein, you will offer to sell, on a best efforts
basis, preformation partnership interests in the Partnership (the "Units")
which are described more fully in a Prospectus (the "Prospectus").  The
date as of which you are notified by PDC that Units may be offered and
sold shall constitute the "Effective Date" of the offering of Units under
this Agreement.  The "Termination Date" of such offering shall be (a)
December 31, 1996 with respect to the 1996 partnerships and December 31,
1997 with respect to the 1997 partnerships or (b) such earlier date on
which Subscriptions (as hereinafter defined) for all of the Units have
been sold in accordance with the procedures and the minimums set forth in
the Prospectus.  The period from the Effective Date through the
Termination Date shall constitute the "Offering Period" for the offering
and sale of Units by you pursuant to this Agreement.  During the Offering
Period, you, the Soliciting Dealers (hereinafter designated) and PDC shall
designate a date, which date shall not be more than ten business days
after the Termination Date, which shall constitute the "Closing Date"
under this Agreement.

    2. Representations and Warranties of PDC.  PDC represents and warrants
to you that:

       (a)     PDC has prepared and reviewed the Prospectus, and the
Prospectus does not include and will not include during the Offering
Period any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material
fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements
therein not misleading; provided, however, that no representations or
warranties are made with respect to statements or omissions made in
reliance upon and in conformity with written information furnished to PDC
with respect to you, by you or on your behalf expressly for use in the
Prospectus or any amendment or supplement thereof;

       (b)     The Partnership, upon the due execution of the Partnership
Agreement in the Prospectus (the "Partnership Agreement") and the filing
of a certificate of limited partnership as required under the laws of the
State of West Virginia, will be a limited partnership duly formed and
validly existing pursuant to the Uniform Limited Partnership Act of the
State of West Virginia (the "West Virginia Act"), with all authority
necessary to acquire, own and manage the investments which are

                              1
<PAGE>
described as proposed investments of the Partnership in the Prospectus and 
to conduct the business which it proposes to conduct, all as described in
the Prospectus; the Partnership Agreement pursuant to which the 
Partnership will be organized provides for the issuance and sale of the
Units; all action required to be taken by PDC or the Partnership as a
condition to the offering or sale of the Units to qualified subscribers
has been or, prior to the Effective Date, will have been taken; upon
payment of the consideration therefor specified in the Subscription
Agreement contained in the Prospectus and the due execution and delivery
to PDC of the Subscription Documents (as hereinafter described) by each
subscriber for the Units (the "Subscription"), acceptance of such
Subscription by PDC, the execution of the Partnership Agreement by PDC as
managing general partner and on behalf of such subscribers pursuant to the
terms of the Partnership Agreement and execution and filing for record of
a certificate of limited partnership of the Partnership (the
"Certificate") as shall be required or appropriate to organize the
Partnership with the accepted subscribers for the Units as additional
general or limited partners in accordance with the requirements of the
West Virginia Act, such subscribers will become additional general or
limited partners of the Partnership (the " Partners") entitled to all the
benefits of Partners under the Partnership Agreement and the West Virginia
Act; 

       (c)     The Units, when issued, will constitute valid partnership
interests in accordance with the terms of, and shall be entitled to the
rights provided in, the Partnership Agreement and the West Virginia Act,
will be fully paid upon payment in cash of the consideration therefor
specified in the Subscription Agreement contained in the Prospectus, and
the liability of a Partner to make payments to the Partnership or on
behalf of the Partnership may or may not be limited to the amount which
such Partner has agreed to pay in accordance with the terms of his
Subscription and the Partnership Agreement depending on whether he chooses
to be an additional general or limited partner; 

       (d)     PDC has been, and on the Closing Date will be, duly and
validly organized and validly existing as a corporation in good standing
under the laws of the State of Nevada; has all requisite power and
authority to act as a Managing General Partner of the Partnership; is or
will be qualified to do business and in good standing as a foreign
corporation in each other jurisdiction in which its acting in such
capacity requires or may require such qualification if the failure to so
qualify might result in material adverse consequences to the Partnership;
has the requisite power and authority and all necessary authorization,
approvals and orders required as of the date hereof to enter into this
Agreement and the Limited Partnership Agreement and to be bound by the
provisions and conditions hereof and thereof; and its audited balance
sheet included in the Prospectus presents fairly its financial position as
at the date indicated; said balance sheet has been prepared in conformity
with generally accepted accounting principles applied on a consistent
basis; and the certified public accountants whose report thereon is
included in the Prospectus are independent accountants as required by the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the "Act");

       (e)     Except to the extent disclosed in the Prospectus there is no
litigation or governmental proceeding pending or, to PDC's knowledge,
threatened  against, or involving the business or proposed business of,
the Partnership or PDC, which might materially and adversely affect the
proposed operations and business of the Partnership;



                              2
<PAGE>
       (f)     The condition, financial or otherwise, of PDC, and the
proposed business of the Partnership, conform in all material respects to
the descriptions thereof contained in the Prospectus;

       (g)     Neither the execution and delivery of this Agreement and the
Partnership Agreement, the incurrence of the obligations herein and
therein set forth, the consummation of the transactions herein and therein
contemplated, nor compliance with the terms and provisions hereof or
thereof, will conflict with or result in a breach or violation of any of
the terms, provisions or conditions of any agreement or instrument to
which PDC is a party or by which it is bound, or any order, rule or
regulation applicable to PDC of any court or any governmental body or
administrative agency having jurisdiction over PDC;

