This invention relates generally to drilling equipment used in drilling bore holes in earth formations, and in particular to a method and apparatus for aligning features in a bit head and a pin body of a drill bit assembly.
A conventional drill bit assembly used in downhole directional drilling applications typically comprises a matrix head and a mating pin body. In one type of drill bit assembly, the bit head is a one-piece structure typically made of tungsten carbide. In some drill bit assemblies, a locking ring is provided which mechanically fastens to the matrix head, and which can be welded to the pin body to ensure a secure connection between matrix head and pin body. In another type of drill bit assembly, the matrix head is made of two materials, namely a tungsten carbide crown which is brazed onto a steel pin.
A typical matrix head has a female threaded bore that extends partway into the matrix head, and mates with a male threaded pin end of the pin body. Prior to making up these two parts, a steel polymer material such as Megasteel™ is applied to the threads to provide sealing as well as to add strength to the connection.
When making up the pin body to the matrix head, a predetermined amount of torque is applied to the two parts by a make-up machine. Due to the geometry of the threads, there is no method of precisely achieving a specific rotational alignment between the pin body and the matrix head during the make-up procedure. Therefore, it is difficult to provide features in the matrix head or pin that need to communicate or connect with features in the other of the matrix head, when such communication or connection requires precise alignment of the matrix head and pin body.
For drill bit assemblies that use a locking ring, the locking ring is typically locked mechanically to the matrix head by inserting keys in the matrix head into matching keyholes in the locking ring. After the matrix head and pin body are made up, the locking ring is located in proximity to the pin body such that a weld can be applied around the circumference of the locking ring and the pin body to secure these two parts together. The weld ensures that no relative rotation between the pin body and the matrix will occur during drilling. While the weld is effective to prevent relative rotation, applying an effective weld requires care, skill and time, thereby adding to the complexity and cost of the matrix head assembly process.
According to one aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing a drill bit assembly having a bit head and a pin body. The bit head has a cutting end, an opposite connecting end with an engagement section, and a feature such as a communications port facing the bit head connecting end. The pin body has a connecting end with an engagement section and a feature such as a communications port facing the pin body connecting end. The method comprises: positioning the pin body and matrix head connecting ends such that the matrix head and pin body engagement sections overlap with a gap therebetween and the matrix head and pin body features are aligned; injecting a connecting material in liquid form into the gap; and solidifying the connecting material such that the bit head and pin body are mechanically coupled together at their connecting ends and the features are securely aligned.
The matrix head connecting end can be female, and the pin body connecting end can be male, and the pin body and bit head are positioned by inserting the pin body connecting end into the bit head connecting end.
The connecting material can be a thermoplastic material, which can be a dielectric material. In particular, the thermoplastic material can comprises a liquid crystal polymer resin reinforced by glass fiber.
The drill bit assembly can further comprise a cavity in at least one of the bit head engagement section and the pin body engagement section. In which case, the method can further comprise injecting a thermoplastic material in liquid form between the bit head and pin body engagement sections such that the gap and the cavity are filled, and solidifying the thermoplastic material to form a gap joint which fills the gap and a segment of thermoplastic material that protrudes into the cavity.
The bit head and pin body engagement sections can be threaded with matching threads, in which case the method further comprises injecting the thermoplastic material in liquid form between the threads of the bit head and pin body engagement sections.
