Wellsite hose and conductor payout and retraction method and system
11982141 ยท 2024-05-14
Inventors
Cpc classification
B65H75/4478
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A reel system allows for storage, paying out, and retrieval of conductors, such as high pressure hydraulic hose, electrical conductors, or any other length of reeled conductor. For well operations, hydraulic control hose may be filled or dry for storage. Pigtail ends of the hose pass through an aperture of a core of a reel into an umbilical space. The hose may be payed out as needed at the job or well site, and the pigtail ends then removed from the umbilical space for connection to a source of pressurized fluid. The reel may be immobilized from rotation during this stage. Once the onsite operations are complete, a drive system may be powered to cause rotation of the reel to retrieve and restore the hose. Multiple hoses may be stored on the reel, and multiple reels may be mounted and independently driven on a common support of the system.
Claims
1. A well control method comprising: paying out multiple parallel hydraulic control hoses wound onto a spool assembly that comprises a core and first and second spaced lateral discs forming a storage space for simultaneous storage of the hydraulic control hoses, the core having a central drive plate, one of the lateral discs having an opening to an inner umbilical space, the core having an entry aperture in communication with the umbilical space for passage of terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses into the umbilical space, the hydraulic control hoses having quick disconnect couplings on the terminal umbilical ends and distal ends thereof, wherein the terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses are stored in the umbilical space and rotate with the spool assembly; connecting the terminal umbilical end of each hydraulic control hose to source of pressurized hydraulic fluid; connecting the distal end of each hydraulic control hose to an actuator input at a wellsite; and controlling the actuators with hydraulic power via the hydraulic control hoses.
2. The method of claim 1, comprising manually paying out the hydraulic control hoses and then securing the spool assembly against rotation.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein an access panel is movable to access the terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses freely stored in the umbilical space, and the terminal umbilical ends are extracted from the umbilical space prior to connection to the source of pressurized hydraulic fluid.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses are terminated to the respective quick disconnect couplings through an access panel.
5. The method of claim 1, comprising disconnecting the control hoses from the source of pressurized hydraulic fluid and from the actuator inputs, and spooling in all of the control hoses simultaneously via a hydraulic drive motor coupled to the drive plate of the spool assembly.
6. A multi-conductor hydraulic control hose reel system comprising: a spool assembly having a core and first and second spaced lateral discs forming a storage space for simultaneous storage of multiple parallel hydraulic control hoses wound onto the core, the core having a central drive plate, one of the lateral discs having an opening to an inner umbilical space, the core having an entry aperture in communication with the umbilical space for passage of terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses into the umbilical space; a hydraulic drive motor mechanically coupled to the drive plate to drive the spool assembly in rotation; a support structure holding the spool assembly and the drive motor; and wherein the terminal umbilical ends comprise lengths of the hoses that are wound and stored in the umbilical space, and an access panel is movable to permit extraction of the terminal umbilical ends of the hoses from the umbilical space; and wherein when the multiple parallel hoses are wound onto the core and prior to coupling of the terminal umbilical ends to other equipment, the terminal umbilical ends rotate with spool assembly.
7. The system of claim 6, comprising a hydraulic power unit comprising a pump and valving for generation of pressured flow of a hydraulic fluid to drive the drive motor.
8. The system of claim 6, comprising a hydraulic power unit comprising a hydraulic accumulator and valving, the accumulator storing pressurized hydraulic fluid to drive the drive motor.
