Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0

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OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY

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Search Result for Space Out Joint

space out

The act of ensuring that a pipe ram preventer will not close on a drill pipe tool joint when the drill stem is stationary. A pup joint is made up in the drill string to lengthen it sufficiently.

(of a sand or sandstone)

The percentage that the volume of the pore space bears to the total bulk volume. The pore space determines the amount of space available for storage of fluids.

spinning chain

A Y-shaped chain used to spin up (tighten) one joint of drill pipe into another. One end of the chain is attached to the tongs, another end to the spinning cathead, and the third end left free. The free end is wrapped around the tool joint, and the cathead pulls the chain off the joint, causing the joint to spin rapidly and tighten up. After the free end of the chain is pulled off the joint, the tongs are secured in the spot vacated by the chain and continued pull on the chain (and thus on the tongs) by the cathead makes up the joint to final tightness.

safety joint

An accessory to a fishing tool, placed above it. if the tool cannot be disengaged from the fish, the safety joint permits easy disengagement of the string of pipe above the safety joint. Thus, part of the safety joint and the tool attached to the fish remain in the hole and become part of the fish.

tool joint

A heavy coupling element for drill pipe. It is made of special ahoy steel and has coarse, tapered threads and seating shoulders designed to sustain the weight of the drill stem, withstand the strain of frequent coupling and uncoupling, and provide a leakproof seal. The male section of the joint, or the pin, is attached to one end of a length of drill pipe, and the female section, or box, is attached to the other end. The tool joint may be welded to the end of the pipe, screwed on, or both. A hard-metal facing is often applied in a band around the outside of the tool joint to enable it to resist abrasion from the walls of the borehole.

make a connection

To attach a joint of drill pipe onto the drill stem suspended in the wellbore to permit deepening the wellbore by the length of the joint added (about 30 feet, or 9 meters).

casing string

The entire length of all the joints of casing run in a well. Most casing joints are manufactured to specifications established by API, although non-API specification casing is available for special situations. Casing manufactured to API specifications is available in three length ranges. A joint of range 1 casing is 16 to 25 feet long; a joint of range 2 casing is 25 to 34 feet long; and a joint of range 3 casing is 34 to 48 feet long. The outside diameter of a joint of API casing ranges from 4 1/2 to 20 inches.

flush-joint pipe

Pipe in which the outside diameter of the joint is the same as the outside diameter of the tube. Pipe may also be internally flush-joint.

packer

A piece of downhole equipment, consisting of a sealing device, a holding or setting device, and an inside passage for fluids, used to block the flow of fluids through the annular space between the tubing and the wall of the wellbore by sealing off the space between them. It is usually made up in the tubing string some distance above the producing zone. A packing element expands to prevent fluid flow except through the inside bore of the packer and into the tubing. Packers are classified according to configuration, use, and method of setting and whether or not they are retrievable (that is, whether they can be removed when necessary, or whether they must be milled or drilled out and thus destroyed).

cellar

A hole dug, usually before drilling of a well, to allow working space for the casinghead equipment.

displacement

2. replacement of one fluid by another in the pore space of a reservoir. For example, oil may be displaced by water.

rod blowout preventer

A ram device used to close the annular space around the polished rod or sucker rod in a pumping well.

substructure

The foundation on which the derrick or mast and usually the drawworks sit. It contains space for storage and well-control equipment.

flush-joint casing

A casing in which the outside diameter of the joint is the same as the outside diameter of the casing itself.

pore pressure

An opening or space within a rock or mass of rocks, usually small and often filled with some fluid (water, oil, gas, or all three). Compare vug.

pin

1. the male section of a tool joint.

box

The female section of a connection. See tool joint.

stripper head

A blowout prevention device consisting of a gland and packing arrangement bolted to the wellhead. It is often used to seal the annular space between tubing and casing.

free water

1. water produced with oil. It usually settles out within five minutes when the well fluids become stationary in a settling space within a vessel.

blind ram

An integral part of a blowout preventer, which serves as the closing element on an open hole. Its ends do not fit around the drill pipe but seal against each other and shut off the space below completely. See ram

blank joint

A heavy wall sub placed opposite flowing perforations.

single

A joint of drill pipe. Compare double, thribble, and fourable.

break out

To loosen a tight joint as in line pipe or sucker rods.

pup joint

A length of drill or line pipe, tubing, or casing considerably shorter than 30 feet.

gauge joint

The heaviest-wall casing section of the string, usually located just below the preventers or tree.

normal circulation

The smooth, uninterrupted circulation of drilling fluid down the drill stem, out the bit, up the annular space between the pipe and the hole, and back to the surface. Compare reverse circulation.

half mule shoe

A cutoff pup joint below a packer used as a fluid entry device and/or seal assemblies guide

mill-out extension

A pinned-end pup joint used to provide additional length and inside diameter necessary to accommodate a standard milling tool.

drilling spool

A fitting placed in the blowout preventer stack to provide space between preventers for facilitating stripping operations, to permit attachment of choke and kill lines, and for localizing possible erosion by fluid flow to the spool instead of to the more expensive pieces of equipment.

telescoping swivel sub

A sub with a telescoping joint used in dual or triple completions for running additional tail pipe.

tubing spider

A device used with slips to prevent tubing from falling into the hole when a joint of pipe is being unscrewed and racked.

expansion joint

A device used to connect long lines of pipe to allow the pipe joints to expand or contract as the temperature rises or falls.

pipe ram

A sealing component for a blowout preventer that closes the annular space between the pipe and the blowout preventer or wellhead.

