OFR-50-80 The Field Testing Of Several Mine Roof Fall Alarm Systems In An Anticipated Natural Roof Fall In The White Pine Mined-Out Windpipe Area

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Walter L. Finlay
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
95
File Size:
42604 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1978

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines has developed prototype instruments promising to improve the ability to warn of imminent roof falls. An unusually good opportunity to test these comparatively under natural caving conditions was afforded by the forecasted caving in August 1977 of a mined-out region of the White Pine Mine. The latter's rock strata closely resemble those in many coal mines. The anticipated cave was of the competent-roof/weak-pillar type. It occurred as, and when, predicted. Automated convergence and bed separation gages agreed well with the standard manual convergence gage measurements. A micro seismic gage was found to be insensitive to the fall and may require different test conditions for effectiveness. A roof resistivity unit was tested under a separate Bureau of Mines contract. (No. H02720J7). An unplanned addition showed interesting potential.
Citation

APA: Walter L. Finlay  (1978)  OFR-50-80 The Field Testing Of Several Mine Roof Fall Alarm Systems In An Anticipated Natural Roof Fall In The White Pine Mined-Out Windpipe Area

MLA: Walter L. Finlay OFR-50-80 The Field Testing Of Several Mine Roof Fall Alarm Systems In An Anticipated Natural Roof Fall In The White Pine Mined-Out Windpipe Area. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1978.

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