       (h)     The Units, when issued, will conform to the descriptions
thereof contained in the Prospectus; and the Prospects (as defined in the
Prospectus) as proposed to be owned by the Partnership conform in all
material respects to the description thereof in the Prospectus;

       (i)     This Agreement has been duly and validly authorized, executed
and delivered by or on behalf of PDC and constitutes the valid and binding
agreement of PDC;

       (j)     The Partnership Agreement, upon its execution by PDC will
have been duly and validly authorized, executed and delivered by or on
behalf of PDC as the Managing General Partner and will constitute the
valid and binding agreement of the Managing General Partner; and 

       (k)     Neither PDC nor any of its affiliates has offered for sale or
sold any Units or interests in the Partnership or other securities
(collectively referred to herein as "Prior Offerings") which, under
present applicable law, would result in the integration of Prior Offerings
with the offering and sale of the Units by you as contemplated in this
Agreement.

    3. Offering and Sale of Units.

       (a)     On the basis of the representations, warranties and
agreements herein contained, but subject to the terms and conditions herein
set forth, PDC hereby appoints you as the Dealer Manager during the Offering
Period to offer all of the Units to potential investors in the Partnership
in accordance with the terms of the Prospectus, and you agree to use your
best efforts as Dealer Manager, promptly following the Effective Date, to
offer the Units to suitable investors at the price and in accordance with
the terms stated in the Prospectus.

       (b)     The offering of Units by you and the Soliciting Dealers will
only be made to potential investors residing in the states listed on
Exhibit A to this Agreement without the prior consent of PDC.

       (c)     All sales of Units will be conditioned upon receipt of
Subscriptions from suitable investors acceptable to PDC for a minimum of
50 Units ($1,000,000)    ; $1,500,000 representing $75 units with respect
to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership    
(the "Minimum Offering") on or before the Termination Date.  All checks
received with Subscription Documents shall be made payable to "PNC Bank
N.A. as Escrow Agent for PDC 199 -  Limited Partnership" and shall be
transferred to the Escrow Agent by noon of the next business day after
receipt for deposit in the Escrow Account established pursuant to the
Prospectus.

       (d)     All sales of Units will be conditioned upon acceptance by PDC
of the Subscription Documents of each subscriber (consisting of the

                             3
<PAGE>
Subscription Agreement, all in the form as may be approved by you, the 
Soliciting Dealers and PDC, or as may be required by the Prospectus and
the Partnership Agreement), which shall be duly executed by each
subscriber and be accompanied by payment in cash of the purchase price of
Units subscribed to by each such subscriber.  PDC shall have the right, in
its sole discretion, to reject the Subscription of any potential purchaser
of Units.

       (e)     The Units will be sold only to persons who warrant or
represent that they or their beneficiaries meet the financial suitability
requirements as set forth in the Prospectus and such other requirements
may be required by the states in which the Units are sold.

       (f)     In consideration of your execution of this Agreement, and the
performance of your obligations hereunder, and in further consideration of
your supervising the offering of Units, PDC agrees to cause the
Partnership to pay to you, within ten (10) business days after the filing
of the Certificate, 10-1/2% of the Partnership Subscriptions (as defined in
the Partnership Agreement) received and accepted by PDC as of the Closing
Date, out of which you may pay commissions  totaling not more than 8% to
the Soliciting Dealer and reimbursement of due diligence expenses,
marketing support fees, and other compensation, totaling no more than 2%
to the Soliciting Dealer as provided in the Soliciting Dealers Agreement,
and from which you may retain 0.5% of the Partnership Subscriptions as a
wholesaling fee, provided, however, that in the event the Minimum Offering
        is not achieved on or before the Termination Date and this 
Agreement is terminated, neither you nor the Soliciting Dealers shall
receive any sales commissions or fees.  Total compensation to NASD
members under this agreement shall not exceed 10% of Subscriptions and
reimbursement of bona fide due diligence expenses shall not exceed 0.5%
of Subscriptions.  Prior to the time any partnership had reached the
Minimum Offering, the Managing General Partner shall advance from its
own funds sales commissions and due diligence expenses which would
otherwise be payable in connection with subscription funds received
and cleared from subscribers that the Managing General Partner deems
suitable to be Investor Partners.  

    4. Suitability.

       (a)     As Dealer-Manager, you are aware of the suitability
standards, as set forth in the Prospectus, that an offeree must meet
and represent.  As such, you will make reasonable inquiry and cause
the Soliciting Dealers to make reasonable inquiry to assure that there
is compliance with such standards.

       (b)     In recommending the purchase of Units in the Partnership,
you shall (and you shall cause the Soliciting Dealers to):

       (l)     Have reasonable grounds to believe, on the basis of
information obtained from the offeree concerning his investment
objectives, other investments, financial situation and needs, and any
other information known by you or any associated person, that:

               (i)     the offeree is or will be in a financial position
appropriate to enable him to realize to a significant extent the benefits
described in the Prospectus;

               (ii)    the offeree has a fair market net worth sufficient to
sustain the risks inherent in the program, including loss of investment
and lack of liquidity;

               (iii)   the program is otherwise suitable for the offeree;
and 

           (2)  Maintain in your file documents disclosing the basis upon
which the determination of suitability was reached as to each offeree.

