US2312459A - Method of making deep well screens - Google Patents

Method of making deep well screens Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2312459A
US2312459A US329752A US32975240A US2312459A US 2312459 A US2312459 A US 2312459A US 329752 A US329752 A US 329752A US 32975240 A US32975240 A US 32975240A US 2312459 A US2312459 A US 2312459A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
screen
pipe base
longitudinal
helical coils
making
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 - Lifetime
Application number
US329752A
Inventor
Howard O Williams
Albert A Jens
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.)
EDWARD E JOHNSON Inc
Original Assignee
EDWARD E JOHNSON Inc
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 US222410A external-priority patent/US2327686A/en
Application filed by EDWARD E JOHNSON Inc filed Critical EDWARD E JOHNSON Inc
Priority to US329752A priority Critical patent/US2312459A/en
Priority to US459064A priority patent/US2344909A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2312459A publication Critical patent/US2312459A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • EFIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
    • E21EARTH DRILLING; MINING
    • E21BEARTH DRILLING, e.g. DEEP DRILLING; OBTAINING OIL, GAS, WATER, SOLUBLE OR MELTABLE MATERIALS OR A SLURRY OF MINERALS FROM WELLS
    • E21B43/00Methods or apparatus for obtaining oil, gas, water, soluble or meltable materials or a slurry of minerals from wells
    • E21B43/02Subsoil filtering
    • E21B43/08Screens or liners
    • E21B43/088Wire screens
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21DWORKING OR PROCESSING OF SHEET METAL OR METAL TUBES, RODS OR PROFILES WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21D28/00Shaping by press-cutting; Perforating
    • B21D28/24Perforating, i.e. punching holes
    • B21D28/28Perforating, i.e. punching holes in tubes or other hollow bodies
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K11/00Resistance welding; Severing by resistance heating
    • B23K11/002Resistance welding; Severing by resistance heating specially adapted for particular articles or work
    • B23K11/008Manufacturing of metallic grids or mats by spot welding
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/496Multiperforated metal article making
    • Y10T29/49602Coil wound wall screen
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/49826Assembling or joining
    • Y10T29/49863Assembling or joining with prestressing of part
    • Y10T29/49865Assembling or joining with prestressing of part by temperature differential [e.g., shrink fit]

