CA1177266A - Reel pipelaying and respooling methods - Google Patents

Reel pipelaying and respooling methods

Info

Publication number
CA1177266A
CA1177266A CA000438176A CA438176A CA1177266A CA 1177266 A CA1177266 A CA 1177266A CA 000438176 A CA000438176 A CA 000438176A CA 438176 A CA438176 A CA 438176A CA 1177266 A CA1177266 A CA 1177266A
Authority
CA
Canada
Prior art keywords
reel
vessel
pipeline
pipe
tension
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
CA000438176A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Prosper A. Tesson
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Santa Fe International Corp
Original Assignee
Santa Fe International Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from CA000364392A external-priority patent/CA1158872A/en
Application filed by Santa Fe International Corp filed Critical Santa Fe International Corp
Priority to CA000438176A priority Critical patent/CA1177266A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of CA1177266A publication Critical patent/CA1177266A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Landscapes

  • Pipeline Systems (AREA)

Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE

A method of intermittently stopping and restarting the laying of pipe offshore from a reel pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively inflexible pipe thereon, pipe working and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is upspooled from the reel, vessel motive source means for imparting a forward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechanism associated with the reel for imparting at least a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode. The method comprises the steps of:
(a) stopping the forward motion of the vessel in the direction of pipelaying by (1) gradually reducing the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source, and (2) concurrently gradually increasing the dynamic braking force imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism, (3) to cause the reel to decrease its rotational rate toward zero while continuing to unspool pipe and to thereby maintain sufficient tension in the pipeline to hold the pipeline in a desired profile;
(b) locking the reel against further rotation in the direction of unspooling when the vessel has stopped its forward motion;
(c) thereafter controlling the forward thrust of the vessel motive source to maintain the vessel in a station keeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under said sufficient tension to hold the desired pipe profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;
(d) performing any necessary operations on the pipe and/or coating while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;

- a -(e) thereafter resuming forward motion of the vessel in the pipelaying direction by (1) disengaging the means locking the reel against the rotation in the unspooling direction, (2) concurrently substantially increasing the dynamic braking force imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism such that the dynamic braking force exceeds any increases in the forward thrust of the vessel's motive source at least up to the pipelaying thrust level required to move the vessel in the forward direction at a desired laying speed, (3) gradually increasing the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source up to said pipelaying thrust level, and (4) thereafter gradually reducing the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism at least until the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source exceeds the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism and the vessel begins to move forward.
The step of performing necessary operations on the pipe and/or coating may for example comprise the step of applying one or more sacrifical anodes to the pipe at a designated work station located along the pipe path downstream of the straightening means in the unspooling direction.

- b -

Description

REEL PIPE LAYING AND RESPOOLING METHODS
BACKGROUN~ OF THE INVENTION

This invention relates to techniques and methods`utilized in laying underwater pipelines. More particularly, the invention relates to laying pipelines wherein continuous lengths of pipe are first spooled onto a reel carried by a ~essel and are thereafter unspooled into the water as the vessel proceeds along the pipeline route. Still more particularly, the invention relates to techniques associated with the laying of such pipe- -lines, including attachment of sacrificial anodes, effecting repairs to the coating and/or Dipe during the laying process, and with respooling the pipeline, either as part of the primary pipelaying operation or as part of a pipeline salvage operation.
The methods and techniques described herein are appli-cable to several types-of reel pipelaying vessels. Suitable vessels which would be expected to use the methods and techniques described herein include towed barges, converted drill ships and/or ore carriers, and specially designed and constructed self-propelled reel type pipelaying ships. Towed barges capable of utilizing the methods and techniques described here have included barges owned and operated by Santa Fe International Corporation (hereafter "Santa Fe") and/or Santa Fe's predecessors-in-interest..
The first known commercial reel type pipelaying barge, called the U-303~ was operated by AquaticContractors and Engineers, Inc. a predecessor-in-interest to Santa Fe. The U-303 utilized a large vertical axis reel, permanently mounted on a barge and ' _ _ _ _ ._ 117~266 having horiz~ntally oriented flanges (generally referred to in the trade as a "horizontal reeln). A combined straightener~
level winder was employed for spooling pipe onto the reel and for straightening pipe as it was unspooled. The U-303 first laid pipe co~unercially in September, 1961, in the Gulf of Meixco off the coast of Louisiana and ~as used successfully during the 19607s to lay several million linear feet of pipe of up to 6" diameter. The U-303 reel pipelaying barge is described in British Patent No. 1,077,331 'and in corresponding I~.S. Patent Nos. 3~237,438 issued March 1, 1966 to Prosper A. Tesson and 3,372,461 issued March 12, 1968 to Prosper A.
Tesson.
The successor to the U-303, currently being operated in the Gulf of Mexico by Santa Fe and known in the trade as the nChickasaw", was built and operated 3:y Fluor Ocean Services, Inc., a successor-in-interest to Aquatic Contractors and Engi-neers, Inc., and a predecessor-in-interest to Santa Fe. The ~Chickasaw" also utilizes a large horizontal reel, permanently mounted to the barge such that it is not readily movable from one carrier vessel tc~ another. Various aspects of the "Chickasaw~
are described in the following patents:
British Patent No. 1,312,592 and corresponding U.S.
Patent Nos.; 3,630,461, issued December 28, 1971 to Daniel E.
Sugasti, Larry R. Russell, and Fred W. Schaejbe; 3,680,342, issued August 1, 1972 to James D. Mott and Richard B. Feazle;
and 3,712,100 issued January 23, 1973 to 30e W. Key and Larry R. Russell, and ~77;Z66 British Patent No. 1,312,593 and corresponding U.S.
Patent No. 3,641,778, issued Februrary 15, 1972 to Robert G.
Gibson.
A portable pipelaying system designed and built by Santa Fe for use on small supply boat type vessels for laying small diameter pipelines (up to 4" nominal diameter) has been in com-mercial use off the coast of Australia since about July, 1978; this portable pipelaying system is described in U.S. Patent No. 4,260,287, issued April 7, 1981 from U.S. Patent Application No. 909,260, filed May 24, 1978 in the names of Stanley T. Uyeda and John H Cha, as inventors.
Santa Fe has developed and built a self-propelled reel ship known in the industry as "Apache" which began commercial pipelaying operations in August, 1979. Features of Apache-type pipelaying ships are described in the following British and U.S. paten$ and applications:
British Patent No. 1,507,959 and corresponding U.S.
Patent No. 3,982,402, issued September 28, 1976, in the names of Alexander Craig Lang and Peter Alan ~unde, as inventors;
U.S. Patent No. 4,230,421, issued October 28, 1980 from U.5. Pa~ent Application No. 903,180, filed May 5, 1978 in the names of Charles N. Springett, Dan Abramovich, Stanley T. Vyeda and E. John Radu, as inventors;
U.S. Patent N. 4,269,540, issued May 26, 1981 from U.S. Patent Application No. 903,181, filed May 5, 1978 and 35,216, filed May 2, 1979 as a Continuation-in-Part of said Serial No~ 903,181, eaoh in the names of Stanley T. Vyeda, E. John Radu, William J. Talbot, Jr. and Norman Eeldman, as inventors.

