wireline operations

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Page 1: Wireline Operations
Page 2: Wireline Operations

WIRE LINE OPERATIONS

Rao Mubarak Ali

Institute Of Petroleum & Natural Gas

Engineering

Mehran University Of Engineering &

Technology

Jamshoro, Sindh, PAKISTAN

[email protected]

international member of

SPE 4353073

Page 3: Wireline Operations

PRESENTATION CONTENTS

What is wireline?

Types of wireline

Slick line

Braided line

Wireline Logs

Wireline Tools

How Pressure control during wireline operation

Tools used to control Pressure during wireline

operation

Page 4: Wireline Operations

WHAT IS WIRELINE ???

In the oil and gas

industry, the term

wireline usually refers to

a cabling technology used

by operators of oil and gas

wells to lower equipment

or measurement devices

into the well for the

purposes of well

intervention, reservoir

evaluation, and pipe

recovery.

Page 5: Wireline Operations

DIFFERENT TYPES OF WIRELINE

Slick line A slickline is a thin cable introduced into a well to

deliver and retrieve tools downhole.

Used to place and recover wellbore equipment,

such as plugs, gauges and valves, slicklines are

single-strand non-electric cables lowered into oil

and gas wells from the surface.

Slicklines can also be used to adjust valves and

sleeves located downhole, as well as repair tubing

within the wellbore.

Page 6: Wireline Operations

BRAIDED LINE

Braided line can contain an inner core of insulated

wires which provide power to equipment located at

the end of the cable, normally referred to as electric

line.

Provides a pathway for electrical telemetry for

communication between the surface and equipment

at the end of the cable.

Page 7: Wireline Operations

WIRE LINE LOGS

First developed by Conrad and Marcel

Schlumberger in 1927.

Wireline logs measure formation properties in a well

through electrical lines of wire.

Wireline logs are constant downhole measurements

sent through the electrical wireline used to help

geologists, drillers and engineers make real-time

decisions about drilling operations.

Wireline logs can measure resistivity, conductivity

and formation pressure, as well as sonic properties

and wellbore dimensions.

Page 8: Wireline Operations

WIRELINE TOOLS

Wireline tools are specially designed instruments lowered into a well bore on the end of the wireline cable.

They are individually designed to provide any number of particular services, such as evaluation of the rock properties, the location of casing collars, formation pressures, information regarding the pore size or fluid identification and sample recovery.

Some wireline tools are: Nuclear tools , Resistivity Tools

Sonic and Ultrasonic Tools , Magnetic Resonance Tools

Borehole Seismic Tools , Cased Hole Electric Line

Additional Equipment

Cable Head

Tractors

Measuring Head

Page 9: Wireline Operations

PRESSURE CONTROL DURING WIRELINE

OPERATION

The pressure control employed during wireline operations is intended to contain pressure originating from the well bore.

During open hole electric line operations, the pressure might be the result from a well kicking. During cased hole electric line, this is most likely the result of a well producing at high pressures.

Pressure equipment must be rated to well over the expected well pressures. Normal ratings for wireline pressure equipment is 5,000, 10,000, and 15,000 pounds per square inch. Some wells are contained with 20,000 psi and 30,000 psi equipment is in development also.

Page 10: Wireline Operations

TOOLS ARE USED TO CONTROL THE

PRESSURE DURING WIRELINE OPERATION

Flange

Wireline Valve

Lubricator

Pump-In Sub

Grease Injector Head

Pack-Off

Line Wiper

Quick Test Sub

Ball-Check Valve

Head Catcher

Tool Trap

Page 11: Wireline Operations

1. Flange

A flange attaches to the top of the Christmas tree, usually with some sort of adapter for the rest of the pressure control. A metal gasket is placed between the top of the Christmas tree and the flange to keep in well pressures.

1. Wireline Valve

A wireline control valve, also called a wireline blow out preventer(BOP), is an enclosed device with one or more rams capable of closing over the wireline in an emergency. A dual wireline valve has two sets of rams and some have the capability of pumping grease in the space between the rams to counterbalance the well pressure.

1. Lubricator

Lubricator is the term used for sections of pressure tested pipe that act to seal in wireline tools during pressurization. As stated it is a series of pipes that connect and it is what holds the tool string so operators can make runs in and out of the well. It has valves to bleed off pressure so that you can disconnect it from the well and work on tools, etc.

1. Pump-In Sub

Pump-in subs (also known as a flow T) allow for the injection of fluid into the pressure control string. Normally these are used for wellsite pressure testing, which is typically performed between every run into the well. They can also be used to bleed off pressure from the string after a run in the well, or to pump in kill fluids to control a wild well.

Page 12: Wireline Operations

5. Grease Injector Head

The grease injector head is the main apparatus for controlling well pressure while running into the hole. The grease head uses a series of very small pipes, called flow tubes, to decrease the pressure head of the well. Grease is injected at high pressure into the bottom portion of the grease head to counteract the remaining well pressure.

5. Pack-Off

Pack-off subs utilize hydraulic pressure on a two brass fittings which compress a rubber sealing element to create a seal around the wireline. Pack-offs can be hand pumped or compressed through a motorized pumping unit.

5. Line Wiper

A line wiper operates in much the same way as a pack-off sub, except that the rubber element is much softer. Hydraulic pumps exert force on the rubber element until a light pressure is exerted on the wireline, cleaning grease and well fluid off the line in the process.

5. Quick Test Sub

A Quick Test Sub (QTS) is used when pressure testing the pressure control equipment (PCE) for repetitive operations. The PCE is pressure tested and then broke at the QTS afterwards to avoid having to retest the entire string. The PCE is then reconnected at the QTS. The QTS has two O-rings where it was disconnected that can be tested with hydraulic pressure to confirm the PCE can still hold the pressure it was tested to.

Page 13: Wireline Operations