1. Field of the Invention
The present invention regards devices for handling pipes, especially devices for handling pipes in connection with petroleum production.
2. Description of the Related Art
In petroleum production, a large number of pipes is used for various purposes. When drilling a well, a total of up to several kilometres of drill pipes may be used, each of which pipes is generally approximately 10 m long. Prior to use, these pipes are stored in horizontal stacks on deck. The pipes are connected by threes to form so-called stands. During drilling, the pipes are stored vertically as stands in so-called finger boards on the drill floor, up along the derrick. During drilling, the entire drill string must be withdrawn from the well at certain intervals, so-called tripping, e.g. in order to change the drill bit. With today's technology, the pipes are inserted back into the finger boards in order to be easily accessible for future use.
Up to several kilometres of casing may also used in a well in order to form walls in the wellbore. In the same way, several kilometres of production tubing is used in order to recover oil and/or gas from the well. In addition, several kilometres of other types of piping would generally then be required, for instance injection piping. All these pipes must at some stage be stored on or near the rig.
Traditionally, the movement of pipes between the pipe rack and the drill floor has to a large extent been accomplished through manual work. This task is heavy and entails a great danger to life, health and materials. Great efforts have therefore been made to reduce the element of manual work and transfer this to machines, which are preferably remotely controlled.
One factor is decisive when it comes to the profitability of petroleum production, and that is time. As the equipment used is very expensive, the time it takes from when the equipment is put into service, i.e. the drilling is initiated, until the production starts, will to a large extent be decisive in the cost of the development. It is therefore of great importance to reduce the time consumption during all parts of the development. During the pipe handling processes, it is important to have all the pipes ready when they are to be run into the well, and also to ensure that they can be carried away quickly from the drill floor when they are retrieved from the well.
Furthermore, the fact that standing pipes or stands contribute towards giving the drilling or production installation a high centre of gravity, is increasingly becoming a problem. With the increase in drilling depth over the recent years, the number of pipes has increased considerably. Also, the use of smaller, floating installations such as drill ships has become increasingly common. A high centre of gravity in such installations causes instability. As such, it becomes difficult to satisfy the requirements for stability. This means that other equipment must be moved down, possibly also involving an increase in ballast. This leads to less flexibility in the utilisation of the available space. In the case of vertically stored pipes, the wind catchment area also increases, which in combination with a high centre of gravity may have fatal consequences. Thus it has long been desired to be able to store the pipes horizontally. This has however involved awkward and time consuming pipe handling.
One object of the invention has been to provide pipe handling equipment that may operate independently and in parallel with any drilling activities that may be in progress in the derrick. This means that the piping goods must be able to be moved between a horizontal position and a vertical position in or by the derrick, and vice versa, while a drilling machine and drill string is in operation in the drilling centre in the derrick. In the case of a retrieval operation involving the entire drill string, this will have particular significance, as it will speed the operation up considerably compared with what has been possible up until today.
A further object of the invention has been to provide pipe handling equipment that is able to pick up a horizontally positioned pipe directly from the pipe rack on the main deck, bring it to a vertical position, and bring it into the drilling centre ready to be connected into a drill string with a minimum of manipulation. It is also becoming more of a requirement that everything is to be handled by use of remotely controlled mechanical equipment.
It is a further object still of the invention to provide pipe handling equipment that is able to handle piping goods of varying lengths, i.e. single pipes and stands, weights and nature without any significant modifications of the equipment. Further, it will not be necessary to have a finger board in the derrick and intermediate storage in the drill floor.
It is also an object of the present invention to enable the centre of gravity to be lowered and the wind catchment area to be reduced for a floating installation, while retaining efficient pipe handling.
Moreover, the present invention aims to improve the utilisation of the available space and/or reduce the size of the drill floor, by reducing or eliminating the need for storage of pipes on the drill floor. According to the present invention, this is achieved by making the handling of pipes in the pipe rack, and to and from this, more efficient, and more particularly by a transport carriage including picking devices that are designed to pick up pipes lying substantially in the horizontal position at different levels in a pipe rack.
One embodiment of the invention also comprises a pipe storage device for horizontal storage of pipes.
In a further embodiment, the present invention also comprises pipe handling equipment adapted for automated pipe handling between an approximately horizontal position and an approximately vertical position in a derrick and vice versa.
The invention will now be explained in greater detail through a preferred embodiment, by means of the accompanying drawings, in which:
The pipe storage device 1 comprises two supporting blocks 3 and 4 that are interconnected via a base frame 5 including two transverse beams 6 and 7 and two longitudinal beams 8 and 9. Each supporting block 3 and 4 is arranged in a tilting manner about a mounting 10 and 11 respectively in the transverse beam 6 and 7 respectively. Means are provided (not shown) for synchronization of the tilting motion of the supporting blocks 3 and 4.