- ~77Z66 The present disclosure (and inventive subject matter described and claimed herein) and the ab~ve-listed British and U~S. patents and applications are all owned by Santa Fe.

~177266 SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

' The present invention was developed to satisfy the requirements of commercial pipelaying operations. More parti~cularly, the invention was developed to meet the require-ments of pipeline owners and various governmental and industry-established regulatory boaies or agencies while at the same time making the reel pipelaying technique commercially practical, economical and competitive with other pipe~laying methods, such as the laying technique known in the trade as "stove-piping. n This invention also has particularly advantageous utility in such cases where it is desired to remove a pipeline from one location and relay it elsewhere. Reuse of the same pipeline can be environmentally advantageous; e.g., natural resources are conserved, pipe is not left on the sea bottom as "trash", etc. Such reuse can also have economic advantages. The cost of constructing a pipeline of a desired length is generally substantially greater than the cost of respooling a previously laid pipeline of similar length. Therefore the effective cost of the "new" pipeline is substantiallly reduced in the case where a pipeline is reused.
In one aspect, the invention is directea to a method of intermittently stopping and restarting the laying of pipe offshore from a reel pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively inflexible pipe thexeon, pipe working :
and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is unspooled from the reel, vessel motive source means for imparting a for-ward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechanism associated with the reel for imparting at least a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode, said method comprising the steps of:
a. stopping the forward motion of the vessel in the direction of pipelaying by (1) gradually r,educing the forward thrust imparted to the ~essel by the vessel motive source, and
(2) concurrently graaually increasing the dynamic braking.
force imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism (3) to cause the reel to decrease its rotational rate toward zero while continuing to unspool pipe and to thereby maintain sufficient tension in the pipeline to hold the pipeline in a desired profile;
b. locking the reel aga~nst further rotation in the direction of unspooling when the vessel has stopped its forward motion;
c. thereafter controlling the forward thrust of the ~essel motive source to maintain the vessel in a station ~eeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under said suffi-cient tension to hold the desired pipe profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;
d. performing any necessary operations on the pipe and/or coating while the vessel is in said station keeping m~de;
e. thereafter resuming forward motion of the vessel in the pipelaying direction by (1) disengaging the means locking the reelagainst the rotation in the unspo~ling .