Each cavity can be an elongated groove extending substantially parallel to an axis of the bit head and pin body and across multiple threads of at least one of the bit head and pin body engagement sections. In which case, the method further comprises injecting the thermoplastic material in liquid form between the bit head and pin body engagement sections such that the gap and the groove are filled, and solidifying the thermoplastic material to form a gap joint in the gap and a segment of thermoplastic material that protrudes into the groove.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a drill bit assembly comprising: a bit head having a cutting end, an opposite connecting end with an engagement section, and a feature facing the connecting end; and a pin body having a connecting end with an engagement section and a feature facing the connecting end. The bit head and pin body connecting ends are positioned such that the bit head and pin body engagement sections overlap with a gap therebetween and the bit head and pin body features are aligned. The drill bit assembly also comprises a connecting material comprising a gap joint located in the gap such that the bit head and pin body are mechanically coupled together at their connecting ends, and a segment protruding into each cavity to impede the rotation of the bit head relative to the pin body. The drill bit assembly can further comprise a cavity in at least one of the bit head engagement section and pin body engagement section. A segment of the gap joint can fill the cavity to impair rotation of the bit head relative to the pin body.
Each cavity can be an elongated groove extending substantially parallel to an axis of the bit head and pin body and across at least one of the bit head and pin body engagement sections. Alternatively, each cavity is an elongated groove extending at an acute angle to an axis of the bit head and pin body and across at least one of the bit head and pin body engagement sections. The bit head and pin body engagement sections can be threaded with matching threads, and each groove can extend across multiple threads, in which case the connecting material is located between and around the matching threads. The connecting material can be a thermoplastic.
The bit head and pin body engagement sections can be threaded with matching threads, and the drill bit assembly can comprise multiple cavities in the form of elongated grooves arranged in a single front-to-tail line and in a reverse thread pattern to the matching threads.
The drill bit assembly can comprise multiple cavities each in the form of a circular dimple and arranged in at least one spaced row extending across at least one of the bit head and pin body engagement sections.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing a drill bit assembly having a bit head and a pin body wherein at least one of the bit head and pin body has two mating pieces connected together by a gap joint. The bit head comprises a cutting end and an opposite connecting end with an engagement section. The pin body comprises a tubular body with an axial bore therethrough and a connecting end with an engagement section. At least one of the bit head and pin body comprises two mating pieces each with mating ends and a feature thereon. This method comprises: positioning the engagement sections of the pin body and the bit head such that the pin body and the bit head are connected at their connecting ends; positioning the mating ends of the two pieces of the pin body or the bit head or both such that a gap is formed between the mating ends, and the features in each mating end are aligned; injecting a connecting material in liquid form between the mating ends and into the gap; and solidifying the connecting material such that the two pieces of the pin body or bit head or both are mechanically coupled together at their mating ends and their features are securely aligned.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, there is provided a drill bit assembly comprising: a bit head having a cutting end and an opposite connecting end with an engagement section; and a pin body having a connecting end with an engagement section. The pin body and bit head connecting ends are positioned such that the bit head and pin body engagement sections overlap and the pin body and bit head are connected at their connecting ends. At least one of the bit head and pin body comprises two mating pieces each with a mating end and a feature thereon; the mating ends are positioned such that a gap is formed therebetween and the features are aligned. A gap joint fills the gap such that the two pieces of the bit head or pin body or both are mechanically coupled together at their mating ends. The pin body and bit head connecting ends can be positioned such that a gap is formed between the bit head and pin body engagement sections, and in which case, the drill bit assembly further comprises a second gap joint filling the gap such that the bit head and pin body are mechanically coupled together at their connecting ends.
a) and (b) are schematic exterior and sectional elevations views of the drill bit assembly having an annular pin body with an electronics housing in the body according to a second embodiment.
a) to (c) are a schematic exterior assembled and sectioned assembled and dissembled views of a two-piece pin body having an electrically insulating gap joint between two pieces of the pin body according to another embodiment.
Drill String
The drill string 12 is suspended within the borehole 11 and has a bottom hole assembly 1 which includes the drill bit assembly 15 at its lower end. The bottom hole assembly 1 of the illustrated embodiment comprises a measuring-while-drilling (MWD) module 13, a logging-while-drilling (LWD) module 14, a drill bit assembly 15, and a roto-steerable system and motor 17. The surface system includes platform and derrick assembly 10 positioned over the borehole 11, the assembly 10 including a rotary table 16, kelly 17, hook 18 and rotary swivel 19. The drill string 12 is rotated by the rotary table 16, energized by means not shown, which engages the kelly 17 at the upper end of the drill string. The drill string 12 is suspended from a hook 18, attached to a traveling block (also not shown), through the kelly 17 and a rotary swivel 19 which permits rotation of the drill string 12 relative to the hook 18. As is well known, a top drive system could alternatively be used.