                                 4
<PAGE>
       (c)     Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) above, you
shall not execute any transaction of Units of the Partnership in any
discretionary account without prior written approval of the transaction by
the offeree.

       (d)     Prior to executing a purchase transaction of Units of the
Partnership, you shall inform the offeree of all the pertinent facts
relating to the liquidity and marketability of the Units during the term
of the Partnership.

       5.  Disclosure.

       (a)     Prior to participating in the offering, you shall have
reasonable grounds to believe, based on information made available to you
by PDC through a prospectus or other materials, that all material facts
are adequately and accurately disclosed and provide a basis for evaluating
the program.

       (b)     In determining the adequacy of disclosed facts pursuant to
subsection (a) hereof, you shall obtain information on material facts
relating at a minimum to the following, if relevant in view of the nature
of the program:

           (1)  items of compensation;
           (2)  physical properties;
           (3)  tax aspects;
           (4)  financial stability and experience of PDC;
           (5)  the program's conflicts and risk factors; and
           (6)  appraisals and other pertinent reports.

       (c)  For the purposes of subsections (a) or (b) hereof, you may rely
upon the results of an inquiry conducted by another NASD member or
members, provided that:

           (1)  the member or persons associated with a member has
reasonable grounds to believe that such inquiry was conducted with due
care;

           (2)  the results of the inquiry were provided to you with the
consent of the member or members conducting or directing the inquiry; and

           (3)  no member that participated in the inquiry is a sponsor of
the program or an affiliate of such sponsor.

       6.  Covenants of PDC.  PDC covenants that it will:

       (a)  During the Offering Period and prior to the Closing Date,
notify you and the Soliciting Dealers immediately, and confirm the notice
in writing, of any event relating to or affecting the Partnership or PDC
which might reasonably result in the Prospectus containing an untrue
statement of a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in
order to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances
existing at the time they were made, not misleading; and if in the opinion
of counsel to PDC, the content of such disclosure to you requires an
amendment or supplement to the Prospectus, PDC will forthwith prepare and
furnish to you and the Soliciting Dealers, at PDC's expense, a reasonable
number of copies of such amendment or amendments, or supplement or
supplements, to the Prospectus so as to render it not misleading prior to
the consummation of any sale of Units to an Investor or any prospective
investor;

                                 5
<PAGE>
       (b)  Qualify or register the Units for offering and sale or make
filings under the securities laws of the states listed in Exhibit A to
this Agreement and such additional states as you or the Soliciting Dealers
may reasonably designate; provided, however, neither the Partnership nor
PDC shall be obligated to file any general consent to service of process
under the laws of any such jurisdiction or subject themselves to taxation
as doing business in such jurisdiction;

       (c)  File registration statements with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and applicable regulatory authorities of the States, as and
when such filings are required under the securities laws of those States,
and promptly furnish to you two signed or conformed copies thereof;

       (d)  Deliver promptly to you and the Soliciting Dealers, upon
request, true and complete copies of such contracts, notes, mortgages,
commitments, loan agreements and other documents relating to the formation
of the Partnership, the acquisition, ownership, operation and management
of any oil and gas properties or interests acquired or to be acquired by
the Partnership, the business experience and financial condition of PDC,
and such other information, financial or otherwise, relating to the
business, assets and liabilities of the Partnership or PDC, as you or the
Soliciting Dealers may reasonably request prior to the Closing Date;

       (e)  Deliver to you and the Soliciting Dealers one copy of each
report, letter, statement or other written information furnished by the
Partnership to the Partners during the term of the Partnership;

       (f)  Apply the proceeds of the sale of the Units substantially as
set forth in the Prospectus;

       (g)  From and after the Closing Date, not offer or sell interests in
the Partnership or other securities which offers or sales, in the opinion
of counsel to PDC, would be integrated with offers and sales of interest
in the Partnership pursuant to this Agreement.

       7.  Covenants of PDC Securities.  PDC Securities Incorporated
agrees:

       (a)  To offer the Units for sale and to sell the Units solely on the
basis of the information furnished to prospective investors in the
Prospectus.  If you prepare any materials or presentations supplementary
to the Prospectus, you assume complete responsibility for such materials
and presentations and agree to deliver no written information other than
the Prospectus to any potential subscriber unless authorized to do so in
writing by the Partnership;

       (b)  To obtain written evidence sufficient to permit you and PDC to
reasonably determine that a subscriber purporting to qualify is, in fact,
so qualified;

       (c)  Prior to obtaining a Subscription from any potential subscriber
to obtain evidence satisfactory to you and PDC that each subscriber meets
the financial suitability requirements established in the Prospectus;

       (d)  Not to commence the offer or sale of Units in any State until
you have received advice from PDC or its counsel that the Units may be
offered and sold in such state; and



                                 6
<PAGE>
       (e)  To furnish to PDC or its designee at PDC's request during the
Offering Period, and in any event within five (5) days after the 
Termination Date, the Subscription Documents (or true copies thereof) of
subscribers solicited by you to permit PDC or its designee to review such
Subscription Documents and to evaluate the qualifications of such
subscribers as potential Partners.

