This disclosure relates in general to drilling and in particular to an improved shear blade attached to shear rams for a blowout preventer.
In offshore drilling operations, the operator will perform drilling operations through a drilling riser. The drilling riser extends between the subsea wellhead assembly at the seafloor and the drilling vessel. The drilling riser is made up of a number of individual joints or sections. These sections are secured to each other and run from a riser deploying floor of the drilling vessel. The drilling riser also normally has a number of auxiliary conduits that extend around the main central pipe. Some of the auxiliary conduits supply hydraulic fluid pressure to a subsea blowout preventer (BOP) installed on the subsea wellhead to control the well.
A BOP assembly may be part of a stack assembly which may be located at the lower end of the riser extending downward from the drilling vessel. The BOP stack assembly will normally contain shear rams, pipe rams, variable bore rams, annular closure member, and a quick disconnect mechanism for disconnecting from the riser in the event of an emergency. When actuated, shear rams will close the through bore and also shear pipe in the well, such as drill pipe, tubing, or casing. A shear blade may be attached to a ram block via a plurality of bolts that pass through a front face of the shear blade and threadingly engage the ram block. Further, the bolts aid in resisting forces during shearing and also from the wellbore pressure. However, a counterbore for each of the bolts on the front face of the shear blade reduces the area of the blade, thereby reducing the strength of the blade. An improved technique for attaching the shear blade to the ram block is therefore needed.
These and other problems are generally solved or circumvented, and technical advantages are generally achieved, by preferred embodiments of the present invention that provide a method of attaching a shear blade to shear rams.
An embodiment of the present invention provides a shear ram assembly comprising of a shear blade attached to a ram block. A similar shear blade and ram block is opposite from and offset to the aforementioned shear blade and ram block. At least one bolt passage is formed at an angle at the top of the ram block. A bolt passage is formed in a back face of shear blade that corresponds with the bolt passage on the ram block. A bolt introduced into the bolt passage of the ram block and also the bolt passage in the shear blade attaches the shear blade to the ram block. The bolt may threadingly engage the bolt passage in the shear blade. Further, at least one bolt passage is formed on the face of the shear blade that registers with a bolt passage formed on a face of the ram block. The bolt passages on the shear blade and ram block faces allow a bolt to be introduced into the passages and threadingly engage the ram block to provide additional connection stability of the shear blade with the ram block.
The technique of connecting the shear blade to the ram block utilizing the angled bolt passages at the top of the ram block and back face of the shear blade advantageously increase the strength of the shear blade by increasing the surface area of the front face of the shear blade because no additional material must be removed from the front face for additional bolt passages.
Referring to
Shear rams 11 include an upper ram assembly 13 having a forward end 15. A semi-circular seal groove 16 is located on the upper side of upper ram block 13 for receiving a portion of an elastomeric seal 9. An upper shearing blade 17 mounts to forward end 15. In this embodiment, a plurality of bolts 18 may be introduced into bolt passages 20 extending from a forward face 23 of the upper shearing blade 17 to a rearward face. The bolt passages 20 are parallel to axis Ax and form a counterbore at the forward face 23 of the upper shearing blade 17. Each of the plurality of bolts 18 continues into bolt passages 22 (
In addition to the bolts 18 entering through the forward face 23 of the upper blade 17, at least one angled bolt 26 is introduced into an angled bolt passage 28 formed on an upper surface of the upper ram assembly 13. In the embodiment shown, there are two angled bolt passages, each on an opposite side of axis Ax. The angled bolt 26 and angled bolt passage 28 is discussed further below at
Continuing to refer to
Pipe guide arms 25 may be located on the outboard sides of upper ram block forward end 15. Each arm 25 could be formed integrally with upper ram block 13, but they could be otherwise attached, such as by welding or fasteners. Each arm 25 has a vertically oriented inboard side 27 and a forward end or tip 29. A wedge surface 31 extends from a forward part of inboard side 27 to tip 29. Each inboard side 27 is parallel with the longitudinal axis Ax of shear rams 11 in this example. Wedge surface 31 may be a flat vertical surface, as shown, that is at an acute angle relative to longitudinal axis Ax. In this embodiment, wedge surface 31 is at an angle of about 30 degrees relative to longitudinal axis Ax. Rather than flat, wedge surface 31 could be a curved surface. Each guide arm 25 has an upper side 33 that is flat and in a horizontal plane in this example. A chamfer or bevel 34 optionally may be at the intersection of upper side 33 with tip 29.