In the example of this embodiment, the surface system further includes drilling fluid or mud 26 stored in a pit 27 formed at the well site. A pump 29 delivers the drilling fluid 26 to the interior of the drill string 12 via a port in the swivel 19, causing the drilling fluid to flow downwardly through the drill string 12 as indicated by the directional arrow 8. The drilling fluid exits the drill string 12 via ports in the drill bit assembly 15, and then circulates upwardly through the annulus region between the outside of the drill string and the wall of the borehole, as indicated by the directional arrows 9. In this well known manner, the drilling fluid lubricates the drill bit assembly 15 and carries formation cuttings up to the surface as it is returned to the pit 27 for recirculation.
The bottom hole assembly (BHA) 1 of the illustrated embodiment comprises a logging-while-drilling (LWD) module 14, a measuring-while-drilling (MWD) module 13, a roto-steerable system and motor 17, and the drill bit assembly 15.
The LWD module 14 is housed in a special type of drill collar, as is known in the art, and can contain one or a plurality of known types of logging tools. It will also be understood that more than one LWD and/or MWD module can be employed, e.g. as represented at 14A. (References, throughout, to a module at the position of 14 can alternatively mean a module at the position of 14A as well.) The LWD module may include capabilities for measuring, processing, and storing information, as well as for communicating with the surface equipment. In the present embodiment, the LWD module includes a pressure measuring device.
The MWD module 13 is also housed in a special type of drill collar, as is known in the art, and can contain one or more devices for measuring characteristics of the drill string and drill bit. The MWD tool further includes an apparatus (not shown) for generating electrical power to the downhole system. This may typically include a mud turbine generator powered by the flow of the drilling fluid, it being understood that other power and/or battery systems may be employed. In the present embodiment, the MWD module may include one or more of the following types of measuring devices: a weight-on-bit measuring device, a torque measuring device, a vibration measuring device, a shock measuring device, a stick slip measuring device, a direction measuring device, and an inclination measuring device.
A particularly advantageous use of the system hereof is in conjunction with controlled steering or “directional drilling”. In this embodiment, a roto-steerable subsystem 17 (
Drill Bit Assembly
In each of the embodiments described and shown in
A first embodiment of the drill bit assembly 15 is shown in detail in
The cutting end of the bit head 30 has a plurality of blades 36. Attached to each blade 36 are a plurality of cutting elements 38; suitable cutting elements include those made from polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC), cubic boron nitride, or other super hard materials as is known in the art. The bit head 30 also has a plurality of drilling fluid discharge ports 42 which extend from the end of the axial bore 35 to the exterior surface of the cutting end of the bit head 30. The axial bore 35 has a portion which tapers inwards and has female threads 46, (“female threaded section”). A plurality of parallel slots or grooves 48 extend in an axial direction through the threads 46 and serve to form anti-rotation barriers as will be described in more detail below. The grooves 48 are milled into the threads 46 and are spaced around the circumference of the threaded section.
While a matrix head is shown as the bit head 30 in this embodiment, other types of bit heads can be substituted, such as a tri-cone bit head (not shown).
