Oil & Gas Glossary 1.0
OIL & GAS TECHNICAL TERMS GLOSSARY
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Search Result for Workover
concentric tubing workover
A workover performed with a small-diameter tubing work string inside the normal tubing. Equipment needed is essentially the same as that for a conventional workover except that it is smaller and lighter.
workover
To perform one or more of a variety of remedial operations on a producing oil well to try to increase production. Examples of workover opera6tions are deepening, plugging back, pulling and resetting liners, squeeze cementing, and so on.
hydraulic workover
A series of hydraulic rams to restrain and pull tubing under well pressure, temporarily attached to the wellhead for workover.
production rig
A portable servicing or workover outfit, usually mounted on wheels and self-propelled. A well servicing unit consists of a hoist and engine mounted on a wheeled chassis with a self-erecting mast. A workover rig is basically the same, with the addition of a substructure with rotary, pump, pits, and auxiliaries to permit handling and working a drill string.
modular-spaced workover rig
workover equipment designed in equipment packages or modules that are light enough to be lifted onto an offshore platform by a platform crane. In most cases, the maximum weight of a module of 12,000 pounds. Once lifted from the work boat, the rig can be erected and working within twenty-four to thirty-six hours.
workover fluid
Any type of fluid used in the workover operation of a well. See completion fluid.
coiled-tubing workover
A workover performed with a continuous steel tube, normally 3/4 inch to 1 inch outside diameter, which is run into the well in one piece inside the normal tubing. Lengths of the tubing up to 16,000 feet are stored on the surface on a reel in a manner similar to that used for wireline. The unit is rigged up over the wellhead. The tubing is injected through a control head that seals off the tubing and makes a pressure-tight connection. A unique feature of the unit is that it allows continuous circulation while it is being lowered into the hole.
workover rig
See production rig. Also see pulling unit.
crew
1. the workers on a drilling or workover rig, including the driller, derrickman, and rotary helpers
rig
The derrick or mast, drawworks, and attendant surface equipment of a drilling or workover unit.
workstring
A string of pipe used in workover of well-servicing operations; not typically considered as production tubing.
flag
2. an indicator of wind direction used during drilling or workover operations where hydrogen sulfide (sour) gas may be encountered.
drilling crew
A driller, a derrickman, and two or more helpers who operate a drilling or workover rig for one tour each day.
reeled tubing
Lighter-duty well maintenance than hydraulic workover, employing small OD tubing capable of descending down the production string under well pressure
workover string
The string of drill pipe or tubing suspended in a well to which is attached a special tool or device that is used to carry out a certain task, such as squeeze cementing or fishing.
mud circulation
The process of pumping mud downward to the bit and back up tot he surface in a drilling or workover operation. See normal circulation, reverse circulation.
rotating components
Those parts of the drilling or workover rig that are designed to turn or rotate the drill stem and bit - swivel, kelly, kelly busing, master bushing, and rotary table.
back-in unit
A portable servicing or workover rig that is self-propelled, using the hoisting engines for motive power. Because the driver's cab is mounted on the end opposite the mast support, the unit must be backed up to the wellhead. See carrier rig.
oil-base mud
A drilling or workover fluid in which oil is the continuous phase and which contains from less than 2 percent and up to 5 percent water. This water is spread out, or dispersed, in the oil as small droplets. See oil mud.
drilling foreman
The supervisor of drilling or workover operations on a rig. Also called a rig manager, rig supervisor, rig superintendent, or tool pusher.
set back
To place stands of drill pipe and drill collars in a vertical position to one side of the rotary table in the derrick or mast of a drilling or workover rig. Compare lay down pipe.
drive-in unit
A type of portable service or workover rig that is self-propelled, using power from the hoisting engines. The driver's cab and steering wheel are mounted on the same end as the mast support; thus the unit can be driven straight ahead to reach the wellhead. See carrier rig.
driller
The employee directly in charge of a drilling or workover rig and crew. His main duty is operation of the drilling and hoisting equipment, but he is also responsible for downhole condition of the well, operation of downhole tools, and pipe measurements.
truck-mounted rig
A well-servicing and workover rig that is mounted on a truck chassis.
rotary helper
A worker on a drilling or workover rig, subordinate to the driller, whose primary work station is on the rig floor. On rotary drilling rigs, there are at least two and usually three or more rotary helpers on each crew. Sometimes called floor man, roughneck, or rig crewman.
macaroni rig
A workover rig, usually lightweight, that is specially built to run a string of 3/4 inch or 1-inch tubing. See macaroni string.
mud
The liquid circulated through the wellbore during rotary drilling and workover operations. In addition to its function of bringing cuttings to the surface, drilling mud cools and lubricates the bit and drill stem, protects against blowouts by holding back subsurface pressures, and deposits a mud cake on the wall of the borehole to prevent loss of fluids to the formation. See drilling fluid.
carrier rig
A large, specially designed, self-propelled workover rig that a person drives directly to the well site. Power from a carrier rig's hoist engine or engines also propels the rig on the road. While a carrier rig is primarily intended to perform workovers, it can also be used to drill relatively shallow wells. A carrier rig may be a back-in type or a drive-in type. See back-in unit, drive-in unit.
reverse circulation
The course of drilling fluid downward through the annulus and upward through the drill stem, in contrast to normal circulation in which the course is downward through the drill stem and upward through the annulus. Seldom used in open hole, but frequently used in workover operations. Also referred to as "circulating the short way," since returns from bottom can be obtained more quickly than in normal circulation.
snub
1. to force pipe or tools into a high-pressure well that has not been killed (i.e., to run pipe or tools into the well against pressure when the weight of pipe is not great enough to force the pipe through the BOPs). Snubbing usually requires an array of wireline bocks and wire rope that forces the pipe or tools into the well through a stripper head or blowout preventer until the weight of the string is sufficient to overcome the lifting effect of the well pressure on the pipe in the preventer. In workover operations, snubbing is usually accomplished by using hydraulic power to force the pipe through the stripping head or blowout preventer.