The pipe picking device 2 acts as a transport carriage for pipes to be transported between the storage device 1 and e.g. a lifting beam for raising pipes from a horizontal to a vertical position in order to bring this into the derrick, and includes picking columns 12 and 13, which are located on a base frame 14 that includes a longitudinal beam 15 and a transverse beam 16 and 17 at either end of the longitudinal beam 15. Each picking column is equipped with two picking arms 18 and 19. The picking columns 12 and 13 may advantageously be moved along the longitudinal beam 15 as shown by arrows 35 and 36, either synchronously towards and away from each other or independently of each other.
It is also possible to provide more than two picking columns on the pipe picker 2, in particular for handling long pipes or entire stands.
The supporting block 4 consists of a generally L-shaped cradle 22 that comprises a generally vertical part 23 and a generally horizontal part, or bearer 24. A generally vertical stop 25 is provided by the free end of the horizontal part 24. The vertical part 23 has a generally horizontal projection 26 by its free end. A thickening 28 is formed at the corner 27 of the L-shaped cradle 22.
Between the projection 26 and the thickening 28 there is a bearing shaft 29. A plurality of supporting arms 30 are arranged in a rotatable manner about the shaft 29, which supporting arms extend in parallel with the horizontal part 24 of the cradle 22. A respective spacer 31 is mounted between the supporting arms 30 on the shaft 29. The supporting arms 30 have at their free ends a respective, generally vertical stop 32. The stops 32 are of such a height that each stop 32 rests on the stop 32 underneath, and the lowermost stop 32 rests on the stop 25.
Each arm 30 is designed to support a plurality of pipes 33. When the supporting blocks 3 and 4 are tilted to the position shown in
The pipe storage device 1 may if desired comprise more than two supporting blocks, particularly if long pipes or entire stands are to be stored.
In
The base frame 15 of the pipe picker 2 is also equipped with wheels 34 (see
As shown in
On the piping deck 50 are provided rails 106 along which the pipe picker 2 can move in order to collect pipes from one or the other of the storage devices 101, or if required replace pipes in the storage devices 101.
When the pipe picker 2 retrieves pipes from the storage devices 101, it will first retrieve that pipe 33 which is located at the top in the nearest storage space 103. When all the pipes have been retrieved from the nearest space 103, the pipe picker 2 proceeds to retrieve pipes from the next space 103, starting with the top pipe 33 in this space.
The picking arms 18 and 19 are connected to separate continuous chains 107 and 108. The chain 107 extends over an upper end wheel 109 (hidden in
The pipe lifter 139 is used to hold large diameter pipes, e.g. casing pipes that are either too large to be held by the picking arms and/or are not designed to be stored in the storage device 1 or 101. In these cases, the pipe picker 2 is used to transport pipes between e.g. a crane and the derrick. In this manner, all types of piping may be brought to the same position as that of the pipes that are stored in the pipe storage device 1 or 101, so that further pipe handling equipment (for example as described below) can handle these in an expedient manner.
Reference is now made to
The actual pipe erecting device 201 comprises an elongated boom 202 shown in three different transport positions on the rig. The boom 202 has two grappler claws 204 associated with it, which are able to move in towards a stand 33, grip it and pick it up from the pipe storage device 215 and retain the stand 33 during the subsequent transport. Each grappler claw 204 is placed at the end of an arm 205 that may be actuated into manipulation of the grappler claw 204 away from and in towards the boom 202. Each arm 205 is actuated by an actuating cylinder 206, one end of which is connected in an articulated manner to the boom 202, and the other end of which is connected in an articulated manner to the arm 205.
The boom 202 is further arranged telescopically along its longitudinal axis, as indicated by arrow P. This means that the boom 202 can be shortened when piping goods of a shorter length is to be handled. In the figure, this is indicated by one half of the boom 202 having a slightly smaller cross-sectional dimension than the other half of the boom 202. One half may be pushed into and guided in the other half, and they may be interlocked at the desired length. The displacement can be manual, by means of rack mechanisms or by means of actuating cylinders acting between the two halves.
In one end portion of the boom 202 guide means have been provided in the form of wheels 207 running in corresponding guides in the form of guide rails 208 attached to the top of two horizontal and parallel girders 220, which at one end are attached to the derrick structure and at the other end are attached to supports 221 located on the main deck 210. The guide rails 208 must extend far enough towards the drilling centre C to allow the boom 202 to be brought into a parallel position with the drilling centre C. At the other end portion of the boom 202 are also provided wheels 207′ that run in guide rails 208′ placed essentially vertically along the derrick 211. At the lower end, the vertical guide rails 208′ deflect out onto the girders 220, and the last portion of the guide rails 208′ run essentially horizontally out onto the girders 220 for a short distance.
