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Petroleum Engineering, Drilling Engineering, Drilling Bits
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DRILLING BITS
JAMES A. CRAIG
Table of Contents
Types of Bit Drag Bit Roller Cutter Bit
Drill Bit Classification Drag Bit Classification Roller Cutter Bit Classification
Drill Bit Grading Tooth Wear/Loss Bearing Wear Gauge Wear
Types of Bit Drag Bit Roller Cutter Bit
Drill Bit Classification Drag Bit Classification Roller Cutter Bit Classification
Drill Bit Grading Tooth Wear/Loss Bearing Wear Gauge Wear
Table of Contents Types of Bit
Drag Bit Roller Cutter Bit
Drill Bit Classification Drag Bit Classification Roller Cutter Bit Classification
Drill Bit Grading Tooth Wear/Loss Bearing Wear Gauge Wear
DRILLING BITS
A steel-toothed piece of equipment attached to the lower end of the drillstring in order to: crush, scrape and, grind formation loose.
The two types available are: drag bits rolling cutter bits
Drag Bits
They consist of fixed cutter blades that are integral with the body of the bit and rotate as a unit with the drillstring. The cutting element consists of steelcutters, diamond, or polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC).
Steelcutter bits the serrated steel blades are set at different angles (e.g.
a fishtail bit). Natural diamond bits
the face or crown of the bit consists of many diamonds set in a tungsten carbide matrix.
Polycrystalline diamond compact (PDC) bits a layer of synthetic PDC is bonded to a cemented
tungsten carbide, it contains many diamond crystals bonded together. The sintered PDC compact is bonded either to a tungsten carbide bit-body matrix or to a tungsten carbide stud that is mounted in a steel bit.
Thermally stable polycrystalline (TSP) bits these bits are manufactured in a similar fashion to PDC
bits but are tolerant of much higher temperatures than PDC bits.
Roller Cutter Bits
They have two or more cones containing the cutting elements which rotate about the axis of the cone as the bit is rotated at the bottom of the hole. The 3-cone rolling cutter bit is by far the most common.
Important factors to consider in this type of bit are: structural materials, bearing-seal-lubricating design, cutting structure arrangements, and hydraulic arrangements.
Structural materials steels with appropriate yield strength, impact resistance,
machineability, and heat-treated properties are usually selected. Cones are commonly heat treated and made of NiMo-steel, teeth are sometimes made of NiCrMo-steel
Bearing-seal-lubricating design they function as a unit and they must be able to
withstand large impact loads, chemicals in the drilling fluids, and high temperature.○ Sealed bearings – grease lubricant (much longer life)
– pressure surges can cause leak○ Journal bearings – wear-resistant hard surface on journal
– O-ring seal and grease– solid lubricant inside cone journal race
Cutting structure arrangements the arrangement must provide efficient penetration of
the formation to be drilled with accurate cut gauge. The gauge of the hole drilled is maintained by the outside cutters which are also known as gauge cutters. Teeth are vulnerable to wear and that increases in abrasive sandstone formations. When the gauge cutters are worn out, the consequent hole drilled is undergauge. The cones rotate at the bottom of the hole and drill hole predominanatly with a grinding and chipping action. The teeth are pressed onto the formation below the bit and applies a force exceeding the compressive strength of the rock
Hydraulic arrangements they must be designed so as to efficiently remove and
evacuate all cuttings from the bottom hole.
Drill Bit Classification Drill bits are classified by IADC (International
Association of Drilling Contractor) to identify similar bit types made from different manufacturers.
