RI 3269 Special Multiple Shot Blasting Units

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
A. V. Hooker E. J. Coggeshall
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
14
File Size:
4906 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1935

Abstract

"The Bureau of Mines for some time advocated the firing of all blasts in coal mines as single shots, and this method of firing is the general practice in American bituminous-coal mines. All single shots can be fired with permissible single-shot units so designed that they will not ignite mixtures of methane and air.If several shots in a face are fired singly it is necessary to return the face after each shot. In some mines having steeply pitching coal seams, this may be dangerous or even impossible, under these conditions shots are usually fired simultaneously.Several shots cannot be fixed simultaneously with permissible single-shot blasting units, and safe types of multiple shots blasters are not readily available. This means that the firing of multiple shots in gassy mines is usually accompanied by the possibility of gas ignition as the blast occurs.Tests have been made at the Pittsburgh Experiment Station to determine the possibility of developing safe types of multiple-shot units suitable for such use, or of applying other type safely in gassy sections of mines where firing shots singly is impracticable.The tests may be divided into the following four groups:1. Tests to demonstrate hazard in the use of existing types of multiple-shot units of the portable generator type.2. Tests to show the electrical characteristics of multiple-shot generator units relative to the possibility of preventing igniting sparks and of modifying the design and application of such units in furthering safety."
Citation

APA: A. V. Hooker E. J. Coggeshall  (1935)  RI 3269 Special Multiple Shot Blasting Units

MLA: A. V. Hooker E. J. Coggeshall RI 3269 Special Multiple Shot Blasting Units. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1935.

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