Nine Years of Blasting Experience with Electronic Delay Detonators

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Claude Cunningham
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
17
File Size:
195 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

AEL has been developing electronic detonators continuously since 1986. It launched its first system for opencast mining in 1993, and now has two distinct product lines. The path has not been without great difficulty, but the determination to persevere was always buoyed by the strong encouragement of customers who experienced the transformed blasting results, as well as a clear vision of the enormous intrinsic value of the concept. The path of growth to dominant global supplier is traced through the separate application channels of coal stripping, quarrying, massive mining, opencast mining and narrow reef mining, to the first allelectronic detonator demolition blast in June 2001. Reasons for the slow coming to market of this highly desirable concept, which often coincide with reasons for the demise of various other systems, include the difficulty of safely mating electronics and explosives in a low cost environment; the extreme difficulties of achieving proper connection under mining conditions; the rapid rate of evolution of the technology, and the safety concerns raised by various accidents and incidents along the way. ED.s are now established as the way forward and are set to displace other systems in all serious applications. There is place for both programmable and pre-set delay systems.
Citation

APA: Claude Cunningham  (2002)  Nine Years of Blasting Experience with Electronic Delay Detonators

MLA: Claude Cunningham Nine Years of Blasting Experience with Electronic Delay Detonators. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2002.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account