What Is
Drilling Rig?
A drilling rig is a machine which creates holes (usually called boreholes)
and/or shafts in the ground. Drilling rigs can be massive structures housing
equipment used to drill water wells, oil wells, or
natural
gas extraction wells, or they can be small enough to be moved manually by
one person. They sample sub-surface mineral deposits, test rock, soil and
groundwater physical properties, and also can be used to install sub-surface
fabrications, such as underground utilities, instrumentation, tunnels or wells.
Drilling rigs can be mobile equipment mounted on trucks, tracks or trailers, or
more permanent land or marine-based structures (such as oil
platforms, commonly called 'offshore oil rigs' even if they don't contain a
drilling rig). The term "rig" therefore generally refers to the
complex of equipment that is used to penetrate the surface of the Earth's crust.
Types Of
Rigs:
Drilling rigs can be:
- Small and portable, such as those used in mineral
exploration drilling, water wells and environmental investigations.
- Huge, capable of drilling through thousands of meters
of the Earth's
crust. Large "mud pumps" circulate drilling mud
(slurry) through the drill bit
and up the casing annulus, for cooling and removing the
"cuttings" while a well is drilled. Hoists in the rig can lift
hundreds of tons
of pipe. Other equipment can force acid
or sand into reservoirs to facilitate extraction of the oil or natural
gas; and in remote locations there can be permanent living accommodation
and catering for crews (which may be more than a hundred). Marine rigs may
operate many hundreds of miles or kilometres distant from the supply base
with infrequent crew rotation
List of
components of Oil Drilling Rig:-
This article lists the main components of a petroleum
onshore drilling
rig.Offshore drilling rigs have similar elements, but are configured with a number of different drilling systems to suit drilling in the marine environment.
The equipment associated with a rig is to some extent dependent on the type of rig but typically includes at least some of the items listed below.
- Mud tank
- Shale shakers
- Suction line
(mud pump)
- Mud pump
- Motor
or power source
- Vibrating hose
- Draw-works
- Standpipe
- Kelly hose
- Goose-neck
- Traveling block
- Drill line
- Crown block
- Derrick
- Monkey board
- Stand (of drill pipe)
- Pipe rack
(floor)
- Swivel (On newer rigs this may be replaced by a top drive)
- Kelly drive
- Rotary
table
- Drill floor
- Bell nipple
- Blowout preventer (BOP) Annular type
- Blowout preventer (BOP) Pipe ram & blind ram
- Drill string
- Drill bit
- Casing head
or Wellhead
- Flow line
Explaination:-
- Bell nipple
(#22) is a section of large diameter pipe fitted to the top of the blowout preventers that the flow line
attaches to via a side outlet, to allow the drilling mud
to flow back to the mud tanks.
- Blowout preventers (BOPs) (#23 and #24) are devices installed at the
wellhead to prevent fluids and gases from unintentionally escaping from
the wellbore.
#23 is the annular
(often referred to as Hydril named after a manufacturer), and #24
is the pipe rams
and blind rams.
- Casing head
(#27) is a large metal flange welded or screwed onto the top of the conductor pipe
(also known as drive-pipe) or the casing and is used to bolt the surface equipment such as the blowout preventers (for well drilling) or the Christmas
tree (oil well) (for well production).
- Centrifuge
(not pictured) is an industrial version of the device that separates fine
silt and sand from the drilling fluid. It is typically mounted on top or
just off of the mud tanks.
- Crown block
(#13) is the stationary end of the block and tackle.
- Degasser
(not pictured) is a device that separates air and/or gas from the drilling
fluid. It is typically mounted on top of the mud tanks.
- Derrick
(#14) is the support structure for the equipment used to lower and raise
the drill string into and out of the wellbore.
- Desander
/ desilter
(not pictured) contains a set of hydrocyclones
that separate sand and silt from the drilling fluid. Typically mounted on
top of the mud tanks.
- Draw-works
(#7) is the mechanical section that contains the spool, whose main
function is to reel in/out the drill line to raise/lower the traveling block.