blast joint

A tubing sub made of abrasion-resistant material. It is used in a tubing string where high-velocity flow through perforations may cause external erosion.

ring-joint flange

A special type of flanged connection in which a metal ring (resting in a groove in he flange) serves as a pressure seal between the two flanges.

joint

A single length (30 feet or 9 meters) of drill pipe, drill collar, casing, or tubing that has threaded connections at both ends. Several joints screwed together constitute a stand of pipe.

crossover joint

A length of casing with one thread on the field end and a different thread in the coupling, used to make a changeover from one thread to another in a string of casing.

sand screen

A screen joint placed opposite perforations in sand control

retainer

A cast-iron or magnesium drillable tool consisting of a packing assembly and a back-pressure valve. It is used to close off the annular space between tubing or drill pipe and casing to allow the placement of cement or fluid through the tubing or drill pipe at any predetermined point behind the casing or liner, around the shoe, or into the open hole around the shoe.

swab

A hollow, rubber-faced cylinder mounted on a hollow mandrel with a pin joint on the upper end to connect to the swab line. A check valve that opens upward on the lower end provides a way to remove the fluid from the well when pressure is insufrficien5t to support flow.

lower kelly valve

An essentially full-opening valve installed immediately below the kelly, with outside diameter equal to the tool joint outside diameter.

lower kelly valve

An essentially full-opening valve installed immediately below the kelly, with outside diameter equal to the tool joint outside diameter.

make up a joint

To screw a length of pipe into another length of pipe.

string shot

An explosive method utilizing primacord, which is an instantaneous textile-covered fuse with a core of very high explosive. It is used to create an explosive jar inside st5uck drill pipe or tubing so that the pipe may be backed off at the joint immediately above where it is stuck.

kelly

The heavy steel member, three-, four-, six-, or eight-sided, suspended from the swivel through the rotary table and connected to the topmost joint of drill pipe to turn the drill stem as the rotary table turns. It has a bored passageway that permits fluid

rotating head

A sealing device used to close off the annular space around the kelly in drilling with pressure at the surface, usually installed above the main blowout preventers. A rotating head makes it possible to drill ahead even when there is pressure in the annulus that the weight of the drilling fluid is not overcoming; the head prevents the well from blowing out. It is used mainly in the drilling of formations that have low permeability. The rate of penetration through such formations is usually rapid.

derrick

A large load-bearing structure, usually of bolted construction. In drilling, the standard derrick has four legs standing at the corners of the substructure and reaching to the crown block. The substructure is an assembly of heavy beams used to elevate the derrick and provide space to install blowout preventers, casingheads, and so forth. Because the standard derrick must be assembled piece by piece, it has largely been replaced by the mast, which can be lowered and raised without disassembly.

strip a well

To pull rods and tubing from a well at the same time. Tubing must be "stripped" over the rods a joint at a time.

blowout preventer

One of several valves installed at the wellhead to prevent the escape of pressure either in the annular space between the casing and drill pipe or in open hole (i.e., hole with no drill pipe) during drilling completion operations. Blowout preventers on land rigs are located beneath the rig at the land's surface; on jackup or platform rigs, at the water's surface; and on floating offshore rigs, on the seafloor.

collar locator

A logging device used to determine accurately the depth of a well; the log measures and records the depth of each casing collar, or coupling, in a well. Since the length of each joint of casing is written down, along with the number of joints of casing that were put into the well, knowing the number and depth of the collars allows an accurate measure of well depth

boot sub

A device made up in the drill stem above the mill to collect bits of junk ground away during a milling operation. During milling, drilling mud under high pressure forces bits of junk up the narrow space between the boot sub and the hole wall. When the junk reaches the wider annulus above the boot sub and pressure drops slightly, the junk falls into the boot sub. A boot sub also can be run above the bit during routine drilling to collect small pieces of junk that may damage the bit or interfere with its operation.

semisubmersible drilling rig

A floating offshore drilling unit that has pontoons and columns that when flooded cause the unit to submerge in the water to a predetermined depth. Living quarters, storage space, and so forth a reassembled on the deck. Semisubmersible rigs are either self-propelled or towed to a drilling site and either anchored or dynamically positioned over the site, or both. In shallow water, some semisubmersibles can be ballasted to rest on the seabed. Semisubmersibles are more stable than drill ships and ship-shaped barges and are used extensively to drill wildcat wells in rough waters such as the North Sea. Two types of semisubmersible rigs are the bottle-type semisubmersible and the column-stabilized semisubmersible. See floating offshore drilling rig.

bradenhead squeeze

A process used to repair a hole in the casing by pumping cement down tubing or drill pipe. First, the casinghead, or bradenhead, is closed to prevent fluids from moving up the casing. Then the rig's pumps are started. Pump pressure moves the cement out of the tubing or pipe and, since the top of the casing is closed, the cement goes into the hole in the casing. The tubing or pipe is pulled from the well and the cement allowed to harden. The hardened cement seals the hole in the casing. Although the term "bradenhead squeezing" is still used, the term "bradenhead" is obsolete. See annular space, casinghead, squeeze.

wash over

To release pipe that is stuck in the hole by running washover pipe. The washover pipe must have an outside diameter small enough to fit into the borehole but an inside diameter large enough to fit over the outside diameter of the stuck pipe. A rotary shoe, which cuts away the formation, mud, or whatever is sticking the pipe, is made up on the bottom joint of the washover pipe, and the assembly is lowered into the hole. Rotation of the assembly frees the stuck pipe. Several washovers may have to be made if the stuck portion is very long.

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