~177Z66 dl~ection, (2) concurrently substantially increasing the ~dynamic braking force imparted to the reel by the reel drive méchanism such that the dynamic braking force exceeds any increases in the forward thrust af the vessel's motive source at least up to the pipelaying thrust level reguired to move the vessel in the forward direction at a desired laying speed, (3) gradually increasing the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source up to said pipelaying thrust levei, and (4) thereafter gradually reducing the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism at least until the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source exceeds the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism and the vessel begins to move forward.
In a furtheraspect, the invention concerns a method of intermi.tently stopping the laying of pipe off-shore from a reel pipelaying vessel, thereafter respopling a portion of the laid pipeline, and thereafter resuming the laying of pipe, said reel pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively inflexible pipe thereon, pipe working and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is unspooled from the reel, vessel motive source l.~eans for imparting a forward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechanism associated with the reel for alternately driving the reel in a spooling mode and imparting a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode, said method comprising the ste~s of:

il77Z6 . ' , ` .

a; stopping the forward motion of the vessel in the direction of pipelaying by (1) gradually reducing the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source, and (2) concurrently gradually increasing the dynamic braking force imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism, (3) to cause the reel to decrease its rotational rate toward zero while continuiny to unspool pipe and to thereby maintain sufficient tension in the pipeline to hold the pipe-line in a desired profile;
b. locking the reel against further rotation in the directi~.n of unspooling when the vessel has stopped its forward motion;
c. thereafter controlling the forward thrust of the vessel motive source to maintain the vessel in a statio~
keeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under said sufficient te~sion to hold the desired pipe profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;
d. thereafter respooling at least a portion of the laid pipeline by (1) switching the reel drive mechanism from unspooling mode to spoolingmode (2) adjusting the straightening means for a no-load condition whereby the straightening means imparts substantially no straightening force to the pipe passing therethrough in the respooling direction, (3) gradually increasing drive torque imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism to overcome the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motivP
source and begin rotating the reel in the spool-up direction, I
(S)~thereafter respooling at least a portion of the laid pipeline, (6) thereafter gradually reducing the reel drive torque to a value which substantially balances the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source to thereby decrease the rate of spooling rotation of the reel toward zero, (7) thereafter again locking the reel against further rotation in the unspooling direction, and (8) thereafter switching the reel drive mechanism from spooling-up mode to unspooling mode;
e. thereafter resuming forward motion of the vessel in th~ pipelaying direction by (1) disengaging the means locking the reel against the rotation in the unspooling direction, (2) concurrently substantially increasing the dynamic braking force imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism such that the dynamic braking force exceeds any increases in the forward thrust of the vessel's motive source at least up to the pipelaying thrust level required to move the vessel in the forward direction at a desired laying speed, (3) gradually increasing the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source up to said pipelaying thrust level, and (4) thereafter gradually reducing the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism at least until the forward thrust imparted to the vessel by the vessel motive source exceeds the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism and the vessel begins to move forward.

_ 9~

Z~

- ~ In a still further aspect, the invention comprises a method of spooling at least a portion of a previously laid pipeline onto a reel pipelaying vessel, said pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively inflexible pipe thereon, pipe working and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is unspooled from the reel, vessel motive source means for imparting a forward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechanism associated with the reel for alternately driving the reel in a spooling mode and imparting a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode, said method comprisi~g the steps of:
a. controlling the forward thrust of the vessel motive source to maintain the vessel in a station keeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under said sufficient tension to hold the desired pipe profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;
b. locking the reel against rotation in the direction of unspooling when the vessel is in said station keeping mode with the one end of the pipeline secured to the reel; and c. spooling at least a pDrtion of the pipeline onto the reel by (1) placing the reel drive mechanism into a spooling mode, (2) adjusting the straightening means for a no-load condi-tion whereby the straightening means imparts substantially no straightening force to the pipe passing therethrough in the spooling direction, (3~ gradually increasing drive torque im-parted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism tc overcome the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source and - 9a - ~

~ ~.77Z66 begin rotating the reel in the spool-up direction, (4) there-after spooling at least a portion of the laid pipeline, (6) thereafter gradually reducing the reel drive torque to a value which substantially balances the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source to thereby decrease the rate of spooling rotation of the reel toward zero when the desired amount of pipeline has been spooled onto the reel, and (7) thereafter again locking the reel against further rotation.

- 9b --~RIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE ACCOMPANYING DRAWINGS

-Figures lA-B show plan and side views of a U-303 type reel pipelaying barge, as described in British Patent No. 1,077,331.
Figures 2A-B show plan and side views of a "Chickasaw"
type reel pipelaying barge, as described in British Patent No. 1,312,592.
Figure 3 shows a perspective view of an Apache-type adjustable pipe ramp assembly on which is located various O pipe handling equipment, as described in U.S. Patent No. 4,230,421.
Figure 4 shows a diagrammatic side view of a reel type pipelaying vessel and the profile of the pipe between the vessel and the sea bottom .

DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

In the following description of the several types of reel pipelaying vessels shown in the drawing figures similar elements will be designated by the same reference numerals. All reel type pipelaying vessels have certain fea-tures in common, including a hull 10, on the deck of which is mounted a pipe carrying reel 12. One or ~ore pipelines of lengths sufficient to satisfy customer job requirements may be spooled onto reel 12 (up to the design capacity of the reel). Although only a "horizontal!' type reel is shown in detail, Apache-type vessels employ a "vertical" reel (i.e., the reel having vertically oriented flanges and mounted for rotation about a generally horizontal axis) and operate (for purposes of the herein described invention) in substantially the same way as horizontal reel vessels.
Pipe handling equipment is located along the pipe path downstream of the reel in the unspooling direction. Such pipe handling equipment may include a level winder/straightening means 16 and separate tensioning means 18 or a combined level wind/straightening/tensioning apparatus 20 as on Apache-type vessels.
Additional features of the vessels shown in Figures 1-3 are described in greater detail in one or more of the above-listed Santa Fe owned British and U.S. patents and applications.

