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Reactivity of ANFO Mixtures with Midwest High Sulfur Coals and Pyrites
By John W. Brown
For seventeen years, I have been involved in surface coal mining in the Mldwest coal fields only to find that once again, I have experienced a problem that was not known to exist in our area. The exis
Jan 1, 1992
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Nonel Primadets Safety and Simplicity in a World of Electric Hazards
By Charles M. Curtin
A significant advance in nonelectric delay blast initiation has been achieved by Nonel shock tube, an invention patented by Nitro Nobel AB of Gyttorp, Sweden. Ensign Bickford has been licensed by Nitr
Jan 1, 1976
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Hospital Buildings: A Construction Site Surrounded by Them
By John Wright
As part of the redevelopment of the Royal Brisbane Hospital complex in Australia, a number of antiquated buildings were to be demolished and replaced by newer, modem facilities. Aside from the decommi
Jan 1, 2000
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Estimation Particle Velocity on the Basis of Blast Event Measurements
By Gungor Tuncer, Ali Kahriman, A. Kadir Karadogan, Savas Gorgun
The environmental problems arisen from ground vibration and air blast have been faced and discussed frequently in various industries such as mining, construