Workover Class Notes
Workover Class Notes
Workover Class Notes
Workovers
What Is a Workover?
Intervention in a Completed Well
Virtually any well intervention can be called a
workover
In practice
Doing some kind of work on the well
May or may not require killing the well
Note many keywords on next few slides
Why enter well instead of just
monitoring at surface?
From surfacesomething is
wrong, but WHERE?
Lubricator
Blow-out
preventer
Wireline
drum
Business End of Wireline Unit
Wireline
Intervention
Slickline
Normal wireline applications
Run/retrieve tools
Braided Line
Fishing applications
E-line
Perforating
Cased-hole logging
Set bridge plug
Wireline failure
Tools getting stuck
Blowouts
Potential for other
accidents
Main advantages
Ability to pump through
the coil
Ability to push into the
hole rather than relying
on gravity
No joints to make/break
Can run through
existing tubing
Coiled Tubing (CT) Some will have a mast
BOP stack if drilling
Gooseneck
Lubricator
Before Running Coiled Tubing into a well
Tubing Force Analysis
All the forces that will act on Coiled Tubing
Pumping Liquid/Gas
Drilling
Perforating
Acidizing
Used for diversion especially in horizontal wells
CT fracturing
CT and electric-line
CT Fracturing
Thru Tubing Intervention: Coiled Tubing Cleanout
(caution: may cause perforation invasion by fluids/solids)
Forward or
Fill Covering Perfs Reverse jetting
Plug Bottom Interval
Use coil or work
Bottom perfs string to lay sand,
watered out cement (and/or plug)
Cement Squeeze 3. Remove
1. Protect Oil zone 2. Squeeze Perfs Wellbore
Cement
Coiled Tubing or
Work String
Watered
Out
Temp.
Sand
Oil Plug
Watered
Out
Oil
Oil
Watered
Out
Oil
Watered
Out
Watered Out
Oil
Watered Out
Oil