- Drill Bit (#26) is a device attached to the end of the drill
string that breaks apart the rock being drilled. It contains jets through
which the drilling fluid exits.
- Drill floor
(#21) is the area on the rig where the tools are located to make the
connections of the drill pipe, bottom hole assembly, tools and bit. It is
considered the main area where work is performed.
- Drill line
(#12) is thick, stranded metal cable threaded through the two blocks
(traveling and crown) to raise and lower the drill string.
- Drill pipe
(#16) is a joint of hollow tubing used to connect the surface equipment to
the bottom
hole assembly (BHA) and acts as a conduit
for the drilling fluid. In the diagram, these are stands
of drill pipe which are 2 or 3 joints of drill pipe connected together and
stood in the derrick vertically, usually to save time while tripping pipe.
- Drill string
(#25) is an assembled collection of drill pipe, heavy weight drill pipe,
drill collars and any of a whole assortment of tools, connected together
and run into the wellbore to facilitate the drilling of a well. The collection
is referred to singularly as the drill string.
- Elevators (not pictured) are hinged devices that is used to
latch to the drill pipe or casing to facilitate the lowering or lifting (of pipe or
casing) into or out of the wellbore.
- Flow line
(#28) is large diameter pipe that is attached to the bell nipple
and extends to the shale shakers
to facilitate the flow of drilling fluid back to the mud tanks.
- Goose-neck (#10) is a thick metal elbow connected to the swivel
and standpipe that supports the weight of and provides a downward
angle for the kelly hose to hang from.
- Kelly drive
(#19) is a square, hexagonal or octagonal shaped tubing that is inserted
through and is an integral part of the rotary
table that moves freely vertically
while the rotary table turns it.
- Kelly hose
(#9) is a flexible, high pressure hose that connects the standpipe
to the kelly (or more specifically to the gooseneck on the swivel above
the kelly) and allows free vertical movement of the kelly, while
facilitating the flow of the drilling fluid
through the system and down the drill string.
- Monkey board
(#15) is the structure used to support the top end of the stands
of drill pipe vertically situated in the derrick.
- Mud motor
(not pictured) is a hydraulically powered device positioned just above the
drill bit used to spin the bit independently from the rest of
the drill string.
- Mud pump
(#4) is a reciprocal type of pump used to circulate drilling fluid through
the system.
- Mud tank
(#1) is often called mud pits and stores drilling fluid until it is
required down the wellbore.
- Pipe rack
(#17) is a part of the drill floor
(#21) where the stands of drill pipe are stood upright. It is typically
made of a metal frame structure with large wooden beams situated within
it. The wood helps to protect the end of the drill pipe.
- Rotary
table (#20) rotates, along with its
constituent parts, the kelly and kelly bushing,
the drill string and the attached tools and bit.
- Shale shaker
(#2) separates drill cuttings from the drilling fluid before it is pumped back down
the wellbore.
- Stand
(#16) is a section of 2 or 3 joints of drill pipe
connected together and stood upright in the derrick.
When they are pulled out of the hole, instead of laying down each joint of
drill pipe, 2 or 3 joints are left connected together and stood in the
derrick to save time.
- Standpipe (#8) is a thick metal tubing, situated vertically
along the derrick, that facilitates the flow of drilling fluid and has
attached to it and supports one end of the kelly hose.
- Suction line (#3) is an intake line for the mud pump to
draw drilling fluid from the mud tanks.
- Swivel (#18) is the top end of the kelly that allows the
rotation of the drill string without twisting the block.
- Traveling block
(#11) is the moving end of the block and tackle. Together, they
give a significant mechanical advantage for lifting.
- Vibrating hose
(#6) is a flexible, high pressure hose (similar to the kelly hose)
that connects the mud pump to the stand pipe. It is called the vibrating
hose because it tends to vibrate and shake (sometimes violently) due
to its close proximity to the mud pumps.
"
Very comprehensive post on drilling rig. It explains types, list of components and other details very nicely. Thanks for writing this post.
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