-- - . -6~;

~ -Commercially laid underwater pipelines for carrying oil or gas mus~ meet certain requirements and limits set by the customer (pipeline owner) and/or governmental or other regu-latory bodies. For example, the pipe, as it is being laid and as it layson the sea bottom, should be subjectedto minimal residual stress, strain, tension, etc. This means that the pipe as it lays on the sea bottom should be straight and have substantially no residual curvature due tp the spooling or laying processes. The "as laid" restrictions are a function of a number of parameters developed by the pipeline designer, including the type of sea bed on which the pipe rests, the size and grade of pipe to be used, the type, amounts, and flow rates of fluid to be carried by the pipeline, and predicted life span of the pipeline. Other parameters relating to, or based on, the geometry (shape) of the pipeline during the pipe laying operation (and taking owner supplied parameters into consideration) are developed by the pipelaying engineers.
The pipe laying engineers must also take into considera-tion the type of coating onthepipe to be l`aid in a given operation when developlng the pipe laying guideline para-meters for use by the operating personnel on board the pipe-laying vessel.
In addition, many commercial pipeline owners require that sacrificial anodes be attached to pipe laid offshore to inhibit the corrosive effect of the salt water on the pipe.
The pipeline owner may require that anodes be attached at specified intervals, ranging generally between 300 feet and 1,000 feet.