Definitions

  • Patented Mar. 2, 1943 METHOD OF MAKING DEEP WELL SCREENS Howard Williams, Minneapolis, andAlbert A. Jens, St. Paul, Minn., assignors to Edward E. Johnson, Incorporated, St. Paul, Minn.
  • Our invention relates to the method of making deep well screens, and has for its object to provide a method of making a well screen for use in very deep wells which is strong and sturdy enough to resist very great strains and pressure, including pressures of the liquid being screened, such as are frequently found in deep oil wells. It is well known that in putting down oil wells, particularly those of great depth, oil pressures are encountered which sometimes are so great as to rupture and destroy the straining means of deep well screens.
  • the screening means proper is supported wholly within a perforated pipe base, and which is so constructed that helical channels conduct liquid from the perforations through said pipe base to drainage slots across said helical channels which are inwardly expanding, the members forming the helical coils being at the same time welded to the members which form the drainage slots at all crossing points thereof, and also held immovably upon the inside of the perforated pipe base.
  • elements such as wires having substantially fiat tops and inwardly converging side walls so that the outer limits of said flat tops outline a cylinder, said elements being held closely
  • Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of means for making a screen member comprised of a multiplicity of longitudinal elements closely spaced to form drainage slots with means for welding helical coils of supporting wires to the outside surfaces thereof.
  • Fig. 2 is a side elevation view in part broken away and in section of a complete well screen made in accordance with our invention.
  • Fig. 3 is a sectional view taken on line 33 of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 4 is a sectional view taken on line 4-4 of Fig. 2.
  • Fig. 5 is a fragmentary sectional view taken on line 5-5 of Fig. 1.
  • Fig. 6 shows the cross sectional shape of the helically wound wire.
  • Standard H is provided with a bearing portion 19 which receives a lead-screw shaft 20 adapted to rotate therein.
  • rigidly secured to a spur gear 22 is adapted to rotate on a bearing sleeve 23 surrounding an extension 24 of lead screw 26.
  • a thrust bearing 25 at the end of a lead screw extension 26 enables the lead screw to turn independently of hub 2
  • the spur gear 22 meshes with a pinion 26' fast on a sleeve 21 which is splined as indicated at 28 to a shaft 29 and which forms a bearing for said shaft within a cylindrical bearing portion 30 of standard
  • the shaft 29 is con nected at 3
  • Fast on shaft 32 is a pinion 35 which meshes with a spur gear 36 fast on cylinder l8.
  • the spur gears 22 and 36 and the pinions 26 and 35 are of the same diameters respectively, hence, when the two pinions are driven and in turn rotate the two spur gears and parts connected therewith the rate of rotation of each will be the same.
  • annular contact ring 31 Rigidly connected with cylinder I8 is an annular contact ring 31 which is engaged by a shoe 38 having thereon leaf-shaped electrical conductors 39 for carrying to shoe 38 and contact ring 31 a relatively large volume of electrical current.
  • To the contact ring 31 is secured by means of bolts 40 an annular head 4
  • An anvil cylinder 44 is secured by bolts 45 extending through annular flange 46 on the anvil member to the annular head 4
  • the flange 46 is provided with guide apertures 41 corresponding in number and position to the guide apertures 42 of the annular head 4
  • a head 50 Upon the end of the elongated hub 2
  • and 52 respectively are interchangeable with other similar head members and connected parts to make practical the formation of well screen of diiferent diameters.
  • the disc 64 is provided with a groove 68 to which is fed the supporting wire 62.
  • This supporting wall is wedged shaped as shown in Fig. 6 and is held and fed in the same manner as in the two above-noted Johnson patents.
  • the flat tops of longitudinal wires 43 receive the helical coils, and their wide spacing 63 is effected by the rapidity of advance of the whole assembly by lead screw 20.
  • Electrical current between connectors 61 and 39 must pass through wire 62 as held in groove 68 and welding disc 64 and thence through the longitudinal rods 43, whereby sufficient heat is generated to cause the narrowed edge of the helically wound wire 62 to enter the surfaces of the fiat tops of longitudinal wires 43 and be welded to and made integral therewith.
  • the anvil cylinder 44 is provided with an annular anvil face 16 which contacts the narrowed edges of longitudinal wires 43 directly and transmits electrical current therefrom through anvil cylinder 44 and connected parts to leaf conductors 39.
  • the result of these operations is to produce a screening unit with a screen surface formed of longitudinal wedge-shaped elements having flat tops on the outside to which is welded the reduced edges of a wedge-shaped supporting wire -laid upon said top surfaces in suitably spaced helical coils.
  • a pipe base formed with suitably positioned and sized perforations 12 is produced having an internal diameter which, at room temperature, or the same temperature as the complete screen element above defined, is less than the diameter of the cylinder outlined by the outer faces of the spaced helical coils 63.
  • the pipe base is suificiently heated so that its diameter will be expanded to permit it to be slipped over the said helical coils.
  • the screen member itself may be cooled (by dry ice, liquid air or the like) so as to permit it to be slipped within the pipe base at normal temperature. In either method when the temperatures of the two parts are equalized a shrinkage of the pipe base upon the helical coils 63 will cause the same to adhere immovably to the inner walls of the pipe base and become substantially integral therewith.
  • every one of the longitudinal elements 56 is welded so as to be integrally series of inter-connected helical channels 74 be tween spaced helical coils of wire 62, and between the inner walls of pipe base H and the outer cylindrical surface formed by the screenforming longitudinal elements 56.
  • These channels therefore, open through the wall of the pipe base in openings or holes 12 and to the interior of the screen through longitudinal inwardly diverging slots 15, Fig. 5, between adjacent pairs of the screen making elements 56.
  • the pipe base II will normally be formed with threaded ends 16 and TI and may be finished inside by means of a heavy flange collar TB, as clearly shown in Fig. 4.
  • the new type of screen resulting comprises an outer perforated pipe base of a sufficiently strong construction to resist stresses in sinking the well and high oil pressure under the ground.
  • screening capacities by reason of the longitudinal screenage slots are provided far in excess of the inlet area of the perforations through the pipe base. Any grains of material small enough to pass the outer edges of the inwardly diverging screen slots will go through, other material collecting outside of the screen surface spaced as it necessarily will be will not have the effect of materially diminishing capacity.
  • the screening surface proper being within the heavy pipe base, is protected during the driving down and setting of the wel1 screen, and the smooth outer surface of the complete screen formed by the pipe base itself facilitates these operations.
  • a method of making well screens which consists in holding a plurality of separate and disconnected longitudinal elements so that the outer and inner limits thereof falling within a transverse plane vertical to the lengths of the elements will outline circles with said several elements held spaced apart in said plane distances less than their widths to provide drainage slots, causing said rods as a body to be simultaneously rotated and advanced longitudinally across said plane while being continuously held in said spaced position, causing a wire to be fed in said plane to the outer surfaces of said rods as they are rotated and advanced so that the wire will be laid in helical coils upon the outer limits of said rods so spaced as to produce helical channels outside the rods many times the width of the wire, welding said wire to the rods at every crossing point thereof to form a screening surface made up of parallel longitudinal slots and held positioned by the helical coils of wire with wide helical spaces between said coils, forming a perforated pipe base of an inner diameter slightly less at the same temperature than the diameter of the cylinder outlined by the outer limits of said heli

