Various downhole tools used in the oilfield industry require collars to secure equipment to tubulars and the like. These collars are generally cylindrical in shape (e.g., when assembled), include a hollow interior to receive the tubular therethrough, and may include a plurality of set screws that are used to secure the collar to (around) the OD of the tubular. Collars may be unitary or hinged. Hinged collars, such as the conventional hinged collar 150 shown in
One challenge with welded segment or section collars is that during installation it is possible to generate significant force (e.g., radial force) on the collar when the set screws are tightened. This force has shown to rupture the conventional linear weld joint between the collar segments. As such, there is a need for a stop collar for tubular that overcomes the weaknesses of conventional stop collar linear weld joints.
Embodiments of the disclosure may provide a stop collar for a tubular, for example, for petroleum production equipment. The stop collar provides a relatively thin unitary collar that is increasingly resilient to ruptures that often times occur when tightening collar set screws. The collar may be manufactured from one, two, or more sections welded together at an interlocking weld joint to form the desired circular collar. The interlocking weld joint may include a head and stem portion, wherein the head has a width that is greater than the stem, thus providing both increased weld joint length and increased shear strength in the weld joint.
Embodiments of the disclosure may further provide a stop collar for tubulars. The stop collar may include an annular stop collar member formed from a plurality of collar segments, and a weld joint attaching each of the plurality of collar segments together to form a unitary annular collar, the weld joint having a head and stem, wherein the head has a width that is greater than the stem to form an interlocking weld joint.
Embodiments of the disclosure may further provide a stop collar for tubulars, wherein the stop collar may include a plurality of collar segments each having corresponding interlocking terminating ends, wherein the interlocking terminating ends include a head having an increasing width as the head extends away from an opposing collar segment, and a welded joint formed over the interlocking terminating ends.
Embodiments of the disclosure may further provide a method for manufacturing a stop collar for tubulars. The method may generally include forming a plurality of collar segments, machining terminating ends of the plurality of collar segments to include interlocking joint features, assembling the plurality of collar segments into a unitary circular collar having a plurality of interlocking joints, and welding along the interlocking joint to secure the interlocking joints together.
The present disclosure is best understood from the following detailed description when read with the accompanying Figures. It is emphasized that, in accordance with the standard practice in the industry, various features are not drawn to scale in the following Figures. In fact, the dimensions of the various features may be arbitrarily increased or reduced for clarity of discussion.
a-h each illustrate a schematic views of exemplary weld joint configurations that may be used in the exemplary stop collar of the disclosure to secure collar segments together.
It is to be understood that the following disclosure describes several exemplary embodiments for implementing different features, structures, or functions of the invention. Exemplary embodiments of components, arrangements, and configurations are described below to simplify the present disclosure; however, these exemplary embodiments are provided merely as examples and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Additionally, the present disclosure may repeat reference numerals and/or letters in the various exemplary embodiments and across the Figures provided herein. This repetition is for the purpose of simplicity and clarity and does not in itself dictate a relationship between the various exemplary embodiments and/or configurations discussed in the various Figures. Finally, the exemplary embodiments presented below may be combined in any combination, e.g., any element from one exemplary embodiment may be used in any other exemplary embodiment, without departing from the scope of the disclosure.
Additionally, certain terms are used throughout the following description and claims to refer to particular components of the disclosure. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, various entities may refer to the same component by different names, and as such, the naming convention for the elements described herein is not intended to limit the scope of the invention, unless otherwise specifically defined. Further, the naming convention used herein is not intended to distinguish between components that differ in name but not function. Additionally, in the following discussion and in the claims, the terms “including” and “comprising” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to.” All numerical values in this disclosure may be exact or approximate values unless otherwise specifically stated. Accordingly, various embodiments of the disclosure may deviate from the numbers, values, and ranges disclosed herein without departing from the intended scope. Furthermore, as it is used in the claims or specification, the term “or” is intended to encompass both exclusive and inclusive cases, e.g., “A or B” is intended to be synonymous with “at least one of A and B,” unless otherwise expressly specified herein.
