US788353A - Bottom packing for oil-wells. - Google Patents

Bottom packing for oil-wells. Download PDF

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US788353A
US788353A US23714104A US1904237141A US788353A US 788353 A US788353 A US 788353A US 23714104 A US23714104 A US 23714104A US 1904237141 A US1904237141 A US 1904237141A US 788353 A US788353 A US 788353A
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well
packing
coupling
tubing
tube
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US23714104A
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William H Downing
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    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH OR ROCK DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B33/00Sealing or packing boreholes or wells
    • E21B33/10Sealing or packing boreholes or wells in the borehole
    • E21B33/12Packers; Plugs
    • E21B33/128Packers; Plugs with a member expanded radially by axial pressure

Definitions

  • This invention relates to oil-well packing, and pertains especially to means for packing off water and gas at the bottom of the wellbore by expanding a packing under pressure of the well-tubing.
  • the object of the invention is to provide 'a short section of easing or tubing carrying a packing-ring and having an annular groove or depression over which a coupling is slidably connected by a series of set-screws.
  • the cone interferes with packing to such an extent that little or no expansion of the sleeve is made on the well-bottom and the lower end of the cone is mainly depended upon to do the packing.
  • the shoulder of the cone limits the action of the tubing in its downward movement on the sleeve, so that compression and lateral It is therefore diflicult to ef- I expansion of the sleeve are restricted by such limitation.
  • the frangible joint referred to consists of rivets, which, if small, will be drawn by the weight of the tubing in running the cone into position, and if the rivets are large they may not be broken under the intended pressure of the tubing to brake them, in which event the packing is not expanded, and repeated operation of the tubing is necessary to break the joint.
  • the invention consists of a non-shouldered taperless bottom section of well tubing or-cas ing carrying within its vertical limit a packing sleeve and slidably connected without frangible joint to one end of a coupling, the other end of the latter having the usual well casing or tubing screwed thereinto and adapted to be operated to effect said sliding.
  • Figure 1 is a vertical section of part of a well-bore, showing the invention in elevation and in position to receive pressure from the well-casing.
  • Fig. 2 is a similar view showing all the parts in section and the packer expanded over the bottom of the well-bore.
  • Fig. 3 is a detail elevation of the bottom tube 'section, showing in section a coupling slidably connected thereto.
  • Fig. 4 is a detail elevation of the bottom tube 'section, showing in section a coupling slidably connected thereto.
  • the well-bore 1 must be of greater diameter than the casing 2 and coupling 3, so that a space is left between the wall of the bore and said couplings, and a greater space is left between the tubing or casing and the wall, such space being also at the bottom 4 of the well-bore.
  • It not being essential to produce a vertical packing or filling of the firstmen tioned space I am enabled to use a short section of tubing 5, carrying aroundthe lower part of its length a packing-ring 6, the lower edge of which is flush with the lower edge of the tube 5.
  • a shallow annular groove or depression 7 Near the upper end of the tube 5 is formed a shallow annular groove or depression 7.
  • the tube 5 is without inner or outer shoulders and screw-threads and its botvtom end rests on the bore-bottom 4:.
  • the terminal coupling 8 has a top screwthread by which it connects with the casing or tubing 2, and its bottom edge is beveled to re ceive the top edge of the packing-ring
  • the coupling 8 has a series of countersunk screw threaded apertures 9 near its lower edge, so as to leave a portion to overlap the tube 5 below the groove 7
  • Set-screws 10 work in the apertures 9 and engage the groove 7 to hold the tube 5 to the coupling 8 during the placing of these parts at the bottom of the wellbore and afterward to permit telescopic movement of said parts without the screws being loosened.
  • the screws have sufiicient bearing in the groove to prevent displacement during the introduction of the tubing or casing into the well; yet the groove is of such shallow depth that when the tube 5 strikes the well-bottom the screws are pushed out of the groove by the weight of the casing and couplings without breaking the screws or loosening them.
  • the weight of the tubing-sections or casing slides the coupling 8 upon the tube 5 and carries the screws out of the groove so that they impinge the tube below the groove.
  • Such sliding efiects vertical compression and lateral expansion or crowding of the packingring over the bottom of the well between the wall of the latter and the tube 5.
  • the tube 5 is sim ply a small section or part of the well-tubing and without special preparation except the forming of the groove or slight depression therein; that the coupling 8 is one of ordinary use, with the exception of the omission or the screw-threads at one end and the substitution of the screwapertures-hence the extreme simplicity and inexpensive features of the device, which are essential, inasmuch as 'one is required for every well.
  • a well-casing coupling having a screwless end, the set-screws, and apacker slidably held to the coupling by the screws.
  • a well casing or tubing a packer having telescopic connection with the casing or tubing, and set-screws making said connection and adapted to slide on the packer under pressure of the casing or tubing.
  • a well casing coupling having setscrews, and a tube having an annular groove engaged by the screws to hold the coupling and the tube together and to permit telescopic movement thereof.
  • a well casing coupling having setscrews, a tube having an annular groove engaged by the screws to make a telescopic connection, and a packing-ring carried by the tube and acted upon by the coupling to expand it on the bottom of the well.