The double pin body 32 is made of a 4130 high strength steel alloy but can alternatively be made of any suitable material as known in the art. The double pin body 32 has a generally tubular body with two connecting pin ends each tapering inwards, namely: a gap joint pin end 49 for engagement with the bit head 30, and an API pin end 33 for engagement with the rest of the bottom hole assembly 1. The gap joint pin end 49 has a rim which abuts against the annular lip of the bit head axial bore 35. An axial bore 50 extends through the pin body 32 to allow drilling fluid to flow therethrough and to the ports 42 of the bit head 30. The gap joint pin end 49 has a tapered and rounded coarse male threaded section with threads 51 that match the female threads 46 of the bit head 30. A plurality of parallel slots or grooves 52 extend in an axial direction through the threads 51 and serve to form the thermoplastic anti-rotation barriers 40. The grooves 52 are milled into the threads 51 and are spaced around the circumference of the threaded section. The male threaded section extends from the gap joint pin end to an annular recess 54; an annular, large root stress relief radius 56 bridges the annular recess 54 and threaded section and serves to reduce stress concentrations between the mating components and the thermoplastic gap joint 34 and allows for more even flow of the thermoplastic during injection, as will be described in further detail below. The annular recess abuts against a rim 58, which serves to contain the thermoplastic material 34 in the recess and contain a bit breaker slot 60.
The elongated grooves 48, 52 are machined into the male and female threads 46, 51 and provide cavities for thermoplastic material to fill and form the anti-rotation barriers 40. As will be described in more detail below, anti-rotation, i.e. torsion resistance, is provided by means which require parts of the thermoplastic anti-rotation barrier 40 to shear in order to disassemble the pin body 32 and bit head 30 under torsion loading. The grooves 48, 52 can be but do not have to be aligned when the bit head 30 and pin body 32 are connected.
Referring to
Alternatively, the features could be used to position sensory housings, such as a gamma module, or electronic support bays. In essence these alignment features can be utilized as spaces for locating electronics as well as sensory packages. Alternately, these could be used as anti-rotation features as well—by the placement of pins through the threads.
Referring to
The transmission wire 71 extends through the pin body communications port 64 and is potted to support it against vibration damage. One end of the transmission wire 71 is electrically connected, through the use of solder, crimp, or similar technique, to one end of a feed-through conductor of a feed-through 73. The feed-through 73 is seated in the mouth of the pin body communications port 64 that opens into the gap between the pin body 32 and bit head 30. A feed-through is a well known and commercially available part from a supplier such as Greene Tweed, Inc. and consists of an insulating body, seals surrounding the body and providing a seal between the body and the pin body communications port 64, and the conductor seated within a bore in the body. The purpose of the feed-through 73 is to provide a means of passing an electrical conductor through a sealed insulator.
The bit head and pin body communications ports 62, 64 must be precisely aligned with each other in order to allow the passing of wiring therethrough. In particular, wiring 74 is electrically coupled at one end to a second end of the feed-through 73 in a similar manner to the transmission wire 71 and extends through the gap joint 34 and into the bit head communications port 62. The other end of the wiring 74 extends inside the bit head communications port 62 and is anchored to and makes electrical contact solely with the bit head 30 through the use of a securing bolt 75 threaded into the body of the bit head 30.
Alternatively but not shown, an electronics equipment housing can be provided in the bit head 30 instead of or in addition to the pin body 30 in which case the feed through 73 is located in the bit head communications port 62 and the wiring 74 extends from the feed through across the gap joint 34 and into the pin body communications port 64 wherein it is secured to the pin body 32 by a securing bolt.
The bit head and pin body communications ports 62, 64 are aligned with each other by using an assembly method that does not require a conventional application of torque by a make-up machine, and instead involves fixing the pin body 32 and bit head 30 at a selected alignment to each other using an injection molding machine (not shown), then injecting a high-strength, non-porous thermoplastic material 34 at a high temperature in between the mating portions of the pin body 32 and bit head 30 and allowing the thermoplastic material 34 to set under pressure, thereby fixing the pin body 32 and bit head 30 relative to each other in the aligned position.