In another embodiment of the disclosure, the interlocking features at the weld joint may comprise only a portion of the thickness of the segments 102, 104. For example, the terminating end of one segment may be machined or otherwise manufactured with an interlocking feature, however, the feature may be machined into only a portion of the overall thickness of the terminating end of the segment 102, 104. The terminating end of another segment 102, 104 may also be machined or manufactured with a corresponding (generally inverse) feature. As such, the two terminating ends having features machined into only a portion of the thickness of the respective segments 102, 104 may be machined, sized, and/or otherwise manufactured to be joined together to form an interlocking joint that may be permanently welded together.
In another embodiment of the disclosure, the interlocking features at the weld joint may be formed, machined, or otherwise manufactured into the terminating ends of segments 102, 104, and the segments 102, 104 that cooperatively form the stop collar 100 may be of equal length. Therefore, in this embodiment, the segments 102, 104 may be substantially identical in construction, e.g., each having identical terminating ends. For example, two substantially identical (semicircular) segments 102, 104 having a head on a first end and a receiving element corresponding to the head formed into a second, may be assembled to form a continuous circle or collar. Similarly, three or more substantially identical segments may be manufactured and assembled in the same manner to form the collar.
Further detailing the weld joint 106 in
a-h illustrate schematic views of exemplary weld joints 106 that may be used in the exemplary stop collar of the disclosure. As is generally shown and described below, the weld joints 106 may be in a plurality of shapes and sizes. In some embodiments of the disclosure the weld joint 106 will form an interlocking head, and in others, the weld joint 106 may not include an interlocking feature. Regardless of the size or shape of the weld joint 106, the respective sides of the weld joint 106 may be formed by various manufacturing processes, including machining, mechanical cutting, water or laser jet cutting, stamping, pressing, or any other manufacturing process capable of generating parts of various sizes and shapes.
a illustrates a mushroom-shaped head in an interlocking weld joint 106. The head generally includes a rounded top that connects back to a stem having a width that is less than the width of the head, thus creating a higher shear force interlocking joint. The interconnection between the stem and head is shown as being downwardly curved lines (away from the head), however, embodiments of the disclosure contemplate that these lines may also be linear and/or at any angle. Similarly, although the stem is shown with parallel sides, embodiments of the invention contemplate that the sides of the stem may be at any angle desired and may be parallel or not to each other. Further still, the stem connects to the edge of the collar via edge lines, which are the lines extending from the edge of the collar to the base of the stem that are shown as being generally perpendicular to the edge of the collar and extending inward therefrom toward the stem. Embodiments of the disclosure are not limited to any particular configuration of edge lines, as the edge lines may be of any length and may be positioned at any angle with respect to the edge of the collar. Additionally, the edge lines may be symmetric to each other of not as desired.
b illustrates a triangle-shaped head in a weld joint 106. The head generally includes a wide base portion (closer to the stem) and a narrower top portion (more distant from the stem), and the stem is generally narrower in width than the base of the triangle. This configuration again creates a head that is larger than the stem and higher shear forces are required for joint failure. The triangle-shaped head may generally be of any size or configuration, e.g., the angles of the triangle may be equal or different and may be in any configuration. Similarly, in the illustrated configuration of
c illustrates head configuration wherein the stem height is essentially zero. More particularly, in
d illustrates a circular or teardrop head configuration with an integral stem. In this embodiment the circular shaped head connects to the edge connecting weld lines via the rounded or arc shaped stem. The circular shaped head increases in width as it extends away from the edge lines to again require increased shear force to overcome or fail the weld joint. The radius of the circle shaped head in this embodiment may be any radius that is less than about ½ the collar width, however, generally the radius may be less than about ¼ of the collar width to provide for sufficient collar material to surround the circular shaped head. Applicants note that the head illustrated in
e illustrates an exemplary weld joint 106 where the head is octagon shaped and greater in width than the stem. In another embodiment an octagon shaped head may be used without a stem, e.g., the head may be directly connected to the edge lines, which may also be at any orientation with respect to the collar edges. In yet another embodiment, other shapes may be used, such as a henagon, diagon, trigon, tetragon, pentagon, hexagon, heptagon, nonagon, decagon, or other desired polygon shape. Regardless of shape, the polygon may generally have a width that increases as it extends from the edge connecting lines, this creating the desired shear resistance effect discussed herein.