As shown in
Each guide arm 25 has an outboard side 35 that extends from a base 37, where arms 25 join upper ram block 13, to tip 29. Outboard side 35 may be at an acute angle relative to longitudinal axis Ax. In this embodiment, the acute angle is about 15 degrees relative to longitudinal axis. Tip 29 has a smaller height and width than base 37.
Referring still to
Referring again to
In this embodiment, ram blocks 13 and 51 are designed to be pressure assisted in closing. The seals 9 and 56 in the semi-circular grooves 9 and 55 enable this pressure assist. Securing a RAM shear blade to a RAM block with a fastener that extended through the RAM block from the back side to the front side would create a path for pressure to leak by seals 9 and 56 unless an additional seal were provided around the fastener. In this case, the angled bolt passage 28 to secure the blade lies completely on the interior bore side of the seal 9, 56 so that there is no chance for pressure to leak by and diminish the pressure-assist element. Further, since the angle bolt passage 28 is forward of seal groove 16 and seal 9, it is not necessary to seal around each bolt passage. The passage 28, as previously explained, does not cross the seal grooves 16 and 55 but is instead located entirely in the pressure zone sealed by seals 9 and 56. However, in an alternative embodiment, the passage 28 may bypass the seals 9 and 56.
A lower blade 63 attaches to forward end 53 of lower ram block 51. Lower blade 63 is at a lower elevation than upper blade 17, as illustrated in
Referring to
A vertical center point of each arm 25 is approximately the same as a vertical center of lower blade 63. When moving to the closed or sheared position, lower blade 63 will slide between the two arms 25 as the arms enter recesses 71. The outboard ends 70 of lower blade 63 will be closely spaced from the inboard sides 27 of arms 25 as the arms enter recesses 71. A T-shaped connector slot 76 for connection to a piston rod is located on the rearward end of lower block 51.
During manufacturing, the angled bolt passage 28 is formed by boring through the upper ram block 13 starting at the upper surface and through the forward end 15. Angled blade bolt passage 38 is formed by boring through the rearward face of the upper blade 17 such that the blade angled blade bolt passage registers with the angled bolt passage on the ram block 13 when mated. Threads may be formed in the angled blade bolt passage 38 to threadingly engage the angled bolt 26, which may have a threaded exterior profile. A counterbore may be formed in the angled bolt passage 28 in the ram block 13 that corresponds to a head of the angled bolt 26. Additional angled bolts and passages may be formed. Further, bolt passages 20 are formed by boring from the forward face 23 of the upper shearing blade 17 to a rearward face. The bolt passages 20 are formed parallel to axis Ax and form a counterbore at the forward face 23 of the upper shearing blade 17. Each of the plurality of bolts 18 continue into bolt passages 22 (
A lower marine riser package (LMRP) 94 connects to the upper end of BOP stack 81. An annular BOP 95 may be located at the lower end of LMRP 94. Annular BOP 95 will close around any size of pipe and seal the annulus between the pipe and the side wall of the bore. Annular BOP 95 will also seal fully even if a pipe is not present. A flex joint 97 is located at the upper end of LMRP 94 to allow flexing of a lower end of a riser string 99 connected to flex joint 97. Choke and kill lines 101 extend from below annular blowout preventer 95 to alongside riser 99 for pumping fluid into the well. In the event of an emergency, LMRP 94 and riser 99 can be detached from BOP stack 81. Redundant control pods 103 mount to LMRP 94 and contain hydraulic and electrical circuitry for controlling movement of the various rams 11, 81, 91 and 93 annular BOP 95 and other equipment. Control pods 103 are retrievable from LMRP 94 and are connected to an umbilical (not shown) leading to the drilling vessel at the surface.
It is understood that the present invention may take many forms and embodiments. Accordingly, several variations may be made in the foregoing without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Having thus described the present invention by reference to certain of its preferred embodiments, it is noted that the embodiments disclosed are illustrative rather than limiting in nature and that a wide range of variations, modifications, changes, and substitutions are contemplated in the foregoing disclosure and, in some instances, some features of the present invention may be employed without a corresponding use of the other features. Many such variations and modifications may be considered obvious and desirable by those skilled in the art based upon a review of the foregoing description of preferred embodiments. Accordingly, it is appropriate that the appended claims be construed broadly and in a manner consistent with the scope of the invention.
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883329 | Nov 1981 | SU |
Entry |
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Eurasian Search Report dated Apr. 29, 2013 from corresponfing EA Application No. 201201641. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20130168075 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |