The invention relates generally to the field of clamping devices for securing hydraulic, pneumatic and electrical control hose bundles and various other control lines, such as a wire line and also control mechanisms for being able to control subsurface equipment from a offshore rig or offshore vessel. However, the invention has other applications, and can be used to clamp hoses, control lines and the like in various other applications.
One or more hoses or tube bundles used in oil well drilling and production is typically made up of a plurality of individual or single line electrical lines or pneumatic or hydraulic hoses bundled together to make a compact design and having a plastic outer sheath. The diameter of the hose bundle varies with respect to the desired number and size of hoses utilized. Typically in an offshore drilling operation such a bundle is used to transmit hydraulic or pneumatic fluid under pressure from control equipment located on an offshore oil well platform to a wellhead control system, or to a control pod for a sub-sea blowout preventer stack. The hose or tube bundle is flexible and generally extends for several hundred up to several thousand feet or more. Because the tube bundle is flexible and must extend several hundred feet or more from a surface platform to a control pod or a blowout preventer stack, it is necessary to attach the tube bundle to some type of support structure, which may be a cable, choke or kill lines or some supporting member of various tubulars such as a riser.
It is known to attach the tube bundle to a series of clamps spaced along the extended cable. A type of control hose clamp known includes two clamping sections, often pivotally connected by an exterior hinge and having an over-center or off-center latch securing the control bundle and the wireline between the two sections. Such control bundle clamps are manufactured in various sizes to conform to the various sizes of tube bundles utilized.
As offshore platforms and floating drilling rigs have ventured into deeper waters, the environment has become more of a problem to operating sub-surface through control hose bundles. The currents may be worse because of depth or even because of the area and the temperature of the water may even be a negative factor to the life of the control hose bundle. A light polyurethane that is utilized as the outer coating on such tube bundles has a tendency to get torn up. The tube bundles are extremely expensive, and since it may be necessary to shut down a drilling rig if a control hose bundle is damaged to the extent that the control pod may not be operable, maintaining the integrity of the bundles is a very important consideration.
In the known type of hose bundle clamps, the metal arms of the clamp often will degrade the tube hose bundle around the clamped portion as the marine forces cause flexing of the intermediate sections of the control bundles. The effective weight of the clamp becomes a very big factor when using the clamps in very deep water. It is a very well known fact that solid metal weighs essentially the same whether in the open air or submerged in water. If one places a metal clamp every twenty to thirty feet along a depth of five to ten thousand feet, such clamps may add an additional twenty pounds of weight at each of those twenty-foot locations. This additional weight can be a very negative factor. The elastomer body clamps, according to the present invention, having metal inserts embedded in elastomer bodies, weigh considerably less when submerged in water than in open air. As an example, the clamp may weigh twenty points in the open air and five pounds when submerged in water. This differential is of course governed by the amount of water displaced by the elastomer clamp having metal inserts embedded therein.
It is also known in the prior art that the prior art clamps used frequently are more complex and are manufactured from a multiplicity of pieces.
It is also known that with prior art clamps, they frequently fail to provide a uniform clamping pressure upon hoses or control lines being clamped.
Referring now to the drawings in more detail,
The clamp 10 illustrated in
The clamp 10 has a molded elastomer hinge 32 which is an integral part of the molded elastomer body 10. In using the clamp 10, illustrated in
The present invention contemplates that the body of the clamp, including the two arms and the integral hinge, are molded from an elastomer. As used herein, the word “elastomer” and any derivatives of that word are meant to include any thermo-setting material, either natural or synthetic, including natural and synthetic rubber, nitrile rubber, butyl rubber, polysulfide rubber, TPO rubber and polyurethane rubber. Although the preferred embodiment of this invention relates to the use of a polyurethane elastomer to mold the body, other such elastomers will also function to serve as the body of the clamp, according the present invention.
Referring now to
The thru-ports 60, 62 and 64 are threaded and are sized such as to be slightly undersized with respect to the male thread 304 of bolt 300, illustrated in
It should be appreciated that the insert 70 of
Although some parts of the inserts are welded together, they may also be made by well known casting processes.