    8.  Payment of Expenses.  PDC will pay all expenses incident to the
performance of its obligations under this Agreement, including (a) the
preparation of the Prospectus, (b) the preparation of this Agreement, (c)
the fees and disbursements of PDC's counsel, accountants and consultants
related to the preparation of the Prospectus, (d) the qualification of the
Units for the offer and sale thereof under the securities laws of the
States and you or the Soliciting Dealers may reasonably designate,
including filing fees and the fees and disbursements of counsel in
connection therewith, and (e) the printing and delivery to you of such
quantities of the Prospectus as you may reasonably request and all
amendments or supplements thereto.

    9.  Closing Conditions.  Your obligation to deliver the Subscriptions
Documents to PDC for acceptance by it and funds received for Subscriptions
is subject to the satisfaction on or before the Closing Date (as above
defined) of the following conditions:

       (a)  You and the Soliciting Dealers shall have received the
favorable opinion of one or more of the special counsel or general counsel
for the Partnership or PDC, dated as of the Closing Date, to the effect
that

           (i)  the Partnership Agreement provides for the issuance and sale
of the Units; all action required to be taken by PDC or the Partnership as
a condition to the offering or sale of Units to subscribers has been
taken; subscribers purchasing Units will become Additional General
Partners or Limited Partners in the Partnership entitled to all the
benefits of Additional General Partners or Limited Partners under the
Partnership Agreement upon the occurrence of the following events:  the
acceptance by the Managing General Partner of such Partners, the payment
of the consideration therefor provided in the Subscription Documents, the
execution of the Partnership Agreement by PDC as Managing General Partner
and on behalf of the Partners as provided in the Limited Partnership
Agreement, and the execution and recordation by the Partnership of the
Certificate as shall be required or appropriate to organize the Partnership
with Investors as Additional General Partners or Limited Partners in
accordance with the requirements of the West Virginia Act;

           (ii)  the Partnership Agreement has been duly and validly
authorized and executed by PDC and constitutes the valid and binding
obligation of PDC;

           (iii)  this Agreement has been duly and validly authorized,
executed and delivered by PDC and constitutes the valid and binding
agreement of PDC;

           (iv)  to the best of their knowledge, there are no legal or
governmental proceedings pending or threatened against the Partnership or
PDC (or its Affiliates) of a character required to be disclosed in the
Prospectus which have not been so disclosed and no consent, approval,
authorization or order of any governmental agency or body is required in
connection with the consummation of the transactions contemplated by this
Agreement, the Prospectus, or the Partnership Agreement, except such as

                                 7
<PAGE>
 have been heretofore obtained and such as may be necessary under state
"Blue Sky" or securities laws;

           (v)  the Partnership will be classified as a partnership and not
as an association taxable as a corporation for Federal income tax
purposes.

       (b)  On the Effective Date and during the Offering no order
suspending the offering or sale of the Units shall have been issued, and
on the Effective Date and during the Offering Period no proceedings for
that purpose shall have been instituted, or to your knowledge or that of
PDC, shall be contemplated.

       (c)  You and the Soliciting Dealers shall have received a sworn
certificate, dated the Closing Date, signed by the President of PDC, to
the effect that he has carefully read the Prospectus and that:

           (i)  as of its date, the Prospectus did not contain an untrue
statement of a material fact and, to the best of his knowledge after
reasonable inquiry, did not omit to state a material fact necessary to
make the statements made therein, in light of the circumstances under
which they were made, not misleading;

           (ii)  since the date of the Prospectus, no event has occurred
which should have been set forth in an amendment or supplement to the
Prospectus which has not been so set forth;

           (iii)  since the date of the Prospectus, there has not been any
adverse change in the business or proposed business, interests, oil and
gas properties or proposed oil and gas properties or condition, financial
or otherwise, of the Partnership or PDC, whether or not arising from
transactions in the ordinary course of business, which might materially
and adversely affect the properties or operations or proposed properties
and operations of the Partnership or PDC or the ability of PDC to perform
the services proposed to be performed by it as described in the
Prospectus; and

           (iv)  to the best of his knowledge, based upon reasonable
investigation, the representations and warranties of PDC in Section 2 of
this Agreement are true and correct as if made at and as of the Closing
Date.

If any condition to your obligations hereunder shall not have been
fulfilled when and as required by this Agreement to be fulfilled, you may
waive any such condition which has not been fulfilled, extend the time for
its fulfillment or terminate this Agreement.  In the event that you elect
to terminate this Agreement, all Subscription Documents, checks and other
documents and instruments delivered to you for the purchase of the Units
shall be returned to the subscribers solicited by you, accompanied by a
notice from you of the cancellation and termination of the offering of the
Units.

       10.  Representations and Agreements to Survive.  Except as the
context otherwise requires, all representations, warranties and agreements
contained in this Agreement shall remain operative and in full force and
effect and shall survive the Closing Date.

       11.  Effective Date, Term and Termination of this Agreement.

           (a)  This Agreement shall become effective on the Effective Date.

You or PDC may elect to prevent this Agreement from

                                 8
<PAGE>
becoming effective without liability of any party to any other party by 
giving notice of such election to the other parties hereto before the time
this Agreement otherwise would become effective.

