Well Planning II Course
Introduction
The Well Planning II drilling course is designed to complete the well planning procedure. Information previously presented in Well Planning I is used as a basis for rig selection, cement program, mud program, logging program and AFE generation.
What Will You Learn
What Will You Take Away
Who Should Attend
Personnel involved in well planning on a day to day basis and those who must execute the plan after its development. It provides further training to those individuals who have previously completed Well Planning.
Course Outline
I. Rig Specifications
A. Derrick Requirements
B. Substructure Specifications
C. Drill Line Requirements
D. Drawworks Requirements
E. Auxiliary Braking Systems
F. Rotary Requirements
G. Pump Requirements
H. Power Transmission
I. Prime Movers
J. BOPS
K. Choke Manifold
L. Mud Systems
M. Air/Gas System (Air/Gas Drilling)
N. Auxiliary Equipment
II. Mud Program
A. Purpose
B. Types
C. Fluid Flow
D. Mud Engineering
III. Cementing Program
A. Purposes Of Cementing
B. Cement
C. Cementing Equipment
D. Cementing Operations
E. Typical Cement Jobs
F. Logging Program
G. Exclusive Drilling Application
H. Wire Line Logs
I. Mud Logging
J. Measurement While Drilling (MWD)
IV. Prognosis Generation
A. Geologic Interpretation Of Prospect
B. Offset Control
C. Projected Characteristics Of Prospect
D. Casing Program
E. Drill String Design
F. Rig Requirements
G. Mud Program
H. Cementing Program
I. Logging Program
J. Directional Control
K. Auxiliary Equipment
L. Depth Days Projections
M. AFE Preparation
N. Record Keeping
The Well Planning II drilling course is designed to complete the well planning procedure. Information previously presented in Well Planning I is used as a basis for rig selection, cement program, mud program, logging program and AFE generation.
What Will You Learn
- To design the drillstring for the planned well.
- To describe the ideal rig specifications for the well being planned.
- To write a request to bid letter to drilling contractors specifying minimum rig requirements.
- To identify potential problems on a hole section basis.
- To write a general well program.
- To select the right drilling fluid for the well being planned, and generate a complete mud program.
- To design and specify a complete cementing program.
- To generate a logging program.
- To estimate all associated costs involved in drilling the planned well, and to generate an AFE (Authorization for Expenditure) for the well.
What Will You Take Away
- Comprehension of the sequence and procedure of well planning.
- A complete example problem, done by you, of a well plan.
- The foundation on which your future experience in well planning can successful build.
- The confidence to take on and complete any well planning assignment.
Who Should Attend
Personnel involved in well planning on a day to day basis and those who must execute the plan after its development. It provides further training to those individuals who have previously completed Well Planning.
Course Outline
I. Rig Specifications
A. Derrick Requirements
B. Substructure Specifications
C. Drill Line Requirements
D. Drawworks Requirements
E. Auxiliary Braking Systems
F. Rotary Requirements
G. Pump Requirements
H. Power Transmission
I. Prime Movers
J. BOPS
K. Choke Manifold
L. Mud Systems
M. Air/Gas System (Air/Gas Drilling)
N. Auxiliary Equipment
II. Mud Program
A. Purpose
B. Types
C. Fluid Flow
D. Mud Engineering
III. Cementing Program
A. Purposes Of Cementing
B. Cement
C. Cementing Equipment
D. Cementing Operations
E. Typical Cement Jobs
F. Logging Program
G. Exclusive Drilling Application
H. Wire Line Logs
I. Mud Logging
J. Measurement While Drilling (MWD)
IV. Prognosis Generation
A. Geologic Interpretation Of Prospect
B. Offset Control
C. Projected Characteristics Of Prospect
D. Casing Program
E. Drill String Design
F. Rig Requirements
G. Mud Program
H. Cementing Program
I. Logging Program
J. Directional Control
K. Auxiliary Equipment
L. Depth Days Projections
M. AFE Preparation
N. Record Keeping
Date and Locations: In-House Only