Claims
- 1. A threaded connection having a box and pin formed with mating wedgethreads, the threads having crests, roots, stab flanks and load flanks, comprising: the threads being open wedgethreads such that the included angle between the stab flank and the load flank is not less than zero degrees.
- 2. The connection of claim 1 further comprising: the threads being tapered threads.
- 3. The connection of claim 1 further comprising: the threads being cylindrical threads.
- 4. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the included angle being zero degrees.
- 5. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the included angle being not more than twice the angle of friction that acts between the mating threads.
- 6. The threaded connection of claim 2 or 3 whereupon makeup, the mating flanks of the wedgethreads exert a wedging force against each other, the wedging force having both an axial component and a radial component, further comprising: the included angle being more than twice the angle of friction that acts between the mating threads; the box wall and the pin wall having sufficient reserve strength in addition to strength required to withstand the desired makeup torque and all other operating loads without the walls becoming stressed higher than the limiting design stress, so as to prevent separation of the mating threads urged by the radial component of the wedging force.
- 7. The connection per claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the threads being coated with thread dope suitable to seal and lubricate between the mating threads; a bridge thickness dimension that defines the widest gap the dope will seal between the mating threads; the diameters of the roots and crests being dimensioned such that before the position of full makeup is attained during assembly, intimate radial interference is initiated between the pin roots and box crests such that at the position of full make-up, a desired magnitude of radial interference exists there between so as to maintain their intimate contact with each other, and no gap exists between the pin crests and the box roots of a magnitude greater than the bridge thickness dimension.
- 8. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the threads being coated with thread dope sufficient to seal and lubricate between the mating threads; a bridge thickness dimension that defines the widest gap the dope will seal between the mating threads; the diameters of the roots and crests being dimensioned such that before the position of full makeup is attained during assembly, intimate radial interference is initiated between the box roots and pin crests such that at the position of full make-up, a desired magnitude of radial interference exists there between so as to maintain their intimate contact with each other, and no gap exists between the box crests and the pin roots of a magnitude greater than the bridge thickness dimension.
- 9. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the threads being coated with thread dope suitable to seal and lubricate between the mating threads; a bridge thickness dimension that defines the widest gap the dope will seal between the mating threads; there being no gap between the mating threads wider than the bridge thickness dimension.
- 10. The connection of claim 2 or 3, wherein the mating threads each have a taper tolerance, further comprising: the magnitude of the desired radial interference together with the taper tolerances, being sufficient to cause a predetermined range of thread interference to extend substantially along the helical length of thread engagement.
- 11. A pipe connection per claim 2 or 3, further comprising: a diametrical interference between the mating threads at the mid-point of thread engagement when at the position of full makeup being substantially equal to the quantity, two-thirds of the pipe outer diameter times the pipe material unit yield strength, all divided by the modulas of elasticity of the pipe material.
- 12. A threaded connection having a box and pin formed with mating wedge threads having a predetermined axial length of thread engagement, the threads having crests, roots, stab flanks and load flanks, a stab flank axial pitch length and a load flank axial pitch length, comprising: the least axial length of the first pin thread crest being dimensioned substantially the same magnitude as the least axial length of the first box thread crest, so as to maximize the number of thread turns within the length of thread engagement for that least axial crest length.
- 13. The connection of claim 2, wherein: the thread taper is not more than 0.25.
- 14. The connection of claim 2 or 12 further comprising: the crests and roots being positioned parallel to the connection axis.
- 15. The connection of claim 2 or 12, further comprising: the threads being coated with thread dope to seal and lubricate between the mating threads; a bridge thickness dimension that defines the widest gap the dope will seal between the mating threads; the radial width of the box load flank being greater than the radial width of the pin load flank by not more than the bridge thickness dimension; the radial width of the box stab flank being greater than the radial width of the pin stab flank by not more than the bridge thickness dimension.