Description

March 2, 1943. H. o. WILLIAMS ETAL 2,312,459
METHOD OF MAKING DEEP WELL SCREENS Original Filed Aug. 1, 1938 2 Shee ts-Sheet 1 m 5v r m w m s H o m mu WWW/ W I m%/ A an B a mm ow ou nu mu m N ww aw W 0% \\\\l g o. WVW W mm 04 an Ill! Nu-v 1 on March 2, 1943. H. o. WILLIAMS ETAL METHOD OF MAKING DEEP WELL SCREENS Original Filed Aug. 1, 1938 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Invntor: Hovv'qr-d Oiwllliams Al. er-t A.U'en.$.
BB WW tier-neg.
Patented Mar. 2, 1943 METHOD OF MAKING DEEP WELL SCREENS Howard Williams, Minneapolis, andAlbert A. Jens, St. Paul, Minn., assignors to Edward E. Johnson, Incorporated, St. Paul, Minn.
Original application August 1, 1938, Serial No. 222,410. Divided and this application'April 15, 1940, Serial No. 329,752
1 Claim.
Our invention relates to the method of making deep well screens, and has for its object to provide a method of making a well screen for use in very deep wells which is strong and sturdy enough to resist very great strains and pressure, including pressures of the liquid being screened, such as are frequently found in deep oil wells. It is well known that in putting down oil wells, particularly those of great depth, oil pressures are encountered which sometimes are so great as to rupture and destroy the straining means of deep well screens. To meet this condition it is an object of our invention to provide a method of making a well screen wherein the screening means proper is supported wholly within a perforated pipe base, and which is so constructed that helical channels conduct liquid from the perforations through said pipe base to drainage slots across said helical channels which are inwardly expanding, the members forming the helical coils being at the same time welded to the members which form the drainage slots at all crossing points thereof, and also held immovably upon the inside of the perforated pipe base.
It is a further object of our invention to hold a plurality of longitudinal screen forming elements such as wires having substantially fiat tops and inwardly converging side walls so that the outer limits of said flat tops outline a cylinder, said elements being held closely spaced in parallel relation to provide longitudinal inwardly diverging drainage slots, and to weld to said flat outwardly turned faces of said longitudinal wires a supporting wire formed in spaced helical coils, said welding being to every crossing point of the helical coils and of the longitudinal screen elements; thereafter to shrink upon the outer screen surface thus formed a perforated pipe base in such manner that the helical coils are rigidly held to the inner surface of the pipe base so as to be substantially integral therewith and the inwardly diverging drainageslots extend directly across the drainage channels thus formed by the helical coils and the inner wall of the pipe base.
It is a further object of our invention to provide a method of making a screen of the type above mentioned wherein longitudinal elements in the form of a cylinder are closely spaced, with drainage slots between, and a helically wound wire with widely spaced helical coils is welded to the outside limits of said longitudinal rods at every crossing point to form an integrally united screen member, and to which a perforated pipe base is applied so as to be immovably united to the spaced helical coils.
It is a further object of our invention to provide a method of making a well screen embodying longitudinal elements with flat outwardly disposed tops and converging sides positioned so the fiat tops form a cylinder with parallel inwardly diverging drainage slots between pairs of the longitudinal elements, and with helical coils of a supporting wire welded to said flat tops at every crossing point of the wire and said tops, together with a perforated pipe base surrounding said screen member and immovably united to the flat outer surfaces of the helical coils to form a helical drainage channel leading to the inwardly diverging drainage slots between longitudinal members. I
This application is a division of our application Serial Number 222,410, filed August 1, 1938.
The full objects and advantages of our invention will appear in connection with the detailed description thereof and the features of novelty of the invention which produce the above noted advantageous results are particularly pointed out in the claim.
In the drawings illustrating an application of our invention in one form:
Fig. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of means for making a screen member comprised of a multiplicity of longitudinal elements closely spaced to form drainage slots with means for welding helical coils of supporting wires to the outside surfaces thereof.
Fig. 2 is a side elevation view in part broken away and in section of a complete well screen made in accordance with our invention.
Fig. 3 is a sectional view taken on line 33 of Fig. 2.
Fig. 4 is a sectional view taken on line 4-4 of Fig. 2.
Fig. 5 is a fragmentary sectional view taken on line 5-5 of Fig. 1.
Fig. 6 shows the cross sectional shape of the helically wound wire.
