| US 7,578,348 B2 | ||
| Overshot tool for retrieving an object in a well and methods of use therefor | ||
| Peter J. Fay, Houston, Tex. (US) | ||
| Assigned to Baker Hughes Incorporated, Houston, Tex. (US) | ||
| Filed on Sep. 20, 2006, as Appl. No. 11/524,106. | ||
| Prior Publication US 2008/0066914 A1, Mar. 20, 2008 | ||
| Int. Cl. E21B 31/00 (2006.01) | ||
| U.S. Cl. 166—301 [166/98; 166/99; 294/86.26] | 20 Claims |

| 1. An overshot tool for retrieving an object in a well, the tool comprising:
a stationary housing having an upper end for attaching to a string for lowering the tool into the well, a housing bore having
upper and lower portions, the lower portion having a lower portion inner wall surface defined by a lower portion inner diameter
and a lower portion axis, the lower portion axis being defined relative to the lower portion inner wall surface;
a cam carried in the upper portion of the bore, the cam having a cam bore that has a lower cam bore portion comprising a lower
portion cam bore inner wall surface defined by a lower portion cam bore inner diameter, the lower portion cam bore inner diameter
being constant, and a cam bore axis, the cam bore axis being defined relative to the lower portion cam bore inner wall surface;
the cam being rotatable relative to the stationary housing from an aligned position wherein the cam bore axis and the lower
portion axis coincide, to a misaligned position wherein the cam bore axis and the lower portion axis are offset and parallel
to each other; and
the lower portion of the housing bore and the cam bore being open at a lower end of the housing for sliding over an object
in the well while the cam bore axis and lower portion axis are in the aligned position, so that subsequent rotation of the
cam relative to the stationary housing causes the cam bore axis and the lower portion axis to move toward the misaligned position,
thereby gripping the object for retrieval.
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