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					  PRESSURE CONTROL BASICS Portions of this page are from Petroleum Engineer's Handbook 
					(PEH) online version.
 
 Pressure control during wireline operations, 
					such as perforating and production logging, is critical to 
					the health and safety of workers at the wellsite nearby 
					residents, domestic animals, and wildlife, not to mention 
					the nearby environment and the financial health of the oil
					company and its executives and shareholders. Government 
					regulations and engineering best-practices keep failures to 
					a minimum, bur a few blowouts and gas leaks hit the evening 
					news often enough to suggest that someone messed up 
					somewhere.
 
 This page describes the basic equipment and terminology 
					related to pressure control at the well.
			
			The pressure control employed during wireline operations is intended 
			to contain pressure originating from the wellbore. During open hole 
			operations, the pressure might result from a well-kick. If 
			serious, the blowout preventer (BOP) would he closed, severing the 
			wireline and dropping the logging tools to bottom of the hole.
			Heavier mud would be pumped in through the kill-line. With the well 
			stabilized, the BOP would be opened and the wireline and tools fished
			from the borehole. Logging would resume and the well completed, 
			suspended, or abandoned.
 
 During cased hole wireline work, the well may be capable of 
			producing at high pressure, either during or immediately after the 
			wireline procedure. A fair amount of research and planning is needed 
			to be sure the correct equipment is in place and tested before
			trying to run the job.
 
 
  PRESSURE CONTROL EQUIPMENT This equipment starts with a connection to the top of the casing, 
			which forms the foundation for a semi-permanent fixture called the 
			well head. This is the control system during normal production,
			and consists 
			
			
			of pipes, joints, valves, chokes, and pressure gauges 
			or sensors.
			Additional equipment is added to the top of the well head during 
			wireline operations in cased holes..
 
 Well head pressure control equipment must be rated to well over the
			expected well-head pressure. Normal ratings for wireline pressure 
			control equipment is 5,000, 10,000, 15,000, and 20,000 psi.
 
 The well head is also called well 
			head assembly, well head stack, or 
			“Christmas tree”.
 
 
			   Cut-away view of a typical well 
			head (left) and "Christmas tree" style well head (right). 
			Schlumberger images
 
			
			The following describes the components of the equipment added to the 
			well head temporarily to allow safe wireline operations in cased 
			holes. They are listed in order from top of well head upward to top 
			of final assembly. This material is from Wikipedia and
			Schlumberger Glossary, edited for clarity.
 
  Flange A flange attaches to the top of the 
			well head assembly, usually with some sort of adapter for the rest 
			of the pressure control. A metal gasket is placed between the top of 
			the well head and the flange to seal against well pressure.
 
 
  Quick-connect sub A subassembly device that is bolted to 
			the top of the BOP stack that is designed to eliminate traditional 
			bolt-flanges to connect lubricator heads and utilize tapered-wedge 
			and lock ring designs. This allows the same security of traditional 
			pressure control connections
 
 
  Tool trap A tool trap has the same purpose as a head catcher 
			in that it prevents the tools from inadvertently dropping down the 
			hole. This device is normally located just above the well control 
			valves, providing protection to these important barriers from a 
			dropped tool. The tool trap has to be open in order to allow the 
			tools to enter the well, and is normally built to allow tools to be 
			recovered through the tool trap even when it is in the closed 
			position.
 
 
  Wireline valve A wireline control valve, also 
			called a wireline blowout 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 
			seal against well pressure.
 
 
   Lubricator The lubricator 
			
			is a high strength, 
			
			pressure tested, 
			
			pipe fitted above the 
			
			wireline BOP 
			
			that allows tools to be put into a high pressure 
			well. The top of the lubricator assembly includes a high pressure 
			grease-injection section and sealing elements. The tools are placed
			in the lubricator and the lubricator pressurized to wellbore 
			pressure. Then the top valves of the well head are opened to enable 
			the tools to fall or be pumped into the wellbore under pressure. To 
			remove the tools, the reverse process is used: the tools are pulled 
			up into the lubricator under wellbore pressure, the well head valves 
			are closed, the lubricator pressure is bled off, and then the 
			lubricator may be opened to remove the tools.
 
 
  Pump-in sub Pump-in subs, also called a  flow-tee, 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.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   Grease injector head The grease injector head is an assembly 
			of components used to contain wellhead fluids and pressure during 
			wireline operations. The wireline passes through a close-tolerance 
			tube assembly as it moves. High-pressure grease is pumped into the 
			surrounding annulus to effect a pressure-tight dynamic seal that is 
			maintained during the operation by injecting more grease as 
			required. A slight leakage of grease is normal, and the addition of 
			fresh grease ensures the seal is maintained.
 
 
  Pack-off subs 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.
 
 
  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 as it moves past the wiper.
 
  Ball check valve If the wireline were to become severed 
			from the tool, a ball check valve can seal the well off from the 
			surface. During wireline operations, a steel ball sits to the side 
			of a confined area within the grease head while the cable runs in 
			and out of the hole. If the wireline exits that confined area under 
			pressure, the pressure will force the steel ball up toward the hole 
			where the wireline had been. The ball's diameter is larger than that 
			of the hole, so the ball effectively seals off pressure to the 
			surface.
 
 
  Head catcher A head catcher, also called tool 
			catcher, is a device placed at the top of the lubricator section. 
			Should the wireline tools be forced into the top of the lubricator 
			section, the head catcher, which looks like a small claw, will clamp 
			down on the fishing neck of the tool. This action prevents the tools 
			from falling downhole should the line pull out of the
 rope socket. Pressure is applied to the head catcher to release the 
			tools.
 
 
 
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