- 16. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the threads being coated with thread dope to seal and lubricate between the mating threads; the box thread being formed on a taper slightly greater than the pin thread taper such that when assembly of the connection begins, the first thread turn of the pin will contact a box thread turn around its periphery before any other pin thread turn does, after which as makeup continues, other pin threads successively contact the box threads around their periphery and thereby cause substantially all excess dope to be extruded from between the mating threads upon reaching the full makeup position for the connection.
- 17. The connection of claim 2 or 3, wherein the stab flanks have a constant axial pitch length, the load flanks have a constant axial pitch length greater in magnitude than the stab flank axial pitch length, a mean axial pitch length being equal to the mathematical average of the stab flank and load flank axial pitch lengths, the axial length of the thread crest at the beginning of the first thread turn being a first dimension, the load flank axial pitch length minus the stab flank axial pitch length being equal in magnitude to a second dimension, comprising: the mean axial pitch length being substantially equal in magnitude to the quantity, the square of the first dimension, plus the second dimension times the length of engaged threads, all raised to the 0.5 power, plus the first dimension.
- 18. The connection of claim 2 or 12, further comprising, the radial width of the pin stab flank being substantially equal to the quantity: one-half of the mean axial pitch length times the thread taper, plus the radial width of the pin load flank.
- 19. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the axial pitch of the load flank minus the axial pitch of the stab flank, being substantially equal to the sum of, 0.0025 inches plus, 0.00036 times the outer diameter of the pipe.
- 20. The connection of claim 17 further comprising: the load flank axial pitch length being substantially equal to the quantity, the mean axial pitch length plus one-half of the second dimension; the stab flank axial pitch length being substantially equal to the quantity, the mean axial pitch length less one-half of the second dimension.
- 21. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the stab flank angle being positive, the load flank angle being negative.
- 22. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the stab flank angle being negative; the load flank angle being positive.
- 23. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the pin having an external sealing surface formed around its periphery adjacent the small diameter end of the thread so as to cooperate with a mating sealing surface formed within the mating box adjacent the small diameter end of the thread and thereby form a metal-to-metal seal against fluid pressure within the connection.
- 24. The connection of claim 2 or 3, further comprising: the pin having an external sealing surface formed around its periphery adjacent the large diameter end of the thread so as to cooperate with a mating sealing surface formed within the mating box adjacent the large diameter end of the thread to thereby form a metal-to-metal seal against fluid pressure around the connection.
- 25. The connection of claim 16, further comprising: the diametrical thread interference at the small diameter end of engaged threads being substantially greater than the diametrical thread interference at the large diameter end of engaged threads by the quantity substantially equal to, the thread mean diameter times two-thousands of an inch.
- 26. A threaded pipe connection having a box and pin formed with tapered mating wedge threads for assembly with the use of thread dope, the thread dope being a desired mixture of grease and solid particles suitable to lubricate and seal between the mating threads, a bridge thickness dimension above which the solid particles will not seal gaps between mating threads, the threads having crests, roots, stab flanks, and load flanks, comprising: the stab flanks being positioned parallel to the load flanks; concave radii being formed at the junctures of the roots and flanks; convex radii at least as great as the concave radii being formed at the junctures of the crests and flanks; the radial width of the pin stab flank and the radial width of the box stab flank being sufficiently close in dimension to each other, and the radial width of the pin load flank and the radial width of the box load flank being sufficiently close in dimension to each other, such that when the mating flanks wedge and seal against one another at the position of full make-up, there exists no gap between roots and crests greater than the bridge thickness dimension.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
PCT/US80/28829 |
Oct 2000 |
US |
|
Parent Case Info
[0001] This Application is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 09/573,480 filed May 16, 2000, which was a Continuation-In-Part of application Ser. No. 09/421,483 filed Oct. 20, 1999, for the Non-Elected Invention thereof.
Government Interests
[0002] The U.S. Government has a paid-up license for this invention for Government use, as provided by the terms of Grant Contract DE-FG01-95EE-15608 funded the U.S. Department of Energy, under the Energy Related Iventions Program.
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09573480 |
May 2000 |
US |
Child |
09994597 |
Nov 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
09421483 |
Oct 1999 |
US |
Child |
09573480 |
May 2000 |
US |