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Technical Guides2026-06-04 · 8 min read

Choke and Kill Manifold Guide: Components, Operation & API 16C Standards

Complete guide to choke and kill manifolds. Learn about components, working principles, API 16C requirements, manual vs hydraulic chokes, and manifold sizing for well control operations.

Choke and kill manifolds are essential well control equipment that work in conjunction with the BOP stack to safely circulate formation fluids out of the wellbore during a kick. A properly specified and maintained choke manifold can mean the difference between a routine well control event and a blowout. This guide covers the key components, operational principles, and selection criteria for choke and kill manifolds.

What Is a Choke Manifold?

A choke manifold is an assembly of valves, chokes, and piping that controls the flow of drilling fluid and formation fluids from the wellbore during well control operations. It allows the driller to apply backpressure on the formation while circulating out an influx (kick), maintaining bottom-hole pressure above formation pressure but below fracture pressure.

Core Functions:
- Regulate flow rate and backpressure during kick circulation
- Direct flow to the mud gas separator, flare, or pit
- Provide pressure monitoring at multiple points
- Allow switching between manual and hydraulic chokes
- Enable the driller's method or wait-and-weight method of well control

Key Components of a Choke Manifold

A typical choke manifold includes these essential components:

1. Choke Valves (Manual and/or Hydraulic) — The primary pressure control devices. Manual chokes use a handwheel to adjust the orifice; hydraulic chokes use remote control from the driller's panel.

2. Gate Valves — Full-bore API 6A gate valves for isolation and flow routing. Typically arranged so either choke can be isolated for maintenance without losing well control capability.

3. Buffer Chamber/Target Tee — A reinforced section where fluid jets from the choke impact, reducing erosion of downstream piping.

4. Pressure Gauges and Transmitters — Monitor upstream (wellbore side) and downstream (flowline side) pressure.

5. Flanges and Crosses — API 6A flanged connections for modular assembly and pressure integrity.

6. Skid/Frame — Structural support for shop assembly, pressure testing, and transport to the rig site.

Manual vs Hydraulic Chokes

Both manual and hydraulic chokes serve the same function but with different operational characteristics:

Manual Chokes:
- Operated by handwheel at the manifold
- Simpler, more reliable, lower cost
- Requires personnel at the manifold during well control
- Suitable for land rigs where access is easy

Hydraulic (Remote) Chokes:
- Operated from the driller's console or remote panel
- Faster response to pressure changes
- Enables precise pressure control during kick circulation
- Required for offshore and high-spec land rigs
- Includes position feedback for choke opening percentage

Most modern choke manifolds include both manual and hydraulic chokes for redundancy — the driller uses the hydraulic choke while the manual choke serves as backup.

API 16C Requirements for Choke Manifolds

API 16C governs the design, manufacturing, and testing of choke and kill systems. Key requirements include:

- Design Pressure: Must be rated for the maximum anticipated wellhead pressure
- Hydrostatic Testing: Body tested to 1.5× rated working pressure
- Seat Testing: Each valve seat tested to rated working pressure
- Functional Testing: Chokes tested for full open-to-close operation
- Erosion Resistance: Choke trim materials must meet minimum hardness requirements
- System Integration: Manifold must integrate with BOP control system per API 16D
- Documentation: Complete pressure test records and material certificates required

When procuring a choke manifold, always verify the manufacturer's API 16C certification through the API Composite List.

Kill Manifold Function and Components

The kill manifold is the complementary system to the choke manifold. While the choke manifold handles fluid returns during kick circulation, the kill manifold provides a high-pressure path to pump kill-weight mud into the wellbore.

Key Differences from Choke Manifold:
- Simpler valving (no chokes required)
- Designed for high-pressure injection (pump side)
- Connects the high-pressure mud pumps to the BOP stack
- Includes check valves to prevent reverse flow
- Often shares the same skid with the choke manifold

A complete well control package includes both choke and kill manifolds, interconnected so that either side of the BOP stack can be accessed for circulation.

Choke and kill manifolds are critical components of the well control system, working alongside the BOP to safely manage formation pressure during drilling operations. JLD Energy supplies API 16C certified choke and kill manifolds in both manual and hydraulic configurations, with complete well control packages available for land and offshore rigs. Contact us with your well specifications for a quotation.

Ko'p so'raladigan savollar

What is the purpose of a choke manifold?
A choke manifold controls the flow and pressure of drilling fluids during well control operations, allowing controlled circulation of formation influx out of the well while maintaining bottom-hole pressure.
What is the difference between a choke manifold and a kill manifold?
A choke manifold controls fluid returns (low-pressure side going to separator/flare). A kill manifold provides a high-pressure injection path for pumping kill fluid into the wellbore through the BOP.
How many chokes should a choke manifold have?
Industry best practice is a minimum of two chokes — one hydraulic (remote) and one manual — providing redundancy and the ability to switch chokes during well control if needed.
What API standard applies to choke manifolds?
API 16C governs choke and kill manifold systems, including design, materials, testing, and documentation requirements.

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