i~7'7Z6ti ;
~ ~In the "stovepiping" method of laying pipe, anodes are pre-attached to certain pipe sections that are then welded in place at the on-board end of the already-laid:
pipeline portion. In the reel pipelaying method, on the other hand, the thin film coated pipe travels through various pipe handling equipment which must make smooth contact with the moving coated outer surface of the pipe to avoid tearing the coating and to adhere as closely as possi~le to the customer developed "as-laid" requirements. Therefore the anodes must be attached at required intervals aft of the pipe handling o equipment, including the straightener~tensioner mechanism, as the pipeline is being unspooled and before it leaves the vessel. It normally ta~es about 3 to 5 minutes to attach a sacrificial anode to the pipe, requiring that the vessel be stopped. Thus, when laying a 15,000 foot line with a require-ment that anodes be attached every 500 feet, the vessel mayhave to be stopped 30 times during the lay operation to permit application of anodes.
The novel techniques described herein of bringing the pipelaying vessel to a stop during a pipelaying operation o and thereafter restarting the vessel to continue laying pipe are applicable as well to situations in which the laying opera-tion must be temporarily halted to allow repairs to be made to the pipe and/or coating. In many cases, minor repairs to the coating can be effected without stopping the laying opera-tion; such minor coating repairs are made "on the fly" withthe pipeline continuously passing through one or more repair stations before it enters the water. Sometimes~ more ~ 77266 , extensive repairs must be made, which require that the laying operation be stopped e.g., to permit a damaged pipe section to be cut out and the cut ends rejoined, welded and recoated.
The nature and time required for repairs of this type pre-clude their being done "on the fly".
The anode locations are marked on the pipe and the anodes are applied at a specific anode application station on the vessel along the pipe path. Coati~g repair locations may also be premarked (e.y., when noted during the original D spooling-on operation) or be visually or electronically observable to the operational personnel watching the pipe as it is unspooled.
In order to meet the above-noted pipe laying requirements, a balance must be maintained between the tension on the pipeline and the vessel's motive source, e.g., main propulsion units on a self-propelled ship or the tug(s) powering a towed barge. (Hereinafter, references to the vessel's "motive source"
will be taken to mean generally the means employed to provide a forward thrust component to move the vessel in the forward direction along the right-of-way). The person in charge of ~O the pipe laying operation (generally and hereafter in this disclosure called the "superintendent") must effectively control the thrust of the motive source to (1) maintain adequate tension on the pipe at all significant times during the laying operation and (2) avoid excessive tension on the pipeline when the reel is braked to a stop, as during an anode application operation.
As noted above, an important aspect of stopping the pipelaying vessel during a laying operation is the requirement 1~77Z66 that, in general, adequate tension must be maintained on the pipe at all significant times. This is necessary to prevent the "sag bend" from exceedingcertain predetermined tolerance limits. As shown in Fig. 4, the "sag bend" region of the pipeline occurs at or near`the sea bottom where the pipe curves back to the horizontal plane as it comes to rest on the sea bottom. The approximate point at which the pipe touches the bottom is called the touchdown point (TDP). The radius of the sag bend should normally be greater~than the minimum permissible radius to which the pipe may be bent without exceeding elasticity limits in accordance with customer requirements. The pipeline should normally be kept under sufficient tension during the laying operation to maintain the proper desixed pipe profile between the pipe departure point from the vessel and the sea bottom on which i the pipe rests, and, in particular, to prevent the sag bend radius from decreasing below its allowable minimum. For convenience, hereafter, a "desired pipe profile" is one in which, at all significant times, the maximum allowable working stress, due to the pipelaying operation, in the unsupported O length of pipe between the vessel and the sea bottom will not normally be greater than about 85~ of the minimum vield strength of the pipe.
Also as noted above, another important require~ent associated with stopphlg the pipelaying vessel during a laying operation concerns the avoidance of imparting excess tension to the pipe. ~ontrolled tension is imparted to the pipe by one or more of (1) the reel through the reel drive mechanism operating as a dynamic brake, (2) the main vessel drive thrust, generated by the towing tug or on board main drive source 1~L77Z66 , (the vessel's "motive source"), and (3) pipe handling equipment, including a 5traightener or straightener/tensioner assembly, such as described, for example, in one or more of the above-referenced prior related Santa Fe patents/applications.
In order to satisfy therequirement that adequate S tension be maintained on the pipe while excess tension be avoided at all significant times during the pipelaying opera-tion, certain procedures have been develo~ed by Santa Fe and/or Santa Fe's predecessors-in-interest while operating the U-303 and/or "Chickasaw". These operating steps are unique to the technique of laying pipe by the reel method, stopping the reel laying vessel during the laying operation, and sub-sequently restarting the vessel. Additional techniques described herein pertain to retrieving pipe from the sea bottom, e.g., during a salvage operation.
A. Stopping the pipelaying o~eration.
When it is necessary to stop a pipeline laying operation in midstream, as, for example~ to apply a sacrificial anode to the pipeline, the pipelaying vessel must be brought to a gradual stop to avoid a rapid sharp increase in tension which could result in damage to the pipe and/or coating. When it is observed that the premarked anode application location (or pipeline section requiring repair) is about to be unspooled, the superintendent orders a gradual reduction in the forward thrust of the vessel to thereby reduce the forward momentum of the pipelaying vessel. On a towed barge, the superinten-dent orders the towing tug to reduce its forward thrust;
Oll a self-propelled vessel, the superintendent orders a reduc-11'77Z66 tion in the forward thrust of the main drive engines.Reducing the forward thrust produces a reduction in the tension holding the pipe in its desired profile. In order to maintain the desired pipe profile as the forward motion of the vessel is reduced to zero, the superintendent orders a corresponding increase inthe dynamic braking force exerted by the reel drive mechanism. The combination of reduced forward thrust and increased ~raking force serves,to maintain the pipe under adequate tension and thus hold the proper profile.
As the forward thrust of the vessel is reduced and the braking force of the reel increased, the vessel continues to lay pipe at a gradually decreasing lay rate. The superintendent must therefore begin the stopping sequence well in advance so that when the vessel comes to a complete stop, the portion of the pipe to be worked on will be located at -the appropriate work station.
As soon as the vessel comes to a stop and the lay rate has been reduced to zero, the reel is "dogged" or locked in - a known manner to prevent further unspooling of pipe. The superintendent then orders any necessary adjustments to the vessel's motive source to modify the forward thrust as required to hold the vessel in a station-keeping position, while main-taining a desired pipe profile. Surges due to sudden changes in the vessel thrust or reel braking force can produce increases in pipeline tension which exceed the maximum allowable stress~
residual tension limit requirements imposed by the pipeline owner; an abrupt decrease in the vessel thrust or reel braking force can produce decreases in pipeline tension and cause the ~ ` 1177266 sag bend radius (see Fig. 4) to decrease below the minimum permissible radius for the particular pipeline, possi~ly even resulting in severe damage to the pipe and/or co~ting due to buckling. It is therefore desirable and preferable to avoid such surges. Adjustments to the vessel's forward thrust and/or reel braking forces should therefore be made gradually to avoid surging actions as much as possible.
Once the reel has been dogged or locked to prevent further rotation in the direction of unspooling, anode application or repair operations can be performed on the stopped pipe.
B. Respooling pipe.
If the pipeline is to be respooled, the reel drive mechanism is changed over from a dynamic braking mode ~o a driving mode. It is important that the reel be dogged before this switch over to maintain the pipe under adequate tension at all significant times. The vessel motive source thrust is held at the minimum level necessary to maintain the pipelaying vessel in a station-keeping attitude.
Before beginning to respool pipe, the straightener mechanism is preferably xetracted to a no-load (or spool up) position so that it exerts no reverse bending forceon the pipe. Preferably, therefore, no straightening of the pipe will take place during the respooling mode, since the pipe which is being respooled had previously been straightened.
The tensioner mechanism may or may not be retracted to a no-load position, depending upon whether it is necessary or desirable to impart tension to the pipe in addition to or alternatively to reel imparted tension. If a power driven tensioner mechanism is employed, and such mechanism is to be used to impart tension to the pipe in a respooling mode, the ~ 18 -~177266 , tensioner drive mechanism will generally be reversed to drive the tènsioner mechanism in the direction of respooling pipe movement at a rate which produces the desired respooling tension or part thereof.

