Response of Pressurized Pipelines to Production - Size Mine Blasting

International Society of Explosives Engineers
David E. Siskind Mark S. Stagg
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
8
File Size:
705 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1996

Abstract

The mining industry occasionally blasts near pressurized transmission pipelines and has requested guidance of safe vibration levels and setback distances. the Bureau of Mines and the Indiana Department of Natural Resources cooperated with AMAX Coal Company on a study of coal mine overburden blasting. Five buried and pressurized 250-ft pipeline sections were specifically installed on the Minnehaha Mine highwall near Sullivan, IN for testing to failure. Four welded steel pipes ranging from 6- to 20- in diameter and one 8- PVC water supply pipe were monitored for vibration, strain, and internal pressure for a period of 6 months while production blasting advanced up to the pipeline field. In contrast to previous studies of small-scale blasting representing construction activities, these tests involved overburden blasts of up to 2100 lb per delay in 12-l/4-in diameter holes.
Citation

APA: David E. Siskind Mark S. Stagg  (1996)  Response of Pressurized Pipelines to Production - Size Mine Blasting

MLA: David E. Siskind Mark S. Stagg Response of Pressurized Pipelines to Production - Size Mine Blasting. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 1996.

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