           (b)  You shall have the right to terminate this Agreement at any
time during the Offering Period if any representation or warranty
hereunder shall be found to have been incorrect or misleading or PDC shall
fail, refuse or be unable to perform any of its agreements hereunder or to
fulfill any condition of your obligations hereunder or if the Prospectus
shall have been amended or supplemented despite your objection to such
amendment or supplement or (i) if all trading on the New York Stock
Exchange or the American Stock Exchange (in this Section collectively
called "Exchange') shall have been suspended, or minimum or maximum prices
for trading generally shall have been fixed, or maximum ranges for prices
for all securities shall have been required on the Exchange by the
Exchange or by order of the Securities and Exchange Commission or any
other governmental authority having jurisdiction or (ii) if the United
States shall have become involved in a war or major hostilities or (iii)
if a banking moratorium has been declared by a state or Federal authority
or (iv) if PDC or its properties shall have sustained a material or
substantial loss by fire, flood, accident, earthquake or other calamity or
malicious act which, whether or not said loss shall have been insured,
will in your opinion make it inadvisable to proceed with the offering and
sale of the Units; or if there shall have been such change in the
condition or prospects of the Partnership or PDC or in the levels of the
prime interest rate or long-term mortgage rate or in the condition 
of securities markets generally as in your judgement would make it
inadvisable to proceed with the offering and sale of the Units.

       12.  Notices.

           (a)  All communications hereunder, except as herein otherwise
specifically provided, shall be in writing and if sent to you shall be
mailed, delivered, or telegraphed and confirmed to you at PDC Securities
Incorporated, 103 East Main Street, Bridgeport, West Virginia 26330,
Attention:  Dale G. Rettinger; if sent to PDC and/or the Partnership shall
be mailed, delivered or telegraphed and confirmed to PDC at 103 East Main
Street, P. O. Box 26, Bridgeport, West Virginia 26330.

           (b)  Notice shall be deemed to be given by you to PDC or the
Partnership or by PDC or the Partnership to you as of the third business
day after it is mailed or telegraphed as provided and confirmed to you at
PDC Securities Incorporated, 103 East Main Street, Bridgeport, West
Virginia 26330.

       13.  Parties.  This Agreement shall inure solely to the benefit of
you and shall be binding upon you and PDC and your respective successors
and assigns.  Nothing expressed or mentioned in this Agreement is intended
or shall be construed to give any person or corporation, other than the
parties hereto and their respective successors and assigns any legal or
equitable right, remedy or claim under or in respect of this Agreement or
any provision herein contained.  No purchaser of any of the Units from you
or PDC shall be construed a successor or assign by reason merely of such
purchase.

       14.  Construction.  This Agreement shall be construed in accordance
with the laws of the State of West Virginia.

If the foregoing correctly sets forth the understanding between us, please
so indicate in the space provided below for that purpose, whereupon this
letter shall constitute a binding agreement between us.

                                 9
<PAGE>
                       Very truly yours,


                       PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

                       By


                       Title
                                  President 

Accepted as of the date first above written.

PDC SECURITIES INCORPORATED

By                      


Title                   
       President











































                                 10<PAGE>



                              EXHIBIT (1) (b)



                         Selling Dealers Agreement
<PAGE>
                        PDC SECURITIES INCORPORATED
                            103 E. Main Street
                                P.O. Box 26
                     BRIDGEPORT, WEST VIRGINIA  26330
                              (304) 842-3597


                                                     , 199 

       
                  Selling Dealers Agreement


    RE:  PDC 1996-A, B, C, and D and 1997-A, B, C, and D
      (a Series of Limited Partnerships to be organized)


3~
1~
2~

Dear 4~:

     We have entered into a Dealer Manager Agreement (the "Dealer Manager
Agreement") with Petroleum Development Corporation, a Nevada corporation
("PDC"), the proposed Managing General Partner of PDC 1996-A, B, C, and D
and 1997-A, B, C, and D, a series of limited partnerships to be formed under
the laws of West Virginia (the "Partnership"), under which we have agreed to
use our best efforts to place with qualified investors preformation
partnership interests in the Partnership ("Units").  PDC and the Partnership
are offering up to $50,000,000 of Units consisting of 2,500 Units at a price
of $20,000 per Unit with fractional Units available as described in the
Partnership's Offering Prospectus, dated    December 19, 1995 (the
"Prospectus"), a copy of which has previously been furnished to you.

     In connection with the performance of our obligations under the Dealer
Manager Agreement, we are authorized to engage you as a soliciting dealer
for the offer and sale of Units, to pay you all or a portion of our
commissions and fees  for Units sold by you, all as is more fully set forth
herein.  In further consideration of your participation in the offering and
sale of the Units, and  as an inducement to you to become a soliciting
dealer, PDC, by its execution of this Agreement, agrees to extend to you
certain of the benefits provided to us in the Dealer Manager Agreement, to
indemnify you against certain civil liabilities under the Securities Act of
1933, as amended (the "Act").  Unless the context otherwise requires, all of
the capitalized terms used herein shall have the meaning given to such terms
in the Dealer Manager Agreement or in the Prospectus.  You are hereby
invited to become a soliciting dealer and, as such, to use your best efforts
to procure purchasers of Units in accordance with the terms and provisions
of this Agreement.

     1.  Representations and Warranties of PDC.  All of the representations
and warranties contained in Section 2 of the Dealer Manager Agreement are
incorporated herein by this reference and given to you by PDC as though
fully set forth herein.

     2.  Offering and Sale of Units.

         (a)  On the basis of the representations, warranties and agreements
herein contained, but subject to the terms and conditions herein set forth,
we hereby appoint you as a soliciting dealer during the Offering Period to
offer to potential investors in the Partnership in accordance with the terms
of the Prospectus up to 2,500 Units, and you agree to use your best efforts
as 

                                  MEMBER
          NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF SECURITIES DEALERS, INC. (NASD)
             SECURITIES INVESTOR PROTECTION CORPORATION (SIPC)
<PAGE>
soliciting dealer, promptly following the Effective Date, to offer and sell
such number of Units to potential investors at the price and in accordance
with the terms stated in the Prospectus.

     (b) All sales of Units will be conditioned upon acceptance by PDC of
the Subscriptions Documents of each subscriber to Units consisting of the
Subscription Agreement, duly executed by each such subscriber and
accompanied by payment of the purchase price of Units subscribed to by each
subscriber.  PDC shall have the right, in its sole discretion, to reject the
Subscription of any potential purchaser of Units.  

     (c) The offering of Units by you will be made to potential investors
solely in the states in which you are registered to sell and listed in
Exhibit A to this Agreement.

     (d) The Units will be offered and sold by you only to persons who
warrant or represent that they or their beneficiaries meet the financial
suitability requirements as set forth in the Prospectus and such other
conditions as may be required by the states in which the Units are offered
or sold.

     (e) Subject to the terms and conditions herein set forth, we agree that
we shall pay to you commissions equal to 8% and a due diligence fee of 2%
(which 2% fee expressly includes an expense allowance and marketing support
fees, as wells as due diligence fees) of the Partnership Subscriptions of
subscribers whose Subscriptions were obtained by you in your capacity as
soliciting dealer pursuant to this Agreement, such commissions to be paid on
the date commissions are paid to us pursuant to the Dealer Manager
Agreement.  Total compensation to NASD members under this agreement shall
not exceed 9.5% of Subscriptions and reimbursement of bona fide due
diligence expenses shall not exceed 0.5% of Subscriptions.  Prior to the
time the partnership has been formed and funded, the Managing General
Partner will advance funds for payment of sales commissions and selling
expenses for units which have been accepted and cleared from its own funds.

     (f) Notwithstanding the provisions of Sections 2(e) of this Agreement,
you understand and agree that no commissions, fees or other compensation
shall be payable to us or to you if PDC has not received and accepted
Subscriptions aggregating at least $1,000,000     ($1,500,000 with respect
to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)     
by the Termination Date.

     3.  Subscription Payments.

         (a)  Payments received by us or you for Subscriptions shall be made
payable to "PNC Bank N.A. as Escrow Agent for PDC 1996-A [B, C, or D, or
1997-A, B, C, or D, as the case may be] Limited Partnership". 

         (b)  All such funds shall be transferred by you by noon of the next 
business day after receipt to PDC Securities Incorporated for transfer to
the Bank Escrow Agent by noon of the next business day after receipt for
deposit in escrow in accordance with the Prospectus.  In the event that the
($1,000,000)   ; $1,500,000 with respect to PDC 1996-D Limited Partnership
and PDC 1997-D Limited Partnership)     Minimum Offering is not achieved on
or before the Termination Date, all funds held in the Escrow Account shall,
within 10 days after the Termination Date, be returned directly to the
respective subscribers, together with a pro rata share of any interest
earned thereon.  In the event the Minimum Offering is achieved on or before
the Termination Date, all funds held in the Escrow Account attributable to
subscribers whose Subscriptions are rejected by PDC, together with any
interest earned thereon, as well as any interest earned on the funds of
subscribers whose Subscriptions are accepted by PDC, shall, within 10 days
after the filing of the Certificate, be returned or disbursed, as the case
may be, to such subscribers.

     4.  Suitability.

         (a)  As a soliciting dealer, you are aware of the suitability
standards, as set forth in the Prospectus, that an offeree must meet and
represent.  As such, you will make reasonable inquiry to assure that there
is compliance with such standards. <PAGE>
         (b)  In recommending the purchase of Units in the Partnership, you
shall:

              (1) Have reasonable grounds to believe, on the basis of
information obtained from the offeree concerning his investment objectives,
other investments, financial situation and needs, and any other information
known by you or any associated person, that: 

                  (i)    the offeree is or will be in a financial position
appropriate to enable him to realize to a significant extent the benefits
described in the Prospectus;

                  (ii)   the offeree has a fair market net worth sufficient
to sustain the risks inherent in the program, including loss of investment
and lack of liquidity;

                  (iii)  the program is otherwise suitable for the offeree;
and 

              (2) Maintain in your file documents disclosing the basis
upon which the determination of suitability was reached as to each
offeree.

         (c)  Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (b) above, you
shall not execute any transaction of Units of the Partnership in any
discretionary account without prior written approval of the transaction by
the offeree. 

         (d)  Prior to executing a purchase transaction of Units of the
Partnership, you shall inform the offeree of all the pertinent facts
relating to the liquidity and marketability of the Units during the term of
the Partnership.

     5.  Disclosure.

         (a)  Prior to participating in the offering, you shall have
reasonable grounds to believe, based on information made available to you by
PDC through a prospectus or other materials, that all material facts are
adequately and accurately disclosed and provide a basis for evaluating the
program:

         (b)  In determining the adequacy of disclosed facts pursuant to
subsection (a) hereof, you shall obtain information on material facts
relating at a minimum to the following, if relevant in view of the nature of
program:

              (1) items of compensation;
              (2) physical properties;
              (3) tax aspects;
              (4) financial stability and experience of PDC;
              (5) the program's conflicts and risk factors; and
              (6) appraisals and other pertinent reports.

