Combine high speed, bidirectionality, large pull and push forces, and logging while tractoring in a 2 1/8-in-diameter package.
Published: 07/08/2019
Published: 07/08/2019
An ERD well in a field offshore Sakhalin Island had developed water inflow behind tubing, most likely because of a leaking packer. However, logging the well would not be simple. The tubing was only 3½ in in diameter and had numerous gas lift mandrels (GLMs) and crossovers in one 50-m interval that would have to be traversed to reach a total depth of 10,700 m for logging a 1,500-m interval.
To develop full understanding of the situation to guide future workovers and plan upcoming wells, the operator needed to run advanced logging services that would provide an unambiguous determination of fluid holdup inside the tubing—in consideration of the presence of gas in the wellbore—and water flow behind the tubing.
The new 2⅛-in TuffTRAC iX tractor was recommended by Schlumberger to convey the logging tools because its slim diameter can be run in casing as small as 2½-in diameter.
The tractor’s drives can be operated independently, enabling a single tractor to negotiate a restriction by closing the drives sequentially as they pass the restriction. This means that only one drive section needs to be closed, which maximizes available power when navigating through restrictions. The electromechanically driven wheels of the TuffTRAC iX tractor already optimize use of the available surface power, achieving more than 45% conversion efficiency from the supplied electrical power. With these low power requirements, even in dry gas wells the tractor never has to be stopped to cool down.
The slim TuffTRAC iX tractor provided a benefit to the operator even before entering the well. Having to deploy only one tractor resulted in a shorter toolstring that reduced the crane boom height requirement. The shorter toolstring also facilitated conveyance. The TuffTRAC iX tractor with its four-drive configuration easily navigated past the two GLMs and six crossovers in the 50-m interval at about 7,500-m depth without the need to deploy the usual tandem tractors.
Tractoring to the target depth of 10,700 m in a single run was also quick—from the 1,200-m holdup depth, including passing the GLMs and crossovers and performing 30 tension pickups—taking just 25 hours. This is an efficiency gain of 80% over conventional tractor conveyance. The TuffTRAC iX tractor also easily conveyed the logging toolstring with a continuous head tension of more than 600 lbf during the flowing down pass of the production log to ensure safer and more efficient operation.
The high-quality logs returned by Pulsar service over the 1,500-m logging interval included 50 WFL log stations that made it possible to successfully identify the water inflow source.
Challenge: Determine water inflow source behind tubing in an ERD well to guide future workovers and aid in new well design.
Solution: Use the four-drive TuffTRAC iX cased hole services tractor to efficiently navigate in 3½-in completion while conveying Pulsar multifunction spectroscopy service to acquire production and WFL water flow logs.
Results: