Computerised Underground Diamond Drilling
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 6
 - File Size:
 - 898 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1995
 
Abstract
Diamond drilling is a relatively new commodity in terms of  drilling. The first known diamond drilling activities were carried  out in the Swiss Alps around 1863 when the Swiss engineer  M Leschot designed and made a tube with a diamond set face  which was used in probing ahead drilling for the Mont Cenis  tunnel (Figure 1). Craelius AB which today is a part of the Atlas Copco Group  was formed in 1886. The name Craelius is a family name and the  founder of the company was Per Anton Craelius (Figure 2). He  went to the United States to study this new technology using  diamonds to extract core samples and when he returned to  Sweden designed his first diamond drilling machine. It was a  man-powered drill needing a crew of six men, two to crank the  unit, one to feed, two to power the flush pump and a foreman  (Figure 3). As time passed through research and development, the original  design was improved and manpower was substituted for steam  engines and later combustion engines or electric motors (Figure 4). During the 1930s the drills radically changed designs and took  the form of the short stroke drills which to a certain extent are  still in use today. The original design of these drills have been  refined during the years, hydraulic chucks, gear boxes and other  improvements have been added.
Citation
APA: (1995) Computerised Underground Diamond Drilling
MLA: Computerised Underground Diamond Drilling. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.