; As the next step in a respooling operation, while maintain-ing station-keeping thrust on the vessel drive source, and while the reel remains dogged,the superintendent orders a gradual increase in power to the reel drive mechanism. Th'e pipeline tension will thus be reacted directly to the reel drive~mechanism. When ) the reel drive power becomes greater than the forward thrust of the vessel motive source so that the reel just begins to move in the spool up direction, the dog(s) holding the reel against rotation in the unspooling direction are disengaged.
Disengagemen~ of the reel dog(s) should not take place until j after the reel has begun to move in order that there will be no sudden loss of tension and/or surging in the pipeline.
Respooling tension may in fact be greater than laying tension and is considerably greater than the initial spooling tension, that is the tension on the pipe as it is spooled onto ) the reel at the pipeline base. To avoid damaging the pipe due to the additional tension imparted during the respooling opera-tion a special technique, called "crossover" spooling, is advantageously and preferably used. One such crossover spool-ing method is described in detail in British Patent No.
i 1,601,730, issued from British Patent Application No.
22,080/78, filed May 24, 1978, titled "METHOD AND APPARATUS
FOR SPOOLING PIPE ON A REEL".

~177Z6~;

- - Pipe is respooled by generating sufficient torque in t~e reel to overcome the forwardly directed station-keeping thrust of the vessel motive source and thereby pull the pipe-laying vessel back down the right-of-way. The forward thrust imparted to the pipelaying vessel by the vessel motive source should preferably not be so great as to impose a torque on-- the reel that exceeds the capacity of the reel drive mechanism.
Preferably and advantageously the forward thrust of the vessel motive source is set.to be sufficiently less than the maximum permitted reel torque so that the respooling rate may ~e con-trolled by adjustments to the reel torque through the reel drive mechanism.
Under certain conditions, the force required to respool the pipe may be greater than the maximum torque which can be generated in the reel by the reel drive mechanism while holding the pipe under sufficient tension to. maintain the desired pipe profile. In order to maintain such adPquate tension on the pipe during the respooling operation, even though the capacity of the reel drive mechanism is-exceeded, the tensioner mechanism may be used to provide the additional force required to respool the pipe.
One such circumstance under which the total requi~ed respooling force is greater than that which can be generated by the reel alone while maintaining.the desired pipe profile occurs when relatively large diameter pipe (e.g. 12" I.D.--- ~0 --~77Z6~

~18" ~.D.) is to be respooled from relatively deep water ~(e~g 1,000 foot water depths or greater). At such times, a power driven tensioner apparatus can be used to impart an additive force componen~ to the respooling force generated by~the reel drive mechanism to produce the total force necessary to respool the pipe.
Another circumstance which may require the use of a power driven tensioner during the respooling process occurs when the total force needed to respool the pipe can create an overtension in the pipe which could result in damage to the pipe and/or pipe coating as the pipe is being respooled onto the reel. Overtensioning may be avoided by using the powered tensioner to impart a portion of the force required to raise _ _ the pipe, with the balance of the required force being taken up by the reel drive mechanism. In this way, the portion of the pipe between the reel and tensioner mechanism will be subject to only the force imparted by the reel; the total force needed to raise the pipe is only applied downstream of the ten-sioner. For example, if the combination of water depth and pipe diameter is such as to require a respooling tension of about 200,000 pounds, but the pipe can only safely withstand a maximum spooling tension at the reel on the order of 150,000 pound!
(per custcmer/pipeline owner specification based on such factors ac pipe size, grade, coating, etc.), the tensioner mechanism can be set to impart 100,000 pounds of force and the remaining 100,000 pounds can be imparted by the reel drive mechanism.
Thus, the portion of the pipeline downstream of the tensioner will be subject to a total respooling tension of about 200,000 pounds; however, between the :tensioner and the reel, the pipe will only "see" a tension on the order of 100,000 pounds, well within the safe operating limits of the pipe and reel.