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  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Geology (AREA)
  • Mining & Mineral Resources (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Fluid Mechanics (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
  • Earth Drilling (AREA)

Description

No. 788,353. I PATENTED APR. 25,- 1905. W. H. DOWNING. BOTTOM PACKING FOR OIL WELLS. APPLICATION FILED 131:0. 1a. 1904.
I. f 2 8 7 1 9 6 f I, 7 7? /r ,m/ v
I I I UNITED STATES Patented April 25, 1905.
PATENT OFFICE.
BOTTOM PACKING FOR OIL-WELLS.
SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 788,353, dated April 25, 1905.
Application filed December 16, 1904. Serial No. 237,141.
To all whom it may concern:
Be it known that I, TILLIAM H. DOWNING, a citizen of the United States, residing at Parkersburg, in the county of Wood and State of West Virginia, have invented'certain new and useful Improvements in Bottom Packing for Oil-VVells, of which the following is a specification.
This invention relates to oil-well packing, and pertains especially to means for packing off water and gas at the bottom of the wellbore by expanding a packing under pressure of the well-tubing.
The object of the invention is to provide 'a short section of easing or tubing carrying a packing-ring and having an annular groove or depression over which a coupling is slidably connected by a series of set-screws.
Packers of the character of my invention are practically the same size or diameter as the well-tubing. Hence in running the latter, with the packer, into the bore of a well there is invariably particles of the well-walL-such as earth, sand, and gravel-pushed ahead of the end of the tubing to the bottom of the bore, and the usual uneven condition of the borebottom is only made more so by the falling of said particles. fect packing off of water and gas at the wellbottom in a permanent manner, Such packing 0H has heretofore been attempted by packing-sleeves arranged to expand against the wall of the well without engaging the well-bottom, and particularly by a shouldered cone which surrounds and is secured to a shell by a frangible joint. This cone and part of the shell is incased by a sleeve of rubber or other annular packing having a tapering end, so that pressure on the upper end of the packing will compress it vertically and expand it laterally,
thereby filling the space between the wellwall, the tube, and the cone; but the cone interferes with packing to such an extent that little or no expansion of the sleeve is made on the well-bottom and the lower end of the cone is mainly depended upon to do the packing. The shoulder of the cone limits the action of the tubing in its downward movement on the sleeve, so that compression and lateral It is therefore diflicult to ef- I expansion of the sleeve are restricted by such limitation. The frangible joint referred to consists of rivets, which, if small, will be drawn by the weight of the tubing in running the cone into position, and if the rivets are large they may not be broken under the intended pressure of the tubing to brake them, in which event the packing is not expanded, and repeated operation of the tubing is necessary to break the joint.
- It is therefore the purpose of this invention to cure the defects, overcome the objections, and remedy the disadvantages found in packers of this character and to provide a packer simple in construction, certain in operation, and of such arrangement that the packing is spread over the well-bottom to effectually pack off water and gas from the tubing.
With these and various other objects in view the invention consists of a non-shouldered taperless bottom section of well tubing or-cas ing carrying within its vertical limit a packing sleeve and slidably connected without frangible joint to one end of a coupling, the other end of the latter having the usual well casing or tubing screwed thereinto and adapted to be operated to effect said sliding.
In the accompanying drawings, forming part of this application, Figure 1 is a vertical section of part of a well-bore, showing the invention in elevation and in position to receive pressure from the well-casing. Fig. 2 is a similar view showing all the parts in section and the packer expanded over the bottom of the well-bore. Fig. 3 is a detail elevation of the bottom tube 'section, showing in section a coupling slidably connected thereto. Fig. 4
is a section on the line 0 00, Fig. 3.
The same numeral references denote the same parts throughout the several views of the drawings.