The thermoplastic material 34 is injected under high pressure into the interstitial space between the equidistant male and female threads of the pin and bit head threaded sections. The injected thermoplastic fills the barrier forming grooves 48, 52 in the pin and bit head 30, 32 to form the anti-rotation barriers 40, and between the conductive component threads to electrically isolate the conductive pin body 32 and bit head 30 from each other. Many different suitable thermoplastic materials may be chosen depending on the properties required. In this embodiment, a particularly suitable thermoplastic material is a resin/fiber composition comprising a liquid crystal polymer (LCP) resin sold under the trade-name Zenite 7130 by DuPont. This material offers high toughness, stiffness, chemical resistance, and creep resistance at high temperature. The resin is further reinforced by the addition of 30% glass fiber. This thermoplastic material 34 is especially suitable as it has low mould shrinkage and low viscosity, especially under high processing stresses. The low viscosity allows the thermoplastic to fill close fitting serpentine paths, such as that formed by overlapping threads. The low shrinkage prevents the thermoplastic from shrinking too much during cooling and creating a poor seal. The thermoplastic is also has dielectric properties, i.e. has negligible electrical conductivity. In another embodiment of the invention rods of insulating material such as fiberglass or Zenite can be inserted in the grooves formed by barrier forming grooves 48, 52 before injecting the thermoplastic. These may serve as centralizers keeping bores 35, and 50 symmetric relative to each other.
Connecting the bit head 30 to the pin body 32 such that the communication ports 62, 64 in each respective component are precisely aligned will now be described.
First, the electronics equipment 69 is installed into the housing 66 and the transmission wire 71 is connected to the feed-through 73. Then, wiring 74 is connected to the feed-through 73 so that the wiring extends out of the mouth of the pin body communications port 64. Then, the drill bit assembly 15 is assembled by loosely screwing the threaded ends of the bit head and pin body 30, 32 together in an axially symmetric arrangement on a mandrel (not shown) which extends through the bores 35, 50 of the pin body and bit head so that the ports 62, 64 in the bit head 30 and pin body 32 are precisely aligned. The mandrel also secures the pin body 32 and bit head 30 in place with a gap between the engagement sections of these two parts, and also serves to prevent thermoplastic material from spilling into the bores 35, 50. The wiring 74 is threaded into the bit head communications port 62 and fastened to the securing bolt 75, which is then screwed into a drill hole in the bit head communications port 62. The transmission wire 71, feed-through 73 and wiring 74 form one continuously extending electrical conductor and serves as the conductor for the EM telemetry equipment; this conductor can also serve to conduct current for measurement equipment taking resistivity measurements as will be discussed below.
Alternatively, the wiring 74 can be first secured to the securing bolt 75, then connected to the feed through 73. As another alternative, the feed-through 73, wiring 74, and transmission wire 71 is replaced by a single continuous conductor which extends from the securing bolt 75 to the electronics equipment 69.
Then, the threaded connecting ends of the bit head and pin 30, 32 are fixed in a mold of an injection molding machine (not shown) such that the tapered threads overlap but do not touch and the bit head and pin body communications ports 62, 64 remain precisely aligned. Such injection molding machine and its use to inject thermoplastic material into a mold is well known the art and thus are not described in detail here. The mold is designed to accommodate the dimensions of the loosely screwed together drill bit assembly 15 in a manner that the thermoplastic injected by the injection molding machine is constrained to fill the gaps in between the threads. Optionally, the assembly 15 can be evacuated first before injecting the thermoplastic.
