In the hydrocarbon recovery industry boreholes are drilled to access hydrocarbon bearing formations for the purpose of extracting target fluids be the fluid gas, oil or a combination of fluids. While traditionally boreholes were drilled substantially vertically and therefore orientation of a bottom hole assembly could be relatively accurately tracked by tracking the orientation of the string at the surface, orientation in highly deviated or horizontal wells that are more common today is difficult and accuracy is limited. This is due in part to the frictional factors encountered as a string of several thousand feet is driven into the low side borehole wall. Because it is difficult to measure the friction all the way up the string, it is difficult to resolve the forces that act on the string and affect actual orientation downhole relative to apparent orientation at the surface.
Being able to accurately determine orientation in the downhole environment facilitates many operational interests. Therefore, the art is always receptive to new methods and apparatus that improve or enable orientation in the downhole environment.
A pressure orienting swivel arrangement including a weight assembly and a pin adapter reactably interengagable with the weight assembly to orient the pin adapter to the weight assembly.
A pressure orienting swivel arrangement including a housing, a spring compression mandrel within the housing, a spring disposed about the spring compression mandrel, a weight assembly rotatably supported in the housing, and a pin adaptor rotatably supported within the housing and reactably interengagable with the weight assembly to accept a torque from the weight assembly.
A method for orienting a downhole tool including gravitationally orienting a weight assembly, interengaging a pin adapter and inducing rotation in the pin adapter with the weight assembly.
Referring now to the drawings wherein like elements are numbered alike in the several Figures:
Referring to
Referring to
The seal sleeve 24 is attached at a downhole end thereof to a spring compression mandrel 26 at an interconnection point 28. The seal sleeve 24 provides a spring shoulder 30 upon which an uphole end 32 of a spring 34 bears during actuation of the arrangement 10. A downhole end 36 of the spring 34 bears against a bushing 38 or other surface capable of supporting the spring 34 when under compression during actuation of the arrangement.
Adjacent the bushing 38 and through the spring housing 14 is one or more fluid displacement pathway(s) 40 (two shown) within each of which is a filter material 42 in one embodiment of the arrangement 10. This provision allows for fluid to move into or out of the arrangement while the arrangement is being actuated or released from the actuated position to avoid the potential for hydraulic locking or inhibition of movement of the components of the arrangement 10 due to hydraulic forces created by fluid in the arrangement.
Downhole of the spring housing 14 and fixedly attached thereto is an extension sleeve 44. The extension sleeve supports a pin 48 fitted to rotationally constrain a gear ring 72. Within the extension sleeve 44, a weight assembly 50 is supported on the spring compression mandrel 26 at bearing 46 and bearing 52. Between the bearings 46 and 52, the weight assembly is balanced axially to promote a relatively frictionless rotational movement within the arrangement 10. This is a useful attribute for the arrangement because it facilitates the self-orientation of the weight assembly 50. Orientation of the weight assembly 50 is important to the function of the arrangement 10. Further the construction of the weight assembly 50 facilitates operation of the arrangement 10. Referring to
Importantly then the weight assembly also features an orientation torque producer 58 that functions to orient another component of the arrangement 10 to the weight assembly 50. It is this function that allows an operator to set a desired orientation of this separate component. The component is a pin adapter 70 identified in
Referring for a moment back to
At a downhole end of the arrangement 10 (
In operation, the arrangement 10 is assembled at surface with a tool 94 oriented to the groove 90 so that the tool will have the ultimate desired orientation in the wellbore when the arrangement reaches a target depth and achieves the actuated position. The arrangement is then run in the hole until it reaches the target location. Pressure supplied to the pathway 20 acts upon the arrangement to urge a number of its components in the downhole direction. These are the seal sleeve 24, the spring compression mandrel 26 and the weight assembly 50. The spring 34 is compressed by spring shoulder 30 of the seal sleeve 24 during this operation. Since gravity based orientation of the weight assembly 50 has already occurred, since it is continuous until engagement of the key 56 with the gear ring 72, downhole movement of the weight assembly causes the engagement of the key 56 between a pair of teeth of the gear ring 72. Since the gear ring itself is restricted in rotational movement by the pin 48, the weight assembly will now also be prevented from moving rotationally. It is noted that a reduction in pressure on the arrangement 10 will allow the key 56 to disengage from the gear ring and thereby restore rotational movement to the weight assembly under action of the spring 34 but too, a repressurization will reengage the key 56 with the gear ring. This can be repeated as desired. Importantly, and as noted above, the gear ring maintaining the weight assembly rotationless means that upon further pressure based downhole movement of the weight assembly and engagement of the torque producer 58 with the pin adapter 70, all of the torque generated is transferred to the pin adapter 70. Torque on the order of about 70 ft lbs can be generated in one embodiment hereof upon the application of 5,000 psi.
While preferred embodiments have been shown and described, modifications and substitutions may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that the present invention has been described by way of illustrations and not limitation.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20100012378 A1 | Jan 2010 | US |