As illustrated, there is supported upon framing [0, indicated diagrammatically, a number of standards ll, l2 and I3. Standards [2 and I3 are provided with bearing sleeves l4 and I5 within cylindrical bearing rings [6 and I! and support a rotatable cylinder 18. Standard H is provided with a bearing portion 19 which receives a lead-screw shaft 20 adapted to rotate therein. An elongated hub 2| rigidly secured to a spur gear 22 is adapted to rotate on a bearing sleeve 23 surrounding an extension 24 of lead screw 26. A thrust bearing 25 at the end of a lead screw extension 26 enables the lead screw to turn independently of hub 2| and to draw said hub forwardly while it and the parts connected with it are being rotated, as may be desired.
The spur gear 22 meshes with a pinion 26' fast on a sleeve 21 which is splined as indicated at 28 to a shaft 29 and which forms a bearing for said shaft within a cylindrical bearing portion 30 of standard The shaft 29 is con nected at 3| with a shaft 32 which is journaled in cylindrical seats 33 and 34 formed in standards l2 and 3. Fast on shaft 32 is a pinion 35 which meshes with a spur gear 36 fast on cylinder l8. The spur gears 22 and 36 and the pinions 26 and 35 are of the same diameters respectively, hence, when the two pinions are driven and in turn rotate the two spur gears and parts connected therewith the rate of rotation of each will be the same. Rigidly connected with cylinder I8 is an annular contact ring 31 which is engaged by a shoe 38 having thereon leaf-shaped electrical conductors 39 for carrying to shoe 38 and contact ring 31 a relatively large volume of electrical current. To the contact ring 31 is secured by means of bolts 40 an annular head 4| which is provided with a multiplicity of openings 42 properly spaced to have passed therethrough a corresponding number of longitudinal screen making elements 43. An anvil cylinder 44 is secured by bolts 45 extending through annular flange 46 on the anvil member to the annular head 4|. The flange 46 is provided with guide apertures 41 corresponding in number and position to the guide apertures 42 of the annular head 4|, also a'guide ring 48 is secured to head 4| by means of bolts 49 and this guide ring comprises guide slots for guiding and holding the rods 43.
Upon the end of the elongated hub 2| is an integrally formed head 50. Secured to the head 50 by bolts 5| is an annular member 52 having thereon a drum extension 53, Figs. 1 and 5. Upon the drum extension 53, and secured thereto by swaging or other means as desired, is a securing drum 54 which is provided with a multiplicity of socket grooves 55, Fig. 5, into which extend the ends 56 of the longitudinal screen making elements 43, a collar 51 is bolted to the head 52 by means of bolts 58. This collar has a drum extension 59 overlying the grooved member 54. Threaded through the extension 59 are two circumferential rows of set screws 60 and 6|. The set screws of each circumferential row are positioned in staggered relation so as to engage alternate ones of rod ends 56 and clamp them firmly in the wedge-shaped grooves 55,
as clearly indicated in Figs. 1 and 5.
The annular head members 4| and 52 respectively are interchangeable with other similar head members and connected parts to make practical the formation of well screen of diiferent diameters.
From the above it will be obvious that when the machine is operated, all of the screen making rods 43 will be held between heads 4| and 52 in narrowly spaced parallel relation and that as the machine is operated, the entire body of screen making rods so held, will be rotated through the operation of shafts 29 and 32, pinions 26 and 35 and spur gears 22 and 36. At the same time through the operation of lead screw 26, by means not shown but such as is fully described in Johnson Patent No. 2,646,461, the head 50 and all connected parts, including head 4| and cylinder l8, will be advanced at a making longitudinal wires 56 in the manner and by substantially the same means as that disclosed in Johnson Patent No. 2,046,461. As here shown a rotary welding disc 64 has its supporting arms 65 and 66 in electric connection with leaf bar electrical connector 61 for conveying through welding disc 64.
a large volume of electrical current to and The disc 64 is provided with a groove 68 to which is fed the supporting wire 62. This supporting wall is wedged shaped as shown in Fig. 6 and is held and fed in the same manner as in the two above-noted Johnson patents.
It will be noted that, as here shown, the flat tops of longitudinal wires 43 receive the helical coils, and their wide spacing 63 is effected by the rapidity of advance of the whole assembly by lead screw 20. Electrical current between connectors 61 and 39 must pass through wire 62 as held in groove 68 and welding disc 64 and thence through the longitudinal rods 43, whereby sufficient heat is generated to cause the narrowed edge of the helically wound wire 62 to enter the surfaces of the fiat tops of longitudinal wires 43 and be welded to and made integral therewith. The anvil cylinder 44 is provided with an annular anvil face 16 which contacts the narrowed edges of longitudinal wires 43 directly and transmits electrical current therefrom through anvil cylinder 44 and connected parts to leaf conductors 39.