9. The system of claim 6, wherein the spool assembly is independently rotatable.
10. A multi-conductor hydraulic control hose reel system for well control, comprising: a plurality of spool assemblies each having a core and first and second spaced lateral discs forming a storage space for simultaneous storage of multiple parallel hydraulic control hoses wound onto the core, the core having a central drive plate, one of the lateral discs having an access panel creating an inner umbilical space, the core having an entry aperture in communication with the umbilical space for passage of terminal umbilical ends of the control hoses into the umbilical space, a hydraulic drive motor mechanically coupled to the drive plate to drive the spool assembly in rotation, and a support structure holding the spool assembly and the drive motor, wherein the terminal umbilical ends comprise lengths of the hoses that are wound and stored in the umbilical space, and the access panel is movable to permit extraction of the terminal umbilical ends of the hoses from the umbilical space; and wherein when the multiple parallel control hoses are wound onto the core and prior to coupling of the terminal umbilical ends to other equipment, the terminal umbilical ends rotate with spool assembly; wherein the spool assemblies are mounted generally parallel to one another on a support base; and a hydraulic power unit mounted on the support base and configured to selectively drive the hydraulic drive motor of each spool assembly to spool in the control hoses.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the hydraulic power unit comprises a pump and valving for generation of pressured flow of a hydraulic fluid to drive the drive motors.
12. The system of claim 10, wherein the hydraulic power unit comprises a hydraulic accumulator and valving, the accumulator storing pressurized hydraulic fluid to drive the drive motors.
13. The system of claim 10, wherein each of the spool assemblies is independently rotatable.
14. A multi-conductor reel system comprising: a spool assembly having a core and first and second spaced lateral discs forming a storage space for simultaneous storage of multiple parallel conductors wound onto the core, the first lateral disc having a central drive plate, the second lateral disc having central access panel creating an umbilical space, the core having an entry aperture in communication with the umbilical space for passage of terminal umbilical ends of the conductors into the umbilical space; a drive motor mechanically coupled to the drive plate to drive the spool assembly in rotation; a support structure holding the spool assembly and the drive motor; and wherein the access panel is movable for access to the terminal umbilical ends of the conductors; and wherein when the multiple parallel conductors are wound onto the core and prior to coupling of the terminal umbilical ends to other equipment, the terminal umbilical ends rotate with spool assembly.
15. The system of claim 14, comprising a locking structure to selectively prevent rotation of the spool assembly.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the locking structure comprises a latch manually engaged with the spool assembly.
17. The system of claim 14, wherein the terminal umbilical ends comprise lengths of the conductors that are wound and stored in the umbilical space, and the access panel is movable to permit extraction of the terminal umbilical ends of the conductors from the umbilical space.
18. The system of claim 14, wherein the terminal umbilical ends of the conductors are terminated in the access panel via threaded or pluggable connectors.
19. The system of claim 14, comprising a drive system that provides power to drive the motor.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the drive system comprises a hydraulic power unit.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Various aspects of this disclosure may be better understood upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the drawings described below in which like numerals refer to like parts.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF SPECIFIC EMBODIMENTS
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(15) A wide range of equipment may be needed or useful during processes at oil and gas wells. It should be borne in mind that the present discussion is intended only to provide a cursory outline of such equipment, and those skilled in the art will recognize that the equipment and systems may vary widely depending upon the wells being serviced, the operations being performed, and so forth. Indeed, the reels and techniques described here, while adapted for oil and gas well applications are equally well suited or may be readily adapted to a host of other uses, such as firefighting, spray and pressure washing, rescue operations, aviation applications, agricultural operations, audio/video cable uses, construction uses, fuel delivery, industrial applications, mining applications, sewer and waste applications, public utility applications, welding applications, and so forth. Further, it should be understood that while high pressure hydraulic well equipment control hoses are described here as an important resource that may be stored on, payed out from, and retrieved via the reel systems described, more generally conductors or any type may be used in conjunction with the reels, particularly hoses of other types, control or data cables, power cables, and so forth.
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(17) In a typical operation, the various equipment and services are brought in and positioned around the well site, and all communications, flow lines, control lines, instrumentation lines, and the like are run and interconnected with the well equipment (and one another where required) in a carefully coordinated process that may take days. Conditions at the site may make such operations challenging, particularly where manual routing and interconnection of the hoses, conductors, wiring, and data cables is done largely manually, as it is in most cases. The present approach to storing and deploying hoses and other conductors is intended to greatly facilitate and speed that process.