~i77Z616 ! ~ When the desired amount of pipe has been respooled, thè drive torque imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism is reduced to balance the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source. To avoid tension surges when terminating the respooling operation, power to the reel drive mechanism should be gradually reduced to gradually decrease the reel torque and thereby gradually bring the reel imparted tension into balance with the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source. If the reel imparted tension had been supplemented by a powered tensioner during the respooling mode, it will generally also be necessary to reduce the tensioner force in order to reduce the pipeline tension to a value balancing that of the forward thrust component of the vessel - - motive source.-- The superintendent must anticipate termination and order the gradual reduction in power well before the respooling termination point.
When the pipeline tension is reduced to a value which just balances the forward thrust on the vessel so that the reel has stopped respooling pipe, the reel is redogged to lock it against rotation in the unspooling direction. The reel drive mechanism is then changed over from the driving mode to a dynamic braking mode. At this time, the straightener mechanism is reset to straighten the pipe as it is unspooled. If a tensioner mechanism is used, it too, is reset to impart the desired amount of laying tension to the pipe.
C. Restarting the pipelaying operation The pipelaying operation is restarted by gradually increasing the forward thrust imparted by the vessel's motive source. The reel dog is disengaged before increasing the 13~77Z66 fbrward thrust of the vessel's motive source but after the superintendent has been assured that the vessel is in the desired station-keeping mode and pipeline tension is properly balanced against the vessel's forward thrust of the vessel motive source up to the thrust level required to move the vessel along the pipeline right-of-way at the desired laying speed.
The dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism is estabiished greater than the forward thrust of the vessel motive source; the vessel will therefore remain on station as the motive source thrust is gradually increased up to pipelaying thrust, that is, the thrust necessary to maintain the vessel underway at a desired pipelaying speed with the pipe under a predetermined tension as established by the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism. The superintendent then orders a very gradual reduction inthe dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism until the vessel's forward thrust begins to exceed the back tension imparted by the reel drive mechanism s~-that the vessel begins to ~ove forward and the reel begins to turn to pay out pipe. The dynamic ~raking force of the reel drive mechanism can thereafter be reduced at a more rapid rate commensurate with the vessel's ability to accelerate to bring the vessel up to normal pipelaying speed while holding the pipe under sufficient tension to maintain the desired pipe profile.
If anodes are to be applied to the pipeline, the same procedures are followed as described above except that th~
steps associated with respooling the pipe (section "B"
above) may be Qmit~d. : Since the vessel must be stopped for 3 to 5 minutes while anodes are applied, all of the above `' 1~77Z6~

described steps associated with stopping and restarting the pipelay~ng operation ~sec~ions A and C above) are followed.
Minor repairs to the pipe coating may be made !'on the ` fly" at a reduced lay rate. When, during the unspooling proce~ure, it becomes apparent before or just as the pipe comes off the reel, that a-minor coating repair will be necessary, t~e superintenden~ orders an increase in the dynamic braking force of the reel drive mechanism, thereby increasing the ~ack tension on ~hepipe and reducing the net forward mo-10` tion of the vessel as long as the forward thrust of thevessel motive source is not increased (e.g., vessel forward thrust is held constant). The lay rate is therefore reduced to enable such minor repairs to be made~ For more extensive repairs, the pipelaying operation must be stopped as per the procedures described above.
When the pipelaying operation is temporarily stopped, e.g., for anode application, major pipe repair, etc., the ten-sion on the pipeline is preferably and advantageously main-tained between upper and lower operating limits. The lower limit constitutes the minimum acceptable tension which will maintain the desired pipe profile; the maximum tension limit constitutes the maximum tension under which the pipeline may be held for a given type, size and graae of pipe. The reel drive mechanism, in its dynamic braking mode, constitutes ~5 the primary control mechanism for maintaining the pipeline tension within the above-noted upper and lower limits. The vessel's motive source is used in conjunction with the reel drive mechanism control to provide a nominal thrust/tension ~177266 balance about which the reel drive mechanism may be varied for maximum tension control within these limits. Thus the combination of the reel drive mechanism and vessel motive source must provide the capability for (a) station-keeping for S anode application and (b) adjustable net f~rward motion for making coating repairs "on the fly" while paying out pipe and not exceeding the above-stated mechanical limitations of the pipe, while permitting control of pipeline variables through the reel drive mechanism.
0 It is further noted that the respooling procedures (section "B" above) are employed as part of a pipe salvage operation after the pipeline end has been picked up and secured to the reel or the stub end of a pipeline remaining on the reel from a prior operation.
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the essential characteristics thereof. The embodiment described above is therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the hereafter appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embrace~
therein.

Claims (8)

