Claims
- 1. A pipe joint for connecting first and second pipes of a pipe string passing through a body of water and driven into the sea floor comprising:
- a first tubular member affixed to the first pipe;
- a second tubular member affixed to the second pipe, said first tubular member having a portion thereof insertable within said second tubular member;
- a plurality of circumferentially spaced groupings of teeth disposed on both of said members;
- the pipes being connectable upon a rotation of one of the pipes in a common plane, said common plane being perpendicular to the axis of rotation;
- stop means on one of said members engageable with means on the other member to limit said rotation to less than one revolution;
- said teeth disposed on one of said members having surfaces engageable, when an axial tension load is placed on the pipe joint, with cooperable surfaces on teeth disposed on the other of said members; said cooperable surfaces being in planes perpendicular to said axis of rotation, thereby avoiding any substantial radial load on the pipe joint upon the application of axial tension loads; and
- abutting support means on said tubular members to transmit axial compression loads applied to the pipe joint whereby the pipe joint is capable of sustaining axial tension loads, axial compression loads, and bending moments caused by the driving of the pipe string into the sea floor and by the water currents.
- 2. A pipe joint as defined in claim 1 wherein said stop means includes an engagement member for each grouping of teeth disposed on one of said tubular members and at least one stop member on the other of said tubular members for engagement with one of said engagement members upon a rotation of less than 30.degree.; said pipe joint further including a movable lock element adjacent said stop member to prevent rotation in the opposite direction upon the engagement of said stop member and said one of said engagement members.
- 3. A pipe joint as defined in claim 1 further including dual seal means disposed on one of said tubular members for sealing engagement with the other tubular member for establishing fluid tight communication between said first and second tubular members; said dual seal means trailing said teeth on said one of said tubular members to prevent engagement of said dual seal means with said teeth on said other tubular member.
- 4. A pipe joint according to claim 1 wherein said support means is so positioned on said tubular members that said support means transmits all of said axial compression loads at said pipe joint.
- 5. A pipe joint according to claim 1 wherein said support means includes an annular shoulder on said second tubular member engaging a correlating annular shoulder on said first tubular member; said shoulders and said pipes having an equal radial extent from the axis of rotation whereby the path of the driving force of said axial loads is co-axial through said joint and pipes.
- 6. A pipe joint according to claim 1 wherein said teeth have no-lead.
- 7. A pipe joint according to claim 1 wherein said teeth are square in cross-section.
- 8. A pipe joint according to claim 1 wherein said groupings of teeth are circumferentially spaced apart at least every 30.degree. on said members to provide engageable surfaces upon the application of a bending moment on one of said members towards one of said groupings.
- 9. A pipe connection for forming between one and another pipe ends a fluid tight fluid conveying joint freely made up and broken apart by nearly torqueless relative rotation of said pipe ends coupled with nearly forceless axial approach and separation of said pipe ends and especially adapted for use in connecting underwater pipes of large diameter such as well heads and casing passing through a body of water and driven into the sea floor, said connection including a pin formed by one pipe end and a socket formed by the other pipe end, said pin and socket each carrying disposed about its periphery, the outer periphery in the case of the pin and the inner periphery in the case of the socket, a plurality of circumferentially spaced-apart groups of axially spaced-apart no-lead threads having zero pitch on their juxtaposable surfaces, having reference to the pin thread surfaces facing away from the pin terminus and the socket thread surfaces facing away from the socket terminus, same being the surfaces which will prevent axial separation of the pin and socket when engaged as hereinafter specified, the circumferential spacing of said socket thread groups being greater than the circumferential extent of the pin thread groups and the circumferential spacing of the pin thread groups being greater than the circumferential extent of the socket thread groups, whereby said pin can be inserted axially into said socket, said pin and socket having engageable annular shoulders thereabout limiting inserting of the pin in the socket, said pin threads being spaced axially from said pin shoulder a distance equal to the axial spacing from the socket shoulder of the spaces between the socket threads to provide for free substantially torqueless interengagement of said threads upon relative rotation of the pin and socket after the pin is inserted and said shoulders are engaged, and for substantially torque free disengagement of said connections by reverse relative rotation of said pin and socket, such rotation being opposed primarily only by friction between the shoulders and depending on the axial loading but being substantially unopposed by the pitch free threads, said pin and socket each including unthreaded areas of untapered cylindrical configuration, said area of the pin making a free fit within the like area of the socket whereby said pin and socket can be readily separated when desired, and elastomeric seal means carried by one of pipe ends in one of said unthreaded areas for forming a fluid tight seal between said pipe ends whereby fluid can be conducted by said joint without leakage despite rocking of said pipe ends one relative to the other, said threads having a square profile for avoiding any substantial radial load on either tubular member upon the application of either axial tension loads or axial compression loads on the pipes whereby the pipe connection is capable of sustaining axial tension loads, axial compression loads, and bending moments caused by the driving of the pipe into the sea floor and by the water currents.
Parent Case Info
This is a division of application Ser. No. 103,839 filed Jan. 4, 1971 now U.S. Pat. No. 3,800,869, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 792,912 filed Jan. 22, 1969, now abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 728,081 filed May 9, 1968 and now U.S. Pat. No. 3,442,536 issued May 6, l969, which is a continuation of Ser. No. 572,511 filed Aug. 15, 1966, now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (14)
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
373,608 |
Jan 1964 |
CH |
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
103839 |
Jan 1971 |
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Continuations (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
792912 |
Jan 1969 |
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Parent |
572511 |
Aug 1966 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
728081 |
May 1968 |
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