The present invention relates to a slip assemblies and methods for gripping casing joints and casing strings.
Slip assemblies are well known in the down-hole drilling and oil and gas industry. Slip assemblies are used to grip casing sections or strings, also called tubulars or piping, for a number of purposes including drilling, making up or breaking out casing strings and performing operations to produce oil from the well. Casing strings are made up by connecting multiple threaded casing sections together and feeding them into the wellbore. Rotation of a first casing into a second casing is conducted until the thread male and female ends engage one another.
The gripping mechanism of the slip assembly must be able to carry large loads and in certain operations including make up or break out operations do so while rotationally gripping the casing section or casing string. The components of the slip assembly must also cooperate to set and unset with ease and to maintain a fully set position on the casing section or casing string during torqueing and rotation.
While a number of prior art patents including U.S. Pat No. 6,631,792, U.S. Pat. No. 7,891,469 and U.S. Pat. No. 7,775,270 teach slip assemblies with means of guiding a slip into engagement with a casing section. However these patents do not address means of maintaining gripping of the casing during rotation and torqueing of the slip assembly for any number of operations including casing make up and break out or any operation involving rotation and torqueing where axial loads may exist.
A need and interest therefore exists in the art to develop improved slip assemblies and gripping systems and methods for making up casing strings.
A gripping system is taught for gripping oil well casing, casing string or other string comprising one or more slips cammed against one or more inclined recesses when the gripping system is rotated to enhance gripping engagement of the casing.
A further gripping system is taught for gripping oil well casing, casing string or other string comprising one or more slips received into one or more inclined recesses.
A method is taught for gripping casing sections or casing strings. The method comprises the steps of providing a gripping system comprising one or more recesses and one or more slips, setting said one or more slips on the casing section and rotating the gripping system to cam said one or more slips against said one or more inclined recesses, wherein camming said one or more slips against said one or more inclined recesses serves to enhance gripping engagement on the casing.
A further method is taught for gripping casing sections or casing strings. The method comprises the steps of receiving a slip into each of one or more inclined recesses of a gripping system, setting said one or more slips on the casing section and rotating the gripping system.
The present invention will now be described in greater detail, with reference to the following drawings, in which:
The slip assembly of the present invention, also called a gripping system can be used in conjunction with a number of tools known in the field of oil well completion and production. These tools include but are not limited to elevators, spiders, flush mount spiders, snubbing tools, bucking units and back up tongs. The present slip assemblies can be used in relation to any operations involving hoisting and rotation of a casing string or casing section or in any operation in which a casing string, casing section or tubular of any kind is torqued or rotated while under axial loading forces. These operations include but are not limited to casing make up or break out “drilling with casing”, snubbing operations and horizontal wellbore operations.
The slip assemblies of the present invention are preferably actuated by one or more cylinders (not shown) that extend to set one or more gripping members of the slip assembly and retract to release said gripping members. Other means of actuation are also possible and would be understood by a person of skill in the art to be encompassed by the scope of the present invention
The present slip assembly or gripping system 14 is now described with references to
The seat 16 of the gripping system 14 preferably comprises an array of one or more separate inclined elements 30 for receiving slips 18.
In a further preferred embodiment, the inclined elements 30 comprise one or more integral or non-integral means of laterally retaining the slips 18 in the inclined elements 30, in such a way that the slips 18 are prevented from falling or tipping towards a central bore of the casing gripping system 14. Examples of non-integral retaining means include but are not limited to strips, plates, clips, cages, bars, tabs and rings that can be removably attached to at least a portion of the slip 18 and at least a portion of the seat 16 to laterally retain the slip 18 to the inclined element 30. Integral retaining means can include but are not limited to mating profiles on at least a portion of the slip 18 and on at least a portion of the inclined elements 30 that connect to hold the slip 18 to the inclined element 30; such mating profiles can include shiplap profiles, tongue-and-groove profiles, dovetail profiles or other profiles well known in the art.
As seen in
Preferably, the inclined recesses 90 have a cylindrical geometry and part-circular cross section to match a cylindrical geometry and part circular cross section of the slips 18. It is also possible for the inclined recesses 90 and slips 18 to have cross sections that are partial rectangles, partial squares, partial ovals, partial rhomboids and partial triangles or other cross-sectional geometries.
In a preferred embodiment, the inclined recesses 90 can comprise an integral retaining means along at least a portion of the axial length of the inclined recess 90. In one example, at least a portion of longitudinal edges 92 of the inclined recesses 90 comprise an integral throat, tab or strip that act to restrict the size of the mouth 94 of the inclined recess 90, to thereby capture slips 18 and laterally retain slips 18 from falling or tipping into the central bore of the seat 16.
In a further preferred embodiment, the inclined recesses 90 are machined to a cross sectional geometry that restricts the mouth 94 of the inclined recesses 90 to be smaller than the widest cross section of the slip 18. In this embodiment the recesses 90 function to partially circumferentially capture the slips 18. To effect this embodiment, at least a portion of the axial length of the inclined recesses 90 is machined such that the desired cross sectional geometry converges to restrict mouth 94. In the preferred case of a partial circle cross-section, at least a portion of the axial length of the inclined recess 90 is formed as more than half of a circle, otherwise put, more than a semi-circle, to provide a restriction to mouth 94 such that the slip 18 cannot fall into the central bore of the seat 16.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, the slips 18 and the recesses 90 interact in such a way as to enhance gripping forces on the casing section 10 during rotation. In a preferred embodiment, the slips 18 are caused to cam or wedge into the recesses 90 to thereby maintain a firm penetration of the dies 20 in the slips 18 and a firm grip of the outer surface of the casing section 10 by the dies 20 during casing make up or break out operations.
Most preferably slips 18 are nominally smaller in cross section than inclined recesses 90. When the slips 18 and dies 20 of the present gripping system 14 are set on the casing section 10 to be made up, the top drive is rotated to rotate gripping system 14. During rotation, gripping torque causes the slightly smaller slip 18 to advantageously rotate slightly. This results in a line of force in which the dies 20 are forced into a front face 36 of the slips 18, in turn forcing a rear face 32 of the slip to cam into and against the inclined recesses 90. This serves to further frictionally arrest the dies 20 into the slips 18, and the slips 18 into the inclined recesses 90, and thereby enhances frictional engagement of the dies to the casing section 10 during make up and break out operations.
Although present seat 16 is preferably shown as having a conical form, it would be well understood by a person of skill in the art that numerous alternative forms of seats 16 are possible that would cause the slips 18 to bias radially inwardly as they move axially down the seat 16. For example, the seat 16 may alternatively have a cylindrical form comprised of one or more inclined elements 30.
Preferably, the inclined recesses 90 are uniformly spaced around the seat 16. Most preferably, the inclined recesses 90 are arranged in diametrically opposing pairs.
The dies 20 of the present invention are illustrated in a preferred embodiment in
In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with a specific embodiment thereof; however, it will be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2013/000411 | 4/25/2013 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61638057 | Apr 2012 | US |