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A method of spooling at least a portion of a previously laid pipeline onto a reel pipelaying vessel, said pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively inflexible pipe thereon, pipe working and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is unspooled from the reel, vessel motive source means for imparting a forward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechanism associated with the reel for alternately driving the reel in a spooling mode and imparting a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) controlling the forward thrust of the vessel motive source to maintain the vessel in a station keeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under sufficient tension to hold the pipeline in a desired profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode;
(b) locking the reel against rotation in the direction of unspooling when the vessel is in said station keeping mode with the one end of the pipeline secured to the reel; and (c) spooling at least a portion of the pipeline onto the reel while maintaining the pipeline under sufficient tension to hold the desired pipeline profile, by (1) placing the reel drive mechanism into a spooling mode, (2) adjusting the straighten-ing means for a no-load condition whereby the straightening means imparts substantially no straightening force to the pipe passing therethrough in the spooling direction, (3) gradually increasing drive torque imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism to overcome the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source and begin rotating the reel in the spool-up direction, (4) there-after disengaging the means locking the reel against rotation in the unspooling direction, (5) thereafter spooling at least a portion of the laid pipeline, (6) thereafter gradually reducing the reel drive torque to a value which substantially balances the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source to thereby decrease the rate of spooling rotation of the reel toward zero when the desired amount of pipeline has been spooled onto the reel, and (7) thereafter again locking the reel against further rotation.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein said pipe handling and working means includes powered tensioner means for tensioning the pipeline independently of reel imparted tension, said method comprising the further step of:
imparting additional tension to the pipeline through said tensioner means to supplement tension imparted to the pipeline by the reel during said step (c).
3. A method according to claim 2, further comprising the step of:
adjusting the tensioner drive force in proportion to adjustments in drive torque imparted to the reel to maintain a substantially constant tension in the pipeline while spooling up said pipeline according to said step (c).
4. A method according to claim 2 or 3, further comprising:
imparting a substantially greater amount of tension to the pipeline by the tensioner than by the reel during said step (c), wherein the portion of the pipeline between the reel and tensioner means is subjected to substantially less tension than the pipeline between the tensioner and the sea bottom.
5. A method of spooling at least a portion of a previously laid pipeline onto a reel pipelaying vessel, said pipelaying vessel having a reel for spooling relatively infexible pipe thereon, pipe working and handling means for straightening the pipe as it is unspooled from the reel, vessel motive source means for imparting a forward thrust to the vessel, and a reel drive mechansim associated with the reel for alternately driving the reel in a spooling mode and imparting a dynamic braking force to the reel in an unspooling mode, said method comprising the steps of:
(a) controlling the forward thrust of the vessel motive source to maintain the vessel in a station keeping mode and to maintain the pipeline under sufficient tension to hold the pipeline in a desired profile while the vessel is in said station keeping mode; and (b) spooling at least a portion of the pipeline onto the reel while maintaining the pipeline under sufficient tension to hold the desired pipeline profile, by (1) adjusting the straightening means for a no-load condition whereby the straight-ening means imparts substantially no straightening force to the pipe passing therethrough in the spooling direction, (2) gradually increasing drive torque imparted to the reel by the reel drive mechanism to overcome the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source and begin rotating the reel in the spool-up direction to thereby spool up at least a portion of the laid pipeline, and (3) thereafter gradually reducing the reel drive torque to a value which substantially balances the forward thrust imparted by the vessel motive source to thereby decrease the rate of spooling rotation of the reel toward zero when the desired amount of pipeline has been spooled onto the reel.
6. A method according to claim 5, wherein said pipe handling and working means includes powered tensioner means for tensioning the pipeline independently of reel imparted tension, said method comprising the further step of:
imparting additional tension to the pipline through said tensioner means to supplement tension imparted to the pipeline by the reel during said step (c).
7. A method according to claim 6, further comprising the step of:
adjusting the tensioner drive force in proportion to adjustments in drive torque imparted to the reel to maintain a substantially constant tension in the pipeline while spooling up said pipeline according to said step (b).
8. A method according to claim 6 or 7, further comprising:
imparting a substantially greater amount of tension to the pipeline by the tensioner than the reel during said step (b), wherein the portion of the pipeline between the reel and tensioner means is subjected to substantially less tension than the portion of the pipeline between the tensioner and the sea bottom.
CA000438176A 1980-11-10 1983-09-30 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods Expired CA1177266A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000438176A CA1177266A (en) 1980-11-10 1983-09-30 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000364392A CA1158872A (en) 1979-11-11 1980-11-10 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods
CA000438176A CA1177266A (en) 1980-11-10 1983-09-30 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000364392A Division CA1158872A (en) 1979-11-11 1980-11-10 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
CA1177266A true CA1177266A (en) 1984-11-06

Family

ID=25669183

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
CA000438176A Expired CA1177266A (en) 1980-11-10 1983-09-30 Reel pipelaying and respooling methods

Country Status (1)

Country Link
CA (1) CA1177266A (en)

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
AU542041B2 (en) Method of laying offshore pipeline from reel carrying vessel
AU770348B2 (en) Horizontal reel barge
US5011333A (en) Underwater pipe laying apparatus
US3982402A (en) Submarine pipeline laying vessel
US4992001A (en) Method of deepwater pipelay
US4260287A (en) Portable reel pipelaying method
US4345855A (en) Self propelled dynamically positioned reel pipe laying ship
US4230421A (en) Self propelled dynamically positioned reel pipe laying ship
GB2025566A (en) Pipe laying ship
US20110274518A1 (en) Methods and Apparatus for Transferring and Laying Elongate Articles at Sea
US6149347A (en) Methods of laying seabed pipelines
USRE30846E (en) Submarine pipeline laying vessel
CA1158872A (en) Reel pipelaying and respooling methods
US6004071A (en) Methods of installing elongate underwater structures
US3472035A (en) Method of abandoning and recovering a pipeline during an underwater pipe laying operation
US4073156A (en) Method and apparatus for laying a submergible elongate structure
CA1177266A (en) Reel pipelaying and respooling methods
WO1994006678A1 (en) Method and apparatus for laying/recovery of lines on a seabed
GB2138531A (en) Spooling Previously Laid Pipeline
WO2015040374A1 (en) Improved pipe laying methods
WO2008017463A1 (en) Device and method for the towing of underwater pipelines
US3533244A (en) Deep water lay barge and method
WO2004011837A1 (en) Method and apparatus for laying/recovery of lines on a seabed
CA1147566A (en) Method of laying offshore pipeline from a reel carrying vessel
WO1998005894A1 (en) Vessel and method for laying pipes

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
MKEX Expiry