Logging
Logging
Logging
Holes containing bridges and ledges can pose extreme risk of loss to
logging tools. Numerous scenarios to be avoided are detailed in the
Logging Manual (Borehole Research Group, 2004)and therefore will
not be listed here. Use of the CSES can greatly assist logging
operations in difficult holes; therefore, its use should be thoroughly
considered.
The Logging Staff Scientist and the Operations Manager should plan
to perform several hours of hole circulation procedures before any
tool deployment if the temperatures exceed the safe operational
limits of the tool strings. In some cases where there is a quick
thermal rebound, the deployment of the sidewall entry sub (CSES)
might be necessary for avoiding tool damage and saving time if
more hole circulation is needed once the logging operations have
already begun. The Logging Staff Scientist, Operations Manager,
and Co-Chief Scientists should also discuss time estimates, potential
benefits, and procedures for such deployment.
Cautionary measures should be taken at the time of retrieving a tool
string, as hot fluids may spray a large area of the rig floor.
Significant amounts of H2S and hot fluids may also concentrate
along joints in large tool strings; therefore, protective clothing and
eyewear should be used when dismantling the tools. If a memory
tool that uses lithium batteries has been deployed in these
environments, extreme caution will be needed before dismantling
the tool, as exploding batteries can be extremely harmful.
Logging-While-Drilling Precautions
Overpressure
LWD/MWD tools are most often used where difficult formations are
expected and hole stability is a significant concern. Environments
such as convergent margins and, in particular, décollements pose a
serious risk to high-dollar drilling equipment. More conservative
drilling techniques must be used to prevent a LWD/MWD assembly
from becoming lodged in a zone of overpressure where hole
instability is a possibility.