The result of these operations is to produce a screening unit with a screen surface formed of longitudinal wedge-shaped elements having flat tops on the outside to which is welded the reduced edges of a wedge-shaped supporting wire -laid upon said top surfaces in suitably spaced helical coils.
To finish the entire screen a pipe base :formed with suitably positioned and sized perforations 12 is produced having an internal diameter which, at room temperature, or the same temperature as the complete screen element above defined, is less than the diameter of the cylinder outlined by the outer faces of the spaced helical coils 63. In practice for assembly purposes the pipe base is suificiently heated so that its diameter will be expanded to permit it to be slipped over the said helical coils. Or to produce the same result the screen member itself may be cooled (by dry ice, liquid air or the like) so as to permit it to be slipped within the pipe base at normal temperature. In either method when the temperatures of the two parts are equalized a shrinkage of the pipe base upon the helical coils 63 will cause the same to adhere immovably to the inner walls of the pipe base and become substantially integral therewith.
As shown in Fig. 4, every one of the longitudinal elements 56 is welded so as to be integrally series of inter-connected helical channels 74 be tween spaced helical coils of wire 62, and between the inner walls of pipe base H and the outer cylindrical surface formed by the screenforming longitudinal elements 56. These channels, therefore, open through the wall of the pipe base in openings or holes 12 and to the interior of the screen through longitudinal inwardly diverging slots 15, Fig. 5, between adjacent pairs of the screen making elements 56.
The pipe base II will normally be formed with threaded ends 16 and TI and may be finished inside by means of a heavy flange collar TB, as clearly shown in Fig. 4.
The advantages of our invention will be apparent from the foregoing description. The new type of screen resulting comprises an outer perforated pipe base of a sufficiently strong construction to resist stresses in sinking the well and high oil pressure under the ground. At the same time screening capacities by reason of the longitudinal screenage slots are provided far in excess of the inlet area of the perforations through the pipe base. Any grains of material small enough to pass the outer edges of the inwardly diverging screen slots will go through, other material collecting outside of the screen surface spaced as it necessarily will be will not have the effect of materially diminishing capacity. Also the screening surface proper, being within the heavy pipe base, is protected during the driving down and setting of the wel1 screen, and the smooth outer surface of the complete screen formed by the pipe base itself facilitates these operations.
We claim:
A method of making well screens which consists in holding a plurality of separate and disconnected longitudinal elements so that the outer and inner limits thereof falling within a transverse plane vertical to the lengths of the elements will outline circles with said several elements held spaced apart in said plane distances less than their widths to provide drainage slots, causing said rods as a body to be simultaneously rotated and advanced longitudinally across said plane while being continuously held in said spaced position, causing a wire to be fed in said plane to the outer surfaces of said rods as they are rotated and advanced so that the wire will be laid in helical coils upon the outer limits of said rods so spaced as to produce helical channels outside the rods many times the width of the wire, welding said wire to the rods at every crossing point thereof to form a screening surface made up of parallel longitudinal slots and held positioned by the helical coils of wire with wide helical spaces between said coils, forming a perforated pipe base of an inner diameter slightly less at the same temperature than the diameter of the cylinder outlined by the outer limits of said helical coils, bringing the perforated pipe base and the screening member including the helical coils thereon to such different temperatures that the pipe base may be applied over the helical coils, applying the pipe base to the helical coils when the temperatures are at such differences so as to bring certain perforations in the pipe base over the channels between the coils of the helix and thereafter permitting the temperatures to equalize, whereby the pipe base and screen member are immovably united through said helical coils to form together a substantially integral well screen device with the screening member on the inside of the pipe base and with helical channels extending between the screening surface and the inner surface of the pipe base.
HOWARD O. WILLIAMS. ALBERT A. JENS.
US329752A 1938-08-01 1940-04-15 Method of making deep well screens Expired - Lifetime US2312459A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US329752A US2312459A (en) 1938-08-01 1940-04-15 Method of making deep well screens
US459064A US2344909A (en) 1940-04-15 1942-09-18 Deep well screen

