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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database

Abilene Geological Society

Abstract


AAPG Southwest Section Meeting, Transactions and Abstracts., 1999
Pages 15-24

Previous HitFishingNext Hit Techniques for Drilling Operations

J. Douglas Cearley

Abstract

Previous HitFishingNext Hit is the process of removal of equipment that has become stuck or lost in the wellbore. Its name derives from a period in which a hook attached to a line was lowered into the borehole. The fish, or lost object, is classified as tubular (drill pipe, drill collars, tubing, casing) or miscellaneous (bit cones, small tools, wire line, chain, junk). Industry wide, twenty-five per cent of drilling costs may be attributed to Previous HitfishingNext Hit.

Operator error, equipment decline, and failure to clean the hole are the cause of many Previous HitfishingNext Hit jobs. Running more mud weight than necessary can cause differential (wall) sticking. When hole conditions permit, differentially stuck pipe may be freed by spotting nitrogen. Worn or improperly shopped tool joints may part while tripping or drilling ahead. Interior corrosion in the body of drill pipe may cause torsion failure.

Previous HitFishingNext Hit equipment for tubular goods includes overshots, baskets, spears taper taps, die collars, mills, washpipe, jar-bumper sub assemblies, surface bumpers, safety joints, bent joints, wall hooks, circulating subs, and cutters. Additional tools for Previous HitfishingNext Hit junk are the magnet and the junk shot.

The cardinal rule of Previous HitfishingNext Hit is "Know when to quit." Close cooperation between geology, engineering, and accounting is necessary to a successful Previous HitfishingNext Hit job. Sidetracking or abandonment may be cheaper than prolonged Previous HitfishingTop operations. A fish on the bank is a liability when its recovery costs more money than leaving it in the borehole.


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