         (c)  For the purpose of subsections (a) or (b) hereof, you may rely
upon the results of an inquiry conducted by another NASD member or members,
provided that:

              (1) the member or persons associated with a member has
reasonable grounds to believe that such inquiry was conducted with due care;

              (2) the results of the inquiry were provided to you with the
consent of the member or members conducting or directing the inquiry; and

              (3) no member that participated in the inquiry is a sponsor of
the program or an affiliate of such sponsor.

     6.  Covenants and Undertakings of the Soliciting Dealer.
<PAGE>
         (a)  You agree to comply with all of the covenants applicable to us
in Section 6 of the Dealer Manager Agreement.

         (b)  You expressly represent and undertake that you will fully
comply with Sections 8, 24, 25 and 36 of the Rules of Fair Practice of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. 

     7.  Closing Conditions.  Your obligation to deliver Subscription
Documents to PDC for acceptance by it is subject to the satisfaction on or
before the Closing Date of the conditions set forth in Section 9 of the
Dealer Manager Agreement.  If any condition to your obligations hereunder
shall not have been fulfilled when as required by this Agreement to be
fulfilled, you may waive any such condition which has not been fulfilled,
extend the time for its fulfillment or terminate this Agreement.  In the
event that you elect to terminate this Agreement, all Subscriptions
Documents, Subscription funds held, checks and other documents and
instruments delivered to you for the purchase of the Units shall be returned
to the subscribers together with their pro rata share of any interest earned
on Subscriptions funds, accompanied by a notice from you of the cancellation
and termination of the offering of the Units. 

     8.  Indemnification.

         (a)  Subject to the conditions set forth below, PDC and PDC
Securities Incorporated ("PDC Securities"). agree to indemnify and hold
harmless you, each of your officers, directors and employees and each
person, if any, who controls you within the meaning of Section 15 of the
Act, against any and all loss, liability, claim, damage and expense
whatsoever (including but not limited to any and all expenses whatsoever
reasonably incurred in investigating,  preparing for, defending against or
settling an litigation, commenced or threatened, or any claim whatsoever)
arising out of or based upon (i) any alleged untrue statement of a material
fact contained in the Prospectus as from time to time amended or
supplemented or the omission or alleged omission therefrom a material fact
required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein,
in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not
misleading, unless such statement or omission was made in reliance upon and
in conformity with written information furnished to PDC with respect to you,
by you or on your behalf expressly for use in the Prospectus or any
amendment or supplement thereof, and (ii) the failure or alleged failure of
PDC Securities Incorporated or PDC to comply with requirements of federal
and state securities law. 

    If any action is brought against you or any such officer, director,
employee or controlling person in respect of which indemnity may be sought
against PDC pursuant to the foregoing paragraph, you or such officer,
director, employee or controlling person shall promptly notify PDC in
writing of the institution of  such action and PDC shall assume the defense
of such action, including the employment of counsel (reasonably satisfactory
to you or such officer, director, employee or controlling person) and
payment of expenses.  You or any such officer, director, employee or
controlling person shall have the right to employ personal counsel in any
such case, but the fees and expenses of such counsel shall be at the expense
of you or such officer, director, employee or controlling person unless the
employment of such counsel shall have been authorized in writing on behalf
of PDC in connection with the defense of such action or PDC shall not have
employed such counsel to have charge of the defense of such action or such
indemnified party or parties shall have reasonably concluded that there may
be defenses available to it or them which are different from or additional
to those available to PDC (in which case PDC shall not have the right to
direct the defense of such action on behalf of the indemnified party or
parties), in any of which events the reasonable fees and expenses of not
more than one additional counsel for you and such officers, directors,
employees and controlling person (which firm shall be designated in writing
by you) shall be borne by PDC.  Anything in this paragraph to the contrary
notwithstanding, PDC shall not be liable for any settlement of any such
claim or action effected without its written consent, which shall not be
withheld unreasonably.  The indemnity agreement contained in this Section
8(a) and the warranties and representations contained in this Agreement
shall remain in full force and effect regardless of any investigation made
by or on behalf of you or any such officer, director, employee or
controlling person, and shall survive any termination of this Agreement. 
You agree promptly to notify PDC of the assertion of any claim or of the
commencement of any litigation or proceedings against you or PDC or the
Partnership in connection with the issuance and sale of the Units or in
connection with the Prospectus.

         (b)  You agree to indemnify and hold harmless, PDC Securities
Incorporated, PDC, the Partnership and each of the officers and directors of
PDC and each other person, if any, who controls PDC or the Partnership
within the meaning of Section 15 of the Act to the same extent as the
foregoing indemnity from PDC to you but only with respect to (i) the
statements or omissions, if any, made in the Prospectus or any amendment or
supplement thereof in reliance upon, and in conformity with, written
information furnished with respect to you, by you or on your behalf
expressly for use in such Prospectus or any amendment or supplement thereof
and (ii) the failure or alleged failure of you to comply with the
requirements of federal or state securities law.  In case any action shall
be indemnified based on such Prospectus or amendment or supplement thereof
and in respect of which indemnity may be sought against you, you shall have
the rights and duties given to PDC and each other person so indemnified
shall have the rights and duties given to you by the provisions of the
second paragraph of Section 8(a) above.  The indemnity agreements contained
in this Section 8(b) shall remain in full force and effect regardless of any
investigation made by or on behalf of any person indemnified herein, and
shall survive any termination of this Agreement.  PDC agrees promptly to
notify you of the assertion of any claim, or of the commencement of any
litigation or proceeding against PDC or the Partnership or any officer or
director of PDC or any person who controls the Partnership within the
meaning of Section 15 of the Act, in connection with the issuance and sale
of the Units or in connection with the Prospectus.

