Drillpipe Inspection
When manufactured, new pipe will be subjected by the manufacturer to a series of mechanical, tensile and hydrostatic pressure tests in accordance with API Specification 5A and 5AX. This will ensure that the pipe can withstand specified loads. A joint of drillpipe will however be used in a number of wells. When it has been used it will undergo some degree of wear and will not be able to withstand the same loads as when it is new.
It is extremely difficult to predict the service life of a drillstring since no two boreholes experience the same drilling conditions. However, as a rough guide, the length of hole drilled by a piece of drillpipe, when part of a drillstring will be :
220000 — 250000 ft 180000 — 210000 ft |
soft drilling areas:
hard or deviated drilling areas:
This means that a piece of drillpipe may be used on up to 25 wells which are 10,000 ft deep
During the working life of the drillpipe it will therefore be necessary to determine the degree of damage or wear that the pipe has already been subjected to and therefore its capacity to withstand the loads to which it will be exposed in the future. Various non-destructive tests are periodically applied to used drillpipe, to assess the wear and therefore strength of the pipe, and to inspect for any defects, e. g. cracks. The strength of the pipe is gauged on the basis of the remaining wall thickness, or if worn eccentrically, the average minimum wall thickness of the pipe. The methods used to inspect drillpipe are summarised in Table 4.
Following inspection, the drillpipe is classified in terms of the degree of wear or damage which is measured on the pipe. The criteria used for classifying the drillpipe on the basis of the degree of wear or damage is shown in Table 6. The ‘Grade 1 or Premium’ drillpipe classification applies to new pipe, or used pipe with at least 80% of the original wall thickness still remaining. A classification of Grade 2 and above indicates that the pipe has sustained significant wear or damage and that its strength has been significantly reduced. The strength of some typical drillpipe sizes when new, and when worn, is shown in tables 11 and 12.
Drillpipe will generally be inspected and classified before a new drilling contract is started. The operating company would require that the drilling contractor provide proof of inspection and classification of the drillstring as part of the drilling contract. In general, only new or premium drillpipe would be acceptable for drilling in the North Sea.
METHOD |
DESCRIPTION |
COMMENTS |
Optical |
Visual inspection |
Slow and can be in error if pipe internals not properly cleaned |
Magnetic Particle |
Magnetise pipe ends and observe attraction of ferrous particles to cracks detected by UV light |
Simple and efficient. No information on wall thickness |
Magnetic Induction |
Detect disturbances in magnetic flux field by pits, notches and cracks |
No information on wall thickness. Internal cracks have to be verified using magnetic particle technique |
Ultra Sonic |
Pulse echo technique |
No information on cracks. Very effective on determination of wall thickness |
Gamma Ray |
Table 4 Summary of inspection techniques