Blasting Physics-What the Operator Can Use in 1975
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 339 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1975
Abstract
Blasting effectiveness must be  gauged by total production costs. ANFO  charges made up in polythene "sausages"  are not as profitable as is indicated by  the price of ANFO. All-slurry charges  are warranted only where blastholes  cannot be dewatered effectively, or  where drilling costs are very high. An increase in blasthole diameter leads to coarser fragmentation. This  effect is most pronounced in tough and  massive or blocky strata, or in ground  which consists of unfissured boulders in  a softer matrix. When ANFO and some  slurry-type charges of small diameter  are used in plastic-acting ground,  charges may fail to detonate through  precompression by charges fired on an  earlier delay. The optimum blasthole  length is rarely less than four times  the burden distance. For best results,  blastholes should be inclined to the  vertical and parallel to the face.  Nominal burdens and spacings are often  altered radically by the initiation  sequence. For best fragmentation, all  blastholes must have good effective  faces, and should be effectively stagg- ered with an actual spacing:burden ratio  in the approximate range 2.0-5.0.
Citation
APA: (1975) Blasting Physics-What the Operator Can Use in 1975
MLA: Blasting Physics-What the Operator Can Use in 1975. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1975.
