Chapter 5 Rotary Drilling Bits
Chapter 5 Rotary Drilling Bits
Chapter 5 Rotary Drilling Bits
Chapter 5
Rotary Drilling Bits
Introduction
A drilling bit is the cutting tool which is made up on the end of the drillstring. The
bit drills through the rock by scraping, chipping, gouging or grinding the rock at the
bottom of the hole. Drilling fluid is circulated through passageways in the bit to
remove the drilled cuttings.
There are however many variations in the design of drill bits and the bit selected
for a particular application will depend on the type of formation to be drilled. The
drilling engineer must be aware of these design variations in order to be able to
select the most appropriate bit for the formation to be drilled. The engineer must
also be aware of the impact of the operating parameters on the performance of the
bit.
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Drag bits were the first bits used in rotary drilling, but are no longer in common
use. A drag bit consists of rigid steel blades shaped like a fish-tail which rotate as
a single unit. The decline in the use of drag bits was due to:
• The introduction of roller cone bits, which could drill soft formations more
efficiently
• If too much WOB was applied, excessive torque led to bit failure or drill pipe
failure
• Drag bits tend to drill crooked hole, therefore some means of controlling
deviation was required
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This drill bit was invented by Howard Hughes. The roller-cone bit has conical
cutters or cones that have spiked teeth around them.
As the drilling-string is rotated, the bit cones roll along the bottom of the hole in a
circle. New teeth come in contact with the bottom of the hole, crushing, scraping,
and gouging the rock immediately below and around the bit tooth.
The high-velocity fluid jet strikes the crushed rock chips to remove them from the
bottom of the hole.
As this occurs, another tooth makes contact with the bottom of the hole and creates
new rock chips.
Thus, the process of chipping the rock and removing the small rock chips with the
fluid jets is continuous.
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Tungsten carbide inserts, as their name implies, are not part of the cone
material. Rather, they are separate elements, pressed into specially machined
holes in the cone. They can be placed either as gauge inserts (along the outside
of the cone) or inner row inserts.
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Diamond has been used as a material for cutting rock for many years. The
hardness and wear resistance of diamond made it an obvious material to be
used for a drilling bit. The diamond bit is really a type of drag bit.
The PDC drill bits were introduced to the drilling industry in 1967. A PDC cutter
consists of a stud covered by an artificial diamond layer bonded in a high
pressure/high temperature sintering process.
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The ability of the PDC bits to drill different formations with excellent efficiency
was proven to the industry (Millheim, 1986). The main advantages of the PDC
bits are:
The IADC categorizes for rolling cutter bits using a four-character code: 517X
The first character in the classification code indicates the cutting structure
series.
• The digits 1 - 3 are for steel tooth bits in the soft, medium and hard formation
categories
• The numbers 4 - 8 are for insert bits in the soft, medium, medium hard, hard
and extremely hard formation categories.
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The second character further specifies the cutting structure type within each series
classification: 517X
The third character indicates bearing type and whether or not the bit is gauge-protected.
• 51 indicates that the Smith F2 has tungsten carbide inserts, designed for use
in soft formations with low compressive strength;
• 7 indicates that the cones on this bit have sealed friction bearings, and that
the bit is designed for protection against gauge wear;
• X indicates that the inserts have a chisel tooth configuration (as opposed, for
example, to a conical shape).
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The IADC also categorizes for fixed cutter bits using a four-character code: M431
The first character indicates the type of body material and cutting elements: M431
Geological formation type to be drilled are classified in the following manner: M431
1 or 2: Soft and soft sticky-Highly drillable formations such as clay, marl, gumbo and
unconsolidated sands.
3: Soft-medium-Low compressive strength sands, shales and anhydrites with hard layers
intermixed.
6: Medium hard-Higher compressive strength with non or semi-sharp sand, shale, lime and
anhydrite.
8: Extremely hard-Dense and sharp formations such as quartzite and volcanic rock.
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1 - Short Fishtail
2 - Short Profile
3 - Medium Profile
4 - Long Profile
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