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US222410A US2327686A (en) 1938-08-01 1938-08-01 Method of making deep well screens
US329752A US2312459A (en) 1938-08-01 1940-04-15 Method of making deep well screens

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2312459A true US2312459A (en) 1943-03-02

Family

ID=26916763

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US329752A Expired - Lifetime US2312459A (en) 1938-08-01 1940-04-15 Method of making deep well screens

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2312459A (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3209793A (en) * 1961-08-04 1965-10-05 Miura Mitsugu Apparatus for manufacturing steel skeleton for reinforced concrete
DE2559600A1 (en) * 1975-03-22 1977-06-08 Boll & Kirch Filter Continuous prodn. of support cages for filter cartridges - in which the axial rods are wound with metal wire, spot welded and cut to length
DE2512781C3 (en) 1975-03-22 1978-09-14 Boll & Kirch Filterbau Gmbh, 5000 Koeln Filter candle with backwashable filter apparatus
US7690097B1 (en) * 2006-01-03 2010-04-06 Bj Services Company Methods of assembling well screens

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3209793A (en) * 1961-08-04 1965-10-05 Miura Mitsugu Apparatus for manufacturing steel skeleton for reinforced concrete
DE2559600A1 (en) * 1975-03-22 1977-06-08 Boll & Kirch Filter Continuous prodn. of support cages for filter cartridges - in which the axial rods are wound with metal wire, spot welded and cut to length
DE2512781C3 (en) 1975-03-22 1978-09-14 Boll & Kirch Filterbau Gmbh, 5000 Koeln Filter candle with backwashable filter apparatus
US7690097B1 (en) * 2006-01-03 2010-04-06 Bj Services Company Methods of assembling well screens

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US1880218A (en) Method of lining oil wells and means therefor
US2627891A (en) Well pipe expander
EP2540958A2 (en) Multiple sectioned wire-wrapped screens
US2312459A (en) Method of making deep well screens
US1992718A (en) Well screen
US2327687A (en) Method of making deep well screens
US2327686A (en) Method of making deep well screens
US2346647A (en) Well screen
US2312458A (en) Method of making deep well screens
US2346885A (en) Deep well screen
EP0029831A1 (en) Wooden pole for power lines or the like, and machine for producing same.
US2185999A (en) Process of making screens for use in connection with oil wells
US2179849A (en) Turret type roll forming-machine
US2128437A (en) Apparatus for and method of producing split wire rings
US2305587A (en) Machine for making flexible metallic tubes
US1679499A (en) Method of and apparatus for making stovepipe casings
EP0206629B1 (en) Screens, a method of making screens and apparatus for making screens
US2561739A (en) Rotary welding transformer structure
US2111680A (en) Well screen
DE4002795C1 (en)
US2811204A (en) Apparatus for making heat transfer coils
US1643394A (en) Perforated pipe for wells
DE1905218A1 (en) Heat exchanger
US2070780A (en) Slotting, perforating, and splining of tubes and the like
US3267561A (en) Method of forming an axial seal plate