Then, the thermoplastic material is heated to between 363° C. and 371° C. and preferably about 370° C. until the thermoplastic is in liquid form, and then is injected (“injectant”) into an equidistant gap formed between the threads of the bit head and pin body 30, 32 until the bores 35, 50 are physically separated by thermoplastic material, into the barrier forming grooves 48, 52 and into the annular recess 54 circumscribing the pin body 32 up to but not spilling over edge of the rim 58. During this process, the thermoplastic material will cover the wiring 74, which is exposed between the communication ports 62, 64. Wear rings 76 surrounding the recess 54 can be embedded in the thermoplastic material to protect the seal against wear. The mold temperature, thermoplastic temperature, flow rate, and pressure required to beneficially flow the injectant and completely fill these spaces are selected in the manner as known in the art. The mold and bit head 30 and pin body 32 are also heated, to about 150° C. so that these parts do not cause the thermoplastics to cool too quickly and solidify prematurely and not completely fill the gap. Once filled, a holding pressure (typically −16,000 to 18,000 psi) is maintained until the thermoplastic injectant cools and solidifies and the thermoplastic gap joint 34 with sealing anti-rotation barriers 40 is formed.
The pin body 32 and bit head 30 can be provided with elongated grooves through the threads (not shown). The thermoplastic material will fill these grooves and form anti-rotation barriers protruding from the gap joint, and impeding the pin body 32 from rotating relative to the bit head 30.
After the thermoplastic material solidifies and become mechanically rigid or set, formation of the thermoplastic gap joint 34 with sealing and anti-rotation barriers 40 is complete and the bit head 30 and pin body 32 can be removed from the injection molding machine. The thermoplastic gap joint 34 now firmly holds the bit head 30 and pin body 32 together mechanically, yet separates the bit head 30 and pin body 32 electrically. The thermoplastic gap joint 34 also provides an effective drilling fluid barrier between the inside and outside of the drill bit assembly 15. Also, this injection process enables the bit head and pin body communication ports 62, 64 in the bit head 30 and pin body 32 to be precisely aligned, which cannot be done by a make-up machine.
The thermoplastic gap joint 34 is generally annular, having an annular outer rim which fills the recess 54, an annular inner rim which separates the axial bores 35, 50 of the bit head 30 and pin body 32, and an annular undulating interconnect portion interconnecting the outer and inner rims. The outer and inner end rims are respectively exposed on the outer and inner surfaces of the drill bit assembly 15 with sufficient distance between the bit head and pin 30, 32 to provide the electrical isolation necessary for the drill bit assembly to serve as an EM telemetry emitter for example.
By using an electrically insulated gap integral to the drill bit, resistivity and other measurements can be taken at the drill bit location rather than at a greater distance back in the LWD module of the bottom hole assembly 1. This is particularly advantageous as there would be an immediate indication of formation penetration since all water-bearing rock formations conduct some electricity (lower measured resistivity), and hydrocarbon-bearing rock formation conduct very little electricity (higher measured resistivity). Greater accuracy can be achieved by knowing the formation resistivity at the face; this ensures that proper corrective responses can be taken to maintain borehole placement in the pay-zone while directional drilling. Further, real-time data can be provided allowing for quicker drilling as the lag-time typically experienced in determining formation penetration would be reduced.
By providing the electrically insulating gap joint 34 in the drill bit assembly 15, it may not be necessary to use a secondary telemetry tool in the drill string 12 such as the MWD module 13, as the gap joint 34 combined with the appropriate electronics equipment and power supply 69 could be used for EM telemetry with the surface. In doing so, the length of the drill string 12 can be shortened as the functionality provided by the MWD module 13 is provided in the drill bit assembly 15. Conversely, the gap joint 34 could be used as a means of communication between one or more telemetry device(s) further up the drill string 12 (a short hop) such as the MWD module 13, acting as a relay for data gathered at the face (all the measuring devices located below the motor for example).
In an alternative embodiment as shown in
The embodiment shown in
Anti-Rotation Barriers
As is well known in the art, the tapered coarse threads in this application efficiently carry both axial and bending loads, and the interlock between the threads provides added mechanical integrity should the thermoplastic gap joint 34 be compromised for any reason. The thermoplastic gap joint 34 provides an arrangement that is self-sealing since the thermoplastic gap joint 34 is nonporous, free from cracks or other defects that could cause leakage, and was injected and allowed to set under high pressure. As a result, drilling fluids cannot penetrate through the thermoplastic material and cannot seep along the boundary between the thermoplastic gap joint 34 and the surfaces of the bit head and pin 30, 32. Thus no additional components are necessary to seal this assembly.