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(19) Of course, for any oil or gas well application the foregoing equipment is positioned on or near the surface of the ground 56 traversed by a well 58. The well penetrates one or more zones of interest 60 from which minerals will hopefully be accessed and extracted. Operations might, then include detecting parameters of such zones, perforating rock in the zones, fracturing the rock, and so forth. In practice, a number of wells may be drilled and serviced in a single site (as shown in
(20) Some of these components are connected to services via hoses, cabling, and so forth, particularly to provide pressurized hydraulic fluid flow to actuate them. This is the case, in the illustrated example, of the wireline valves 48 and the valves 52 and 54. As shown in the figure, then, these may be connected to their remote equipment and services via reels 10.
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(22) As illustrated, the reels 64 store hose 66. In current embodiments, it is contemplated that one or more (e.g., two, three, four, etc.) hoses may be stored parallel on each reel, and payed out together at the worksite. Moreover, an advantage of the reels compared to present techniques at well sites is that only the amount of hose needed is drawn from the reels, the rest remaining wound and stored. Each hose has a pigtail or umbilical end 68 extending from an inner space (discussed below), and a distal or application end 72 that is free to be pulled to the application or actuator. In current embodiments, hydraulic quick disconnect fittings are mounted on the ends of the hoses to allow rapid and easy connections, and to retain the hydraulic fluid within them. In the illustrated embodiments, the reels are supported by a mechanical support bracket 74 on an inboard side, though many different physical supports may be envisioned. In the embodiment shown with two reels, a hydraulic drive 76 is positioned between them and connected to hydraulic motors (discussed below) to allow powered retrieval of the hoses. The entire assembly is mechanically mounted on a support base 78, such as a skid. In some embodiments, the skid may be designed for lifting with a fork lift or crane, or it may be mounted permanently or removably on a truck for ease of transport.
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(25) In a current embodiment, the reel is supported at the drive side by the bearings of the hydraulic motor, which is solidly fixed (e.g., bolted) to the support 74. The opposite side of the reel may be rotationally supported on casters (see below) on the support 78). This arrangement greatly simplifies the structure, and alleviates the need for heavy bearings in the reel, or separate supports for them. Of course, where desired, the entire structure may be adapted for such bearings, or on the contrary, the reel side discs could both be supported by casters with the drive motor being less rigidly supported on its support.
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(30) In a practical application, the method for using the reels would follow operations such as this. The reel system would be transported to a jobsite, and positioned where desired (e.g., around a red zone of a wellsite). One or multiple parallel hydraulic control hoses wound into the storage space of the core of the spool assembly between the spaced side or lateral discs are payed out. These hoses may be prefilled with hydraulic fluid, or may be transported dry and filled at the jobsite. At this point, the pigtails or umbilical ends of the hoses are not connected to the source of power to allow them to freely rotate with the reel. It should be noted that this alleviates the need for complex and expensive live rotational or swivel fittings as on some existing reels. As noted above, only the required lengths of hose need to be payed out, and the remainder can continue to be stored on the reel. Once the hoses are deployed, the reel is immobilized, such as via the structures discussed above. If the pigtail or umbilical ends are stored in the umbilical space, these are pulled out and the pigtails are unwound. The hoses may be connected to the onsite equipment, typically a source of pressurized fluid on the pigtail end, and to an actuator (e.g., valve, valve bank, motor, manifold, or any other application) at the distal end, such a via quick disconnects on the ends of each hose. During these operations, the drive system may be powered off, or may be on if needed for shifting of valves, checking its operation, and so forth. Following use at the jobsite, then, the ends of the hoses may be disconnected (e.g., via the quick disconnects), and the pigtail ends returned to the umbilical space. The immobilization structure on the reel may be freed so that the drive system may be powered on and controlled to cause rewinding of the hoses on the reel.