Slickline
Slickline refers to a single strand wire which is used to run a variety of tools down into wellbore for use during well drilling operations in the oil and gas industry. Slickline can also describe a niche of the industry that involves using a slickline truck or doing a slickline job. Slickline is used to lower tools into an oil or gas well to perform a specified maintenance job downhole. It is more commonly used in production tubing. Slickline tools operate with a mechanical action, controlled from the surface in the wireline trucks' operators' compartment. Slickline and slickline tools are used for a variety of applications.
Description
Slickline is a single strand wire which is used to run a variety of tools down into wellbore for several purposes. It is used during well drilling operations in the oil and gas industry. In general, the term slickline can also describe a niche of the industry that involves using a slickline truck or doing a slickline job.Slickline looks like a long, smooth, unbraided wire, often shiny, silver/chrome in appearance. It comes in varying lengths, according to the depth of wells in the area it is used up to 35,000 feet in length. It is used to lower and raise downhole tools used in oil and gas well maintenance to the appropriate depth of the drilled well.
In use and appearance, slickline is connected by a drum and spooled off the back of the slickline truck to the wireline sheave. The sheave is a round wheel grooved and sized to accept a specified line and positioned to redirect the line to another sheave that will allow the slickline to enter the wellbore.
Uses
Slickline is used to lower downhole tools into an oil or gas well to perform a specified maintenance job downhole. Downhole refers to the area in the pipe below surface, the pipe being either the casing cemented in the hole by the drilling rig or the tubing, a smaller diameter pipe hung inside the casing.Slickline is more commonly used in production tubing. The wireline operator monitors at surface the slickline tension via a weight indicator gauge and the depth via a depth counter zeroed from surface, lowers the downhole tool to the proper depth, completes the job by manipulating the downhole tool mechanically, checks to make sure it worked if possible, and pulls the tool back out by winding the slickline back onto the drum it was spooled from. The slickline drum is controlled by a hydraulic pump, which in turn is controlled by the slickline operator.
Slickline comes in different sizes and grades. The larger the size, and higher the grade, generally means the higher line tension can be pulled before the line snaps at the weakest spot and causes a costly "fishing job". Due to downhole tools getting stuck because of malfunctions or downhole conditions including sand, scale, salt, asphaltenes, and other well byproducts settling or loosening off the pipe walls because of agitation either by the downhole tools or a change in downhole inflow, sometimes it is necessary to pull hard on the tools to bring them back uphole to surface. If the tools are stuck, and the operator pulls too hard, the line will snap or pull apart at the weakest spot, which is generally closer to surface as the further uphole the weak point in the line is, the more weight it has to support.
Weak spots in the line can be caused by making the circle around the counter wheel, making a bend around a sheave, a kink in a line from normal use.
When the slickline parts, this can create an expensive fishing job. It is called fishing because different fishing tools may often need to be used until one gets a "bite", then the original tools downhole may be worked free, or the slickline will be cut off where they join the tools downhole so that broken slickline can be pulled back to surface and out of the way, in order to fish the stuck toolstring. Because of the downtime involved in fishing—meaning not being able to flow the oil/gas well—the client is losing money by lack of production and also the cost of the slickline unit to fish, and the cost of what is left in the hole if it is not fished out.
Slickline was originally called measuring line, because the line was flat like a tape measure, and marked with depth increments so the operators would know how deep in the hole they were. This probably changed because the flat measuring line wasn't as strong as the modern slickline, and separate depth counters were developed.
It is advantageous to keep the diameter of the wire as small as possible for the following reasons:
- It reduces the load of its own weight.
- It can be run over smaller-diameter sheaves, and wound on smaller-diameter spools or reels without overstressing by bending.
- It keeps the reel drum size to a minimum.
- It provides a small cross-section area for operation under pressure.
The sizes of solid wireline in most common uses are:,,,,, and in diameter, and are obtainable from the wire-drawing mills in one-piece standard lengths of 18,000-, 20,000-, 25,000- and 30,000-foot lengths. Other diameters and lengths are usually available on request from the suppliers, with the largest size currently available at.
Mechanical and hydraulic jars
Slickline tools operate with a mechanical action, controlled from the surface in the wireline trucks' operators' compartment. Typically, this mechanical action is accomplished by the operation of jars. There are generally two types of jars; mechanical and hydraulic.Mechanical jars look like a long, tubular piece of machined metal that slides longer or shorter approximately 75% to 90% of its total length. They give the effect of hammering on the downhole tools. The weight or hit of the hammer depends on how much sinker bar is added above the jars. Generally, a slickline operator controls the downhole tools with taps and hits from the sinker bar via the mechanical jars, controlled at surface by lowering or raising the toolstring and monitoring weight, depth, and pressure. Mechanical jars for slickline can hit up or down the hole, making them a versatile form of jarring.