In order to describe a pipe handling operation using the pipe erecting device 201, a start is made with an initial position in which the boom 202 lies horizontally on the girders 220. The arms 205 are manipulated so as to bring the grappler claws 204 down into the pipe rack 215 on the main deck 210. The grappler claws 204 grip a stand 33 and lilt it up against the boom 202. Then the boom 202 is run along the guide rails 208, 208′ from its horizontal position and gradually to an increasingly vertical position until the boom 202 ends up in an essentially vertical position along the derrick 211. Throughout the operation, the grappler claws 204 that hold the stand 33 are brought up against the boom 200.
When the boom 202 is in its final, vertical position, the arms 205 are manipulated to bring the grappler claws 204, still holding the stand 33, away from the boom 202, and place the stand 33 in the drilling centre C. The drilling machine with the elevator 213 is run down, and the elevator 213 is arranged supportingly around the upper pipe joint. The grappler claws 204 loosen their grip on the stand 33, and the arms 205 are activated to withdraw the grappler claws 204 in towards the boom 202. The boom 202 may now be run back down to the pipe rack 215 in order to retrieve another stand 33 and repeat the above described operation.
The stand 33 now depends from the elevator 213, and the stand 33 is lowered towards a vertical pipe string 217 located below, called a “stick up”. Normally, the string 217 includes a pipe box at the top, and the stand 33 includes a pin end at the bottom. When the pin end has been inserted into the pipe box, the spinning and torque tong 212 is run in against the pipe joint. The spinning tong first performs a spinning operation to screw the pin into the pipe box. Then the pipe joint is tightened to the correct make-up torque using the torque tong.
It must be appreciated that the boom 202 may be run completely independently of what is in progress in drilling centre C. Thus the end projection of the boom 202 and the placement of the guide rails 208, 208′ are calculated so as not to bring the stand 33 into or into conflict with drilling centre C while the boom 202 is being run between the pipe rack 215 and the derrick 211, i.e. between the horizontal and the vertical position, and vice versa.
For the pipe erecting device 201 according to the invention, it is clear to see how the drilling machine and the elevator 213 handle single items vertically, while the boom 202 and the grappler claws 204 handle items from the vertical position and out onto the drill floor to a horizontal position and vice versa.
Each of the rails 208″ and 208′″ and each of the pipe erecting devices 201′ and 201″ may in principle be designed in the same manner as the pipe erecting device 201 of
By using two pipe erecting devices, the capacity may be doubled.
Further modifications of the invention, beyond what is mentioned above, may be envisaged. This includes using e.g. a crane to replace pipes in the pipe rack instead of using the pipe picker. The pipe picker may be designed so as to be able to handle several pipes at once. It is also possible to imagine each pipe picking column being equipped with more than two picking arms, so that the pipe picker may handle several pipes separately.
It is also conceivable for the pipe picker to be equipped with only one picking arm on each picking column, and, if desired, for a fixed back stop to be arranged by the top of the picking column instead of the other arm. This will be appropriate if the pipe picker is to retrieve pipes from a rack on one side only.
Alternatively, it is also conceivable for both picking arms to be brought down on the same side of the picking column, so that a pipe may also be held between these while being lifted.
It is also conceivable that the picking arms on different picking columns may be adjustable to different levels, so as to enable the pipe picker to pick up and put down inclined pipes.
Any combination of the various types of pipe pickers and storage devices and/or mutual co-operation that are practical, also lie within the scope of the present invention, provided this falls within the following independent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20000175 | Jan 2000 | NO | national |
20000269 | Jan 2000 | NO | national |
This application claims the benefit of the International Application PCT/NO01/00009 filed Jan. 12, 2001 in the Norwegian applications 20000175 filed Jan. 13, 2000 and 20000269 filed Jan. 19, 2000.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCTNO01/00009 | 1/12/2001 | WO | 00 | 11/22/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO0151762 | 7/19/2001 | WO | A |
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3651959 | Castela et al. | Mar 1972 | A |
3750898 | Ancey et al. | Aug 1973 | A |
3795326 | Neilon et al. | Mar 1974 | A |
3870165 | Besijn | Mar 1975 | A |
4380297 | Frias | Apr 1983 | A |
4439091 | Frias | Mar 1984 | A |
4993905 | Potocnjak | Feb 1991 | A |
6543551 | Sparks et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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3424521 | Jan 1986 | DE |
3513787 | Oct 1986 | DE |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030170095 A1 | Sep 2003 | US |