Drag bit classification – it consists of four digits. First Digit – an alphabet. It defines the type of cutter
and the body material.○ D: natural diamond matrix body○ M: matrix body PDC○ S: steel body PDC○ T: matrix body TSP○ O: others
Second Digit – numbers 1 to 9 define bit profile. G denotes gauge height and C denotes cone height.○ 1: G high, C high○ 2: G high, C medium○ 3: G high, C low○ 4: G medium, C high○ 5: G medium, C medium○ 6: G medium, C low○ 7: G low, C high○ 8: G low, C medium○ 9: G low, C low
Third Digit – numbers 1 to 9 define hydraulic design.○ a: fluid exit (changeable jets, fixed ports, open throat)○ b: cutter distribution (bladed, ribbed, open-faced)
○ 1: changeable jets, bladed○ 2: fixed ports, bladed○ 3: open throat, bladed○ 4: changeable jets, ribbed○ 5: fixed ports, ribbed○ 6: open throat, ribbed○ 7: changeable jets, open-faced○ 8: fixed ports, open-faced○ 9: open throat, open-faced
Fourth Digit – numbers 0 to 9 denote cutter size and density.○ 0: impregnated○ 1: density light, size large○ 2: density medium, size large○ 3: density heavy, size large
○ 4: density light, size medium○ 5: density medium, size medium○ 6: density heavy, size medium○ 7: density light, size small○ 8: density medium, size small○ 9: density heavy, size small
Roller bit classification – consists of four digits. First Digit – numbers 1, 2, and 3 designate steel-milled
tooth bits and correspond to increasing formation hardness.○ 1: soft formation with low UCS and high drillability○ 2: medium to medium-hard formations with high UCS○ 3: hard semi-abrasive and abrasive formations
Numbers 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 designate tungsten carbide insert bits and correspond to increasing formation hardness.○ 4: soft formation with low UCS and high drillability○ 5: soft to medium-hard formations with low UCS○ 6: medium-hard formations with high UCS○ 7: hard semi-abrasive and abrasive formations○ 8: extremely hard and abrasive formations
Second Digit – numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4 denote a sub-classification of the formation hardness in each of the eight classes determined by the first digit. Number 1 depicts softess formation in a series and number 4 depicts hardess formation in a series.
*** UCS = Uniaxial unconfined compressive strength
Third Digit – defines the type of bearing and specifies the presence/absence of gauge protection by tungsten carbide inserts.○ 1: standard roller bearing (non-sealed)○ 2: roller bearing, air cooled○ 3: roller bearing, gauge protected○ 4: sealed roller bearing
Hardness UCS (psi) Formation TypesUltra soft <1,000 Gumbo, clayVery soft 1,000 – 4,000 Unconsolidated sands, chalk, salt, claystoneSoft 4,000 – 8,000 Coal, siltstone, schist, sandsMedium 8,000 – 17,000 Sandstone, slate, shale, limestone, dolomiteHard 17,000 – 27,000 Quartzite, basalt, gabbro, limestone, dolomiteVery hard >27,000 Marble, granite, gneiss
○ 5: sealed roller bearing, gauge protected○ 6: sealed friction bearing○ 7: sealed friction bearing, gauge protected
Fourth Digit – provides in general information about the bit characteristics.○ A: air application, journal bearing bits with air circulation
nozzles○ B: special bearing seal, application at high RPM○ C: center jet○ D: deviation control○ E: extended jets○ G: extra gauge/body protection○ H: horizontal/steering application○ J: jet deflection
○ L: lug pads, pads very close to gauge diameter○ M: motor application, special design for use on downhole
motors○ S: standard steel tooth model○ T: two-cone bits, sometimes used for deviation control and
penetration rate○ W: enhanced cutting structure○ X: chisel tooth insert○ Y: conical tooth insert○ Z: other insert shape
Examples
135MSoft formation milled tooth bit; roller bearings with gauge protection; motor application
447XSoft formation insert bit; friction bearings with gauge protection; chisel inserts
637YMedium-hard insert bit; friction bearings with gauge protection; conical inserts
Drill Bit Grading Dull drill bits are graded after runs according to
tooth wear/loss, worn bearings, and gauge wear.
Tooth Wear/Loss – the reduction of tooth height.It reported in the nearest eighth, thus a bit which teeth are worn out to half of its original height is 4/8 and reported as T-4. Normally, the tooth wear of a bit is not evenly distributed, some are worn more than others, some are broken out, BT; some are chipped (insert bits), CT; some are lost (insert bits), LT.
BT
LT CT
BT
Bearing Wear – bearing wear in the field is difficult since the bit would need to be disassembled for inspection. Often the bearing wear is reported based on the total bit running hours. Thus, a bit expected to have a rotation time of 40 hours but rotated at bottom for 10 hours, would bearing wear is reported as B-2, i.e. 10 hours 840 hours
×
Gauge Wear – when the gauge teeth of a bit are worn, the drilled hole will be under-gauged which may lead to damage of the next bit. A ring gauge is used to measure the wear. The loss of diameter in inches is reported as the nearest eighth. A bit which diameter is reduced by 0.5 in. is reported as G-O-4, (i.e. 0.5 x 8). Letter O is for “out-of-gauge” and letter I is for “in-gauge.”
Cracked cone
Lost cone
Balled-up bit
Washed-out bit