The disclosure relates to the field of horizontal directional drilling or reaming techniques and equipment for drilling holes or boreholes for installation of pipe underground or under obstacles, such as a body of water.
Cone-shaped drill bits or cones or cutters have been used to make bore or hole enlargement tools called reamers or hole openers. A split-bit reamer is a type of reamer featuring cones or cone drill bits. The split-bit reamer is a tool often of larger diameter and is of particular use in horizontal directional drilling applications.
Some examples of prior art cone drill bits and split-bit reamers are shown in
The prior art cones and split-bit reamer create mechanical inefficiency at the cones. The drill bit cones do not and cannot match at each respective row of teeth the rotational speed of the overall reamer around their axles, and hence the tangential speed at the cone surface of the drill bit cone cannot be efficiently matched or correlated with the tangential speed due to the rotation around the longitudinal axle of the split-bit reamer as further described below.
When a cone drill bit rotates around the axle of a reamer due to the application of a force on the tool, e.g. via drilling mud/fluid, (this force is the driving factor for the reamer to drill through earth, ground or rock), every tooth on the cone will have a tangential speed, determined by the angular speed or rotational speed of the cone. Since the tangential speed depends on the angular speed and the radius, due to the triangular cross-sectional shape of the cone, the teeth that are farther away or mounted at a greater radial distance from the axle of the cone will have a higher tangential speed than the teeth close to the “tip” of the cone. The teeth located at a farther distance from the axle, i.e. the ones close to the “base” of the cone and referred to as gauge teeth, will create a higher momentum than the teeth located closer to the axle of the cones, i.e. the teeth closer to the “tip” of the cone, once a friction force is created in between each respective tooth and the earth, ground or rock that is being drilled (reamed).
Due to this momentum's difference, the gauge teeth will establish the rotational speed of the cone, trying to match their tangential speed around the cone's axle with the tangential speed according to their position on the reamer. This creates significant mechanical inefficiency. The teeth closer to the tip of the cones do not have enough tangential speed around the cone's axle to match the tangential speed established by the rotation of the reamer. As a consequence of this inefficiency, the teeth successively and relatively closer to the tip of the cones have imperfect contact with the earth, ground, or rock which causes teeth to slide or drag over the rock, inefficiently scratching or scrapping its surface and often ineffectively drilling or crushing the earth, ground, or rock. The inefficiency may be especially disruptive in situations where the geological material being reamed comprises rock or hard rock. The mechanical inefficiency giving rise to scratching or scraping action, instead of a crushing action, causes teeth successively and relatively closer to the tip of the cones to become flat (worn) sooner than the gauge teeth.
When teeth become flat, the rate-of-penetration (“ROP”) of the reamer or the speed at which the reamer drills through the earth, ground or rock decreases. When the ROP reaches the minimum acceptable value, it forces the driller or operator to trip out the reamer to change it with another unit. The lifetime of the reamer and the ROP of the reamer are negatively affected by this mechanical inefficiency. Additionally, the greater the distance between the center of rotation of a cone and the center of rotation of the reamer, the greater or more pronounced is the mechanical inefficiency.
The desired concept of reaming the earth, ground, or rock with drill bits or reamer heads should be that every tooth will be pushed against the rock producing a crushing effect, and that the combination of the rotational movement plus the injection of drilling fluid at high speed will evacuate the pieces of crushed rock, called cutting, leaving the surface of the rock clean for the next tooth to repeat the process. The present disclosure relates to embodiments of horizontal directional drilling equipment and methods for horizontal directional drilling techniques which more efficiently achieve the desired crushing effect.
The present disclosure relates to embodiments of an improved reamer head or apparatus for reaming an underground arcuate path having a reaming head in one embodiment as a frustoconical or truncated cone, or conical frustum shape or substantially frustoconical, truncated cone, conical frustum shape, or frustoconical body. An imaginary apex of the frustoconical body is superimposed on the centerline of a reamer or reaming apparatus for reaming of an underground arcuate path.
Further, the present disclosure relates to embodiments of a reamer apparatus for reaming an underground arcuate path or split-bit reamer featuring in one embodiment a plurality of improved reamer heads having a frustoconical, truncated cone, or conical frustum shape or substantially frustoconical, truncated cone, or conical frustum shape.
Additionally, the present disclosure relates to embodiments of an improved bearing mechanism for a reamer arm and reamer head.
The present disclosure also relates to embodiments of an apparatus for reaming an underground arcuate path or roller cone reamer head or progressive independently segmented reaming head.
The embodiments may be better understood, and numerous objects, features, and advantages made apparent to those skilled in the art by referencing the accompanying drawings. These drawings are used to illustrate only typical embodiments of this invention, and are not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments. The figures are not necessarily to scale and certain features and certain views of the figures may be shown exaggerated in scale or in schematic in the interest of clarity and conciseness.
The description that follows includes exemplary apparatus, methods, techniques, and instruction sequences that embody techniques of the inventive subject matter. However, it is understood that the described embodiments may be practiced without these specific details.
Referring to
In
It is understood that the present disclosure is not limited to the particular applications and embodiments described and illustrated herein, but covers all such variations thereof as come within the scope of the claims. While the embodiments are described with reference to various implementations and exploitations, it will be understood that these embodiments are illustrative and that the scope of the inventive subject matter is not limited to them. Many variations, modifications, additions and improvements are possible.
Plural instances may be provided for components, operations or structures described herein as a single instance. In general, structures and functionality presented as separate components in the exemplary configurations may be implemented as a combined structure or component. Similarly, structures and functionality presented as a single component may be implemented as separate components. These and other variations, modifications, additions, and improvements may fall within the scope of the inventive subject matter.
The reference numbers in the claims are not intended to be limiting in any way nor to any specific embodiment represented in the drawings, but are included to assist the reader in reviewing the disclosure for purposes of a provisional filing.
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