f illustrates another exemplary head configuration wherein a trapezoid shaped head is implemented. In this embodiment a trapezoid having an increasing width as it extends away from the edge lines connecting to the edge of the collar 100 may be used. The trapezoid shape may have sides in any orientation or angle, may include parallel sides or not, and may contain varying degrees of symmetry, as shown in
g illustrates two exemplary embodiments of weld joints 106, however, the weld joints 106 of this embodiment does not include a head having an increased size over a stem portion. As such, this embodiment does not provide the increased shear strength that the embodiments described above provide. However, the additional weld length resulting from the head significantly increases the weld joint strength over conventional linear weld joints. For example, the exemplary weld joint 106 on the left side of
Similarly,
In another embodiment, a method for manufacturing one of the above noted exemplary stop collars 100 may be provided. In this embodiment two semicircular collar segments 102, 104 may first be formed from a metal, metal alloy, or any other desired or suitable material. In another embodiment more than 2 arc-shaped segments may be used, wherein the cumulative shape of the arcs when assembled forms the desired annular collar. The individual segments may be formed from, for example, a flat strip that is rolled, pressed, processed in a press breaking machine, or otherwise formed into the desired arc curvature and length. Regardless of the number of segments 102, 104, the respective terminating ends of the collar segments 102, 104 may be machined or otherwise processed or manufactured to include an (optional) interlocking feature, as described herein. In embodiments where an interlocking feature is not used, the respective ends of the segments 102, 104 may be machined or otherwise processed or manufactured to fit together when joined. Returning to embodiments where an interlocking head is used, the head portion may be machined, processed or otherwise manufactured into one terminating end of a segment 102, 104 and another terminating end of a segment 102, 104 may be machined, processed, or otherwise manufactured with a feature sized and shaped to receive the head portion therein to form an interlocking joint. For example, one end of a segment may be machined with a positive image of a head and stem portion, while a corresponding end of another segment to be joined thereto may be machined, processed, or otherwise manufactured with an inverse or negative image of the head to create the interlocking joint. The head portion may be of essentially any shape, including T-shaped, triangle shaped, mushroom shaped, circular shaped, polygon shaped, or trapezoid shaped. In at least one embodiment, the width of the head may increase is the head extends from the joint, thus facilitating the interlocking portion of the joint.
The above noted machining, processing, or otherwise manufacturing the terminating ends is intended to cover all processes for forming the terminating ends into the segments. For example, the inventors contemplate that the features may be formed into the ends of the segments by conventional machining techniques, water or laser jet cutting, punching, conventional cutting techniques, shearing, or stamping. Regardless of the process chosen, the process may be repeated for as many segment terminating ends as needed to form the annular collar 100. Once the interlocking features are formed, the respective segments may be assembled to form the unitary stop collar and permanently joined together via an appropriate form of welding (as desired) along the interface line between positive and negative portions of each of the interlocking joints. The welding process will generally include welding along the entire joint line from edge to edge of the collar, and in some embodiments, the weld may be conducted on each side of the collar (inner surface or ID of the collar 100 and the outer surface or OD of the collar 100). In other embodiments, the welding may include sections of the length of the joint line. Once the joints are welded, they may be post processed (grinding, brushing, smoothing, etc.) as desired for the appearance or dimensional constraints of the final product. The segments 102, 104 or assembled collar 100 may be drilled and threaded to receive the desired number of set screws 108, as shown in
The foregoing has outlined features of several embodiments so that those skilled in the art may better understand the present disclosure. Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that the present disclosure may be used as a basis for designing or modifying other processes and structures for carrying out the same purposes and/or achieving the same advantages of the embodiments introduced herein. Those skilled in the art should also realize that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, and that they may make various changes, substitutions and alterations herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, as defined by the following claims.