depends on the job.
disregarding special cases like wedgeblock shields which have no tailskin, or articulated and TBM shields which are a different kettle of fish, a generic Greathead hand-excavation shield consists of a steel 'can' which is around 50mm greater than the tunnel lining rings in diameter.
It will have a hood, or forward extension, approximately 125% the length of the rings, around the upper 120 - 180 degrees of the front end. It will also have a tailskin, approximately 150% of the length of the rings, at the rear. This tailskin may, or may not, be removable as a single piece, or in segments.
the shield will be lowered into the pit bottom on rails and jacked forward, using jacks or more usually, rams, contained within its main 'can'. When it has advanced one riing, a part-ring is built within the tailskin and the shield advances again, jacking off that part-ring.
when the shield enters the ground, full rings will be built and grouted once they are outside the tailskin.
on approaching the target shaft, either an eye will have been constructed, or a reception eye will be broken out, depending on the ground and the design.
the shield will continue to advance until it is far enough into the shaft to be retrieved. The tailskin may, or may not, be disconnected at this stage.
if the shield is to be abandoned, for example if two shields have been steered up to each other underground head-to-head for the purpose ( I set out a connection of this sort in the early 90s, on a cable tunnel in the Regent Street area, for example ) then the shields will be advanced, the internal fittings stripped out, and rings built internally and the final length made good with an in-situ concrete lining.
that's a rather generic answer, but the main points are there
''the stopes soared beyond the range of our caplamps' - David Bick...... How times change .... oh, I don't know, I've still got a lamp like that.