Referring now to
Referring now to
A thru-port 66 in the molded elastomer body 12 is aligned not only with the thru-port 61 but also with the thru-port 80 and also with the boss 110 which is not illustrated in this figure. In a similar way, a thru-port 71 in the molded elastomer body 12 is aligned with the thru-port 82 illustrated in
A thru-port 124 in the molded elastomer body 12 is aligned with the thru-port 64 illustrated in
Another thru-port 67 in the molded elastomer body 12 is aligned not only with the thru-port 65 but also with the thru-port 84 illustrated in
Referring now to
The thru-ports 230, 232 and 234 are formed on the other side wall 210 and lead from the exterior of the mold body 202 into the lower section of the cavity 212. The thru-ports 230, 232 and 234 are a larger diameter than the diameter of the thru-ports 220, 222 and 224, and are sized to have a slightly larger diameter than the diameter of the pin 236 in
The two inserts, such as the inserts 70 and 40, illustrated in
In addition, plugs are inserted into the mold at the position shown as 250, 252 and 254. A much larger plug, which is sized to correspond to the thru-port 18 used to clamp the umbilical, is used to plug up the thru-port 18. In addition, spacers 260, 262, 264 and 266 are used to make sure that the two sides of the elastomer body 12 illustrated in
The preferred castable elastomer polymer material which is to be used in the clamp 10 according to the present invention involves the use of a polyurethane elastomer, available from Anderson Development Company, under the order number 80-5 and which is mixed with mboca, also available from Anderson Development under their ordering number Curcen 442. After determining the total volume to be filled in the mold around, and under and over the inserts to complete the manufacture of the clamp according the present invention, it is best to use 18.5 grams per cubic inch of volume to determine the total amount of the mixture of the polymer and mboca which is required to fill the mold cavity. After making the determination of the amount of materials to use, the polymer should be heated to 210 degrees Fahrenheit and the mboca should be heated to 230 degrees Fahrenheit. When the polymer reaches 210 degrees, it should be placed into a vacuum chamber for ten minutes to remove any trapped gases. After that vacuum process, the polymer and mboca should be blended together using a mixer and a drill for approximately two minutes, or whenever the two fluids are completely blended together. The combination of the polymer and the mboca is then poured into the hot mold cavity and a timer should be set for the correct demold time, usually about 45 minutes. When the 45 minutes is up, the mold should be pulled from the oven, and the clamp according to the present invention should be removed from the mold. The demolded clamp should then be put into a post-cure oven for sixteen hours at 180 degrees Fahrenheit. Thereafter, the clamp should be removed from the post-cure oven after sixteen hours and cooled down to 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Following standard QC procedures, the molded part should be cleaned up and a calibrated durometer tester check should be used for reading of 80 to 86 durometer on the A-scale. After these procedures, the clamp should be inspected for individual defects and the finished clamp should be then compared with the design prints for final approval and shipped out to the customer, or stored, as desired, but only after the three bolts 22, 24 and 26 have been threaded into the clamp 10.
The two inserts 40 and 70, which are illustrated in
Although the preferred embodiment of the present invention contemplates the use of a molded polyurethane elastomer body to allow the two arms to freely pivot around the hinge 32, and the two inserts and the three bolts which are used to pull and hold the two arms close together in the clamping position, are preferably manufactured from steel or some other such hard metal, it should be appreciated that when working on an offshore rig, or a floating drill vessel, or in any other such dangerous environment, the safety rules sometimes require a “no spark” environment. In such an environment, the inserts and/or the bolts used in the thru-ports 60, 62 and 64 can be manufactured, if desired, from extremely hard plastic such as high density polyurethane, fiberglass, nylon, orlon and the like, and mixtures thereof, because to overstate the obvious, the plastic bolts do not spark when coming into contact with the plastic inserts. In an alternative embodiment, the inserts could be made from hard plastic but not the bolts, and vice versa.
Referring now to
Referring now to
The thread bolt 300 has a shank portion 301 between the hex head 302 and the threaded portion 304 which has a lesser diameter than the threaded portion 304. This assists in keeping the bolt 300 as a captive within the clamp 10 because it allows bolt 300 to flop around after the threaded portion 304 has been threaded through the thru-ports 60, 62 or 64.
In the operation of the clamp illustrated in
It should be appreciated that the clamp, according to the present invention, uses a hinge 32 which is believed to be somewhat new and improved over other hinges known in the clamping art, quite aside from the remainder of this invention. The thru-port 14 illustrated in
After the two halves are swung open, whatever cables, hoses or lines, as desired, should be within the thru-ports 16 and 20 and also within the enlarged thru-port 18 for the umbilical. The two halves are then rotated back together, pivoted around the hinge 32, are then, because the bolts 22, 24 and 26 are already captured within the thru-ports 60, 62 and 64, the three bolts are then threaded through the three bosses on the other side of the clamp and continued turning of the bolts into the threaded bosses causes the two halves of the clamp to be moved closer and closer together until the two halves are caused to deform, including the deformation caused by the collapse of the hinge 32, to fully grasp whatever cables and lines are being secured by the clamp. These clamps will find particular utility in deep water operations, for example, where water may vary between one hundred and ten thousand feet deep beneath the offshore rig or floating vessel and it will be common practice to use these clamps every twenty to thirty feet along the length thereof between the offshore rig and the sea floor where the control lines are being used and are being controlled.
Accordingly, it should be appreciated the there has been described a new and improved clamp which can be used for bundling, securing and supporting cables, wirelines and other control lines. The clamp according to the present invention, in its preferred embodiment, includes steel or other hard metal inserts which are fully embedded and encapsulated by an elastomer body molded around said steel structures to prevent damage to such structures and to any control lines being bundled by the clamp.
The clamp also has features of using an elastomeric hinge having no metal, no moving parts and will not corrode, but will collapse when the two arms of the clamp are forced tightly together, which causes the hinge to distort and more firmly clamp the control lines passing though the clamp.
The invention is also characterized by the ability of the clamp to be used in a non-sparking environment such as may be found on an offshore barge or drilling vessel, or even on land drilling rigs where sparks cannot be tolerated.
The clamp is also characterized as being self-contained and having no parts or fasteners which can fall off and be lost in the wellbore or other areas.
Finally, the clamp has the ability to change the hardness of the elastomer body and also to change the size of the clamp and also the ability to increase or decrease the force applied to the bundles being clamped. The invention is also characterized by there being no galvanic action because the only exposure on the outside of the clamp is exposure to a nonmetallic, elastomeric body.