In one embodiment, a certain amount of torsion resistance is provided by the high normal force between the thermoplastic gap joint 34 and the threads of the pin body 32 and bit head 30 resulting from the high injection pressure of the thermoplastic into the interstitial cavity. This high normal force in turn provides high frictional force resisting movement of the threads. Enhanced torsion resistance is achieved by elongated barriers 40 which are formed by injecting thermoplastic material into grooves 48, 52 in the surfaces of the male and female threaded sections of the pin and bit head 32, 30 respectively. The grooves 52 in the male threaded section of the pin body 32 prevents the thermoplastic material therein 40 from rotating with respect to the pin body 32. Similarly, the grooves 48 in the female threaded section of the bit head 30 prevents the thermoplastic material therein (not shown) from rotating with respect to the bit head 30. Grooves in both the male and female sections of the bit head and pin 30, 32 are preferred to provide enhanced torsion resistance with there being no need for the grooves to be proximately aligned.
As shown in
Ti=AiSDi
where:
The male threaded section of the pin body 32 has multiple parallel anti-rotation grooves 48 spaced around the pin body 32 that create a thermoplastic gap joint 34 having multiple barriers (not shown) against the male threads. Multiple barriers provide additional shear resistance over a single barrier. In this embodiment, corresponding grooves 52 (see
where:
Since rotation of the thermoplastic gap joint 34 with respect to either of bit head and pin 30, 32 would constitute decoupling of the joint, torsion resistance for the entire joint is the lesser of TM or TF.
As illustrated, the torsion resistance provided by this embodiment is a function of geometry and the shear strength of the material. With the formulae presented and routine empirical testing to confirm material properties, the quantity of anti-rotation segments required to produce any desirable safety margin is easily determined by one skilled in the art.
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
Referring to
While
According to another alternative embodiment and referring to
In yet another alternative embodiment, a two piece bit head is provided (not shown) and another insulating gap joint is provided between the two pieces of the bit head. Thermoplastic injection techniques as described above can be applied to form the gap joint. A conductor can be extended across the gap joint to have one end contact one of the bit head pieces and the other end to communicate with electronics equipment.
In yet another embodiment, other materials other than thermoplastic or ceramic can be used to form the gap joints 34, 180. The material can be an epoxy, or another polymer based material. Instead of pressurized injection, the thermoplastic, epoxy and other polymer based materials can fill the gap and barrier-forming cavities by potting, then solidified by curing. Curing can be done at atmospheric pressure, or more preferably under pressure to prevent or minimize the tendency for the material to expand out of the gap. The metal and ceramic can be liquefied then cast into the gap and barrier forming cavities. Casting and potting can be performed at either atmospheric pressure or under a vacuum to gain the benefit of increased face friction between the joint material and the connecting parts. Instead of pouring a liquid ceramic into the gap, a ceramic powder can be applied into the gap then sintered to form the gap joint. Alternatively, a ceramic green compact can be machined to the exact dimensions of the gap (or produce a mold to compress the ceramic powder into a green compact with exact dimensions), and screw the bit head having a ceramic green compact screwed into the compact till the bit head bottoms, then screw the pin body into the compact this till the pin body bottoms. Then the barrier forming cavities would be filled with ceramic powder, the ceramic powder is then sintered to produce the gap and barriers.
While the present invention has been described herein by the preferred embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various consistent and now obvious changes may be made and added to the invention. The changes and alternatives are considered within the spirit and scope of the present invention.
The present document is based on and claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/172,188, filed Apr. 23, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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PCT/CA2009/001567 | 10/29/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/5/2012 |
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WO2010/121344 | 10/28/2010 | WO | A |
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