     9.  Representations and Agreement to Survive.  Except as the context
otherwise requires, all representations, warranties and agreements contained
in this Agreement shall remain operative and in full force and effect and
shall survive the Closing Date.

     10. Effective Date, Term and Termination of This Agreement.

         (a)  This Agreement shall become effective on the Effective Date.
You or PDC may elect to prevent this Agreement from becoming effective
without liability of any party to any other party, except as provided in
subsection (c) of this Section 10, by giving notice of such election to the
other parties hereto before the time this Agreement otherwise would become
effective.

         (b)  You shall have the right to terminate this Agreement at any
time during the Offering Period if any representation or warranties
hereunder shall be found to have been incorrect or misleading or PDC shall
fail, refuse or be unable to perform any of its agreements hereunder or to
fulfill any condition of your obligations hereunder of if the Prospectus
shall have been amended or supplemented despite your objection to such
amendment or supplement or (i) if all trading on the New York Stock Exchange
or the American Stock Exchange (in this Section collectively called
"Exchange") shall have been suspended, or minimum or maximum prices for
trading generally shall have been required on the Exchange by Exchange or by
order of the Securities and Exchange Commission or any other governmental
authority having jurisdiction or (ii) if the United States shall have become
involved in a war or major hostilities or (iii) if a banking moratorium has
been declared by a state or Federal authority or (iv) if PDC or its
properties shall have sustained a material or substantial loss by fire,
flood, accident, earthquake or other calamity or malicious act which,
whether or not said loss shall have been insured, will in your opinion make
it inadvisable to proceed with the offering and sale of the Units; or if
there shall have been such change in the condition or prospects of the
Partnership or PDC or in the levels of the prime interest rate or long-term
mortgage rate or in the condition of securities markets generally as in your
judgment would make it inadvisable to proceed with the offering and sale of
the Units. 
<PAGE>
         (c)  If for any reason this Agreement shall not become effective
or the offering hereunder is terminated, PDC shall not have any liability
to you except for such liabilities, if any, as may exist or thereafter
arise under Section 8 hereof.

     11. Notices.

         (a)  All communications hereunder, except as herein otherwise
specifically provided, shall be in writing and if sent to you shall be
mailed, delivered or telegraphed and confirmed to you at the address on page
1 of this agreement if sent to us or PDC and/or the Partnership shall be
mailed, delivered, telegraphed and confirmed to us or PDC and/or the
Partnership at 103 E. Main Street, P.O. Box 26, Bridgeport, West Virginia
26330.

         (b)  Notice shall be deemed to be given by you to us or PDC or the
Partnership or by us, PDC or the Partnership to you as of the third business
day after the same is mailed or telegraphed as provided in Section 10 (a)
above.

     12. Parties.  This Agreement shall inure solely to the benefit of and
shall be binding upon you, us and, to the extent provided herein, PDC and
the respective successors and assigns of such parties.  Nothing expressed or
mentioned in this Agreement is intended or shall be construed to give any
person or corporation, other than the parties hereto and their respective
successors and assigns and the controlling persons, officers, directors and
employees, any legal or equitable right, remedy or claim under or in respect
of this Agreement or any provision herein contained; this Agreement and all
conditions and provisions hereof being intended to be and being for the sole
and exclusive benefit of the parties hereto and their respective successors
and assigns and said controlling persons and said officers, and directors
and employees, and for the benefit of no other person or corporation.  No
purchaser of any of the Units from you or us shall be construed a successor
or assign by reason merely of such purchase.

     13. Construction.  This Agreement shall be construed in accordance with
the laws of the State of West Virginia. 

    If the foregoing correctly sets forth the understanding between us,
please so indicate in the space provided below for that purpose, whereupon
this letter shall constitute a binding agreement between us.

              Very truly yours,

              PDC SECURITIES INCORPORATED
              103 East Main Street
              Bridgeport, WV  26330

              BY:                                 

              TITLE:    President                 
                  President

Accepted as of the date first above written.

BY                                     

TITLE                                  

    PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION hereby agrees to be bound by the
terms and provisions contained in this Agreement which are applicable to
it including the indemnification provisions of Section 8.

              PETROLEUM DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

              BY                                 

              TITLE                               
                  President<PAGE>


CONSENT OF COUNSEL


       We consent to the designation of our firm in the Prospectus
portion of the Registration Statement under the heading "Legal
Opinions".

                 /s/ Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     

Metzger, Hollis, Gordon &     Alprin     
June 10, 1996















INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' CONSENT


The Board of Directors 
Petroleum Development Corporation

We consent to the use of our reports included herein and to
the reference to our firm under the heading "Experts"  in the
prospectus.



              /s/ KPMG Peat Marwick LLP



Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
June 12, 1996











CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT PETROLEUM CONSULTANTS


       We consent to the designation of our company in the
Prospectus portion of the Registration Statement under the
heading "Experts."



                 /s/ Wright & Company, Inc.



June 7, 1996




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