The well-bore 1 must be of greater diameter than the casing 2 and coupling 3, so that a space is left between the wall of the bore and said couplings, and a greater space is left between the tubing or casing and the wall, such space being also at the bottom 4 of the well-bore. It not being essential to produce a vertical packing or filling of the firstmen tioned space, I am enabled to use a short section of tubing 5, carrying aroundthe lower part of its length a packing-ring 6, the lower edge of which is flush with the lower edge of the tube 5. Near the upper end of the tube 5 is formed a shallow annular groove or depression 7. The tube 5 is without inner or outer shoulders and screw-threads and its botvtom end rests on the bore-bottom 4:.
The terminal coupling 8 has a top screwthread by which it connects with the casing or tubing 2, and its bottom edge is beveled to re ceive the top edge of the packing-ring The coupling 8 has a series of countersunk screw threaded apertures 9 near its lower edge, so as to leave a portion to overlap the tube 5 below the groove 7 Set-screws 10 work in the apertures 9 and engage the groove 7 to hold the tube 5 to the coupling 8 during the placing of these parts at the bottom of the wellbore and afterward to permit telescopic movement of said parts without the screws being loosened.
It will be seen that the screws have sufiicient bearing in the groove to prevent displacement during the introduction of the tubing or casing into the well; yet the groove is of such shallow depth that when the tube 5 strikes the well-bottom the screws are pushed out of the groove by the weight of the casing and couplings without breaking the screws or loosening them. After the tube 5 strikes the wellbottom the weight of the tubing-sections or casing slides the coupling 8 upon the tube 5 and carries the screws out of the groove so that they impinge the tube below the groove. Such sliding efiects vertical compression and lateral expansion or crowding of the packingring over the bottom of the well between the wall of the latter and the tube 5.
It will be observed that the tube 5 is sim ply a small section or part of the well-tubing and without special preparation except the forming of the groove or slight depression therein; that the coupling 8 is one of ordinary use, with the exception of the omission or the screw-threads at one end and the substitution of the screwapertures-hence the extreme simplicity and inexpensive features of the device, which are essential, inasmuch as 'one is required for every well.
Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new, and desire to secure by Letters Patent, is
1. A well casing or tubing, a packer, and set-screws connecting the tubing and packing to permit the packer to slide without operating the screws.
2. A well-casing coupling having a screwless end, the set-screws, and apacker slidably held to the coupling by the screws.
3. A well casing or tubing, a packer having telescopic connection with the casing or tubing, and set-screws making said connection and adapted to slide on the packer under pressure of the casing or tubing.
4:. A well casing coupling having setscrews, and a tube having an annular groove engaged by the screws to hold the coupling and the tube together and to permit telescopic movement thereof.
5. A well casing coupling having setscrews, a tube having an annular groove engaged by the screws to make a telescopic connection, and a packing-ring carried by the tube and acted upon by the coupling to expand it on the bottom of the well.
6. The combination, withawell-casing having suitable couplings, and a terminal coupling having screw-threaded apertures, of a tube having an annular grooveand slidable in the coupling, a packing-ring carried by the tube and expanded under pressure of the said coupling, and set-screws connecting the tube and the coupling and permitting a telescopic movement thereof.
7. The combination, with a well-casing having suitable couplings, and a coupling having screw-threaded apertures, of a tube having an annular depression overlapped by the said coupling to have the depression and the apertures register, a packingring extending from the end of the coupling to the bottom of the tube, and set-screws engaging the depression and adapted to slide therefrom in set position under pressure applied to the coupling.
In testimony whereof I affix my signature in presence of two witnesses.
WVILLIAM H. DOlVN IN G.
lVitnesses:
G. W. HATCH, J. V. SoLLEY.
US23714104A 1904-12-16 1904-12-16 Bottom packing for oil-wells. Expired - Lifetime US788353A (en)

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110146988A1 (en) * 2009-12-22 2011-06-23 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Apparatus and Method for Separating a Downhole Tubular String into Two Parts

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20110146988A1 (en) * 2009-12-22 2011-06-23 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Apparatus and Method for Separating a Downhole Tubular String into Two Parts
US8316954B2 (en) * 2009-12-22 2012-11-27 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Apparatus and method for separating a downhole tubular string into two parts

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