Hydraulic jars for slickline are generally meant to jar up only, because not enough sinker bar is able to feasibly be lubricated in to jar down on the downhole tools. Hydraulic jars work by the operator pulling up on the line, which puts an upward force on the top of the hydraulic jars. The bottom of the hydraulic jars is usually attached by threaded connection to the mechanical jars, which are attached to the downhole tools. Depending on how hard the operator pulls on the hydraulic jars will affect how fast they hit, and how hard they hit. When the top is pulled on, the inner mandrel begins to slide upwards. It has a restriction in it that hydraulic fluid has to bypass as it is pulled upwards, until it reaches an area of no restriction, allowing it to slide rapidly. The reason for the initial tighter restriction is to allow the operator to pull his line to the desired hitting range.
Generally, once he hits that range on his weight indicator, he waits while the jars open to the less restricted point, whereupon the sinker bar travels upwards rapidly, providing an upwards hit on the downhole tools. The jars can then be "reset" by lowering the line until the weight of the sinker bar closes, or pushes the inner mandrel of the hydraulic jars back to the starting position. Because the hydraulic jars are designed to provide a wait time to allow the operator to get up to the desired line tension, they can provide a very effective upwards hit.
Mechanical jar and hydraulic jar hitting power is affected by the length of the jars, the mass of the weight above them, and the tension of the line pulling on them.
Some completion components may be deployed and retrieved on slickline such as wireline retrievable safety valves, battery powered downhole gauges, perforating, placing explosively set bridge plugs, and placing or retrieving gas lift valves. Slickline can also be used for fishing, the process of trying to retrieve other equipment and wire, which has been dropped down the hole.
Applications
The most common applications for slickline are:- Tagging T.D.
- Gauge ring runs
- Tubing broach/plunger installations
- Bailing sand and debris
- Shifting sleeves
- Setting/pulling plugs and chokes
- Setting/pulling gas lift valves
- Running tailpipes
- Bottom hole pressure and temperature surveys
- Spinner surveys
- Kinley perforator, sandline cutter, and caliper
- Running production logging tools
- Fishing operations
- Paraffin cutting
- Chipping ice/salt
- Lubricating long assemblies in and out of the hole
Slickline tools
Jar
This type of tool can be extended and closed rapidly to induce a mechanical shock to the tool string. This shock can induce certain components such as plugs to lock into place and then unlock for retrieving. Jars are commonly used to shear small brass or steel pins that are put in place to function certain down-hole tools at a certain moment. The operator can use the jars to shear the pins at a predetermined depth. Spang jars are manually operated by the wireline operator, who either lifts or lowers wire rapidly, requiring a great deal of expertise.Stem
Stem essentially just serves to add weight to the toolstring. The weight may be necessary to overcome the pressure of the well. Some variations of stem, called roller stem, may have wheels built into the tool to allow the tool string to glide more easily down moderately deviated wells. Stem give the hammering action to the tool string which in turn allows the jars to transmit the force given by the movement of the stem's bars. Depending on well conditions, either extra-small OD stems are used or extra-large. The range can be from to OD and the stems normally come in, or lengths. The connection to the rope socket or other tools can be a threaded connection or a QLS system.Pulling tools
These are tools designed for fishing other wireline components which have been dropped or placed in the well down hole. All wireline tools are designed with "fishing necks" on their top side, intended to be easily grabbed by pulling tools with a matching "ID" to that of the "OD" of the fishing neck. Pulling tools are also used for retrieving seated components such as plug prongs. Almost all pulling tools are equipped with a safety feature so they may release a stuck tool and allow the tool string to be brought to the surface for changes in components.Gauge cutter (gauge ring)
A gauge cutter is a tool with a round, open-ended bottom which is milled to an accurate size. Large openings above the bottom of the tool allow for fluid bypass while running in the hole.Most often a gauge ring will be the first tool run on a slickline operation. A gauge ring that is just undersized will allow the operator to ensure clear tubing down to the deepest projected working depth; for example tubing containing profiles would call for a gauge ring between and.
A gauge ring can also be used to remove light paraffin that may have built up in the tubing. Often a variety of different-sized gauges and/or scratchers will be run to remove paraffin little by little. Gauge cutter can be used for drift runs also.
Lead impression block
If an obstruction is found downhole, a lead impression block can be run to help determine its nature. The LIB has a malleable lead base in which the obstruction can leave an impression when they meet. The LIB is called wireline camera because of its function to mark any object downhole.They are also sometimes called confusion blocks because they only give a two-dimensional view of the down-hole object, making it hard for an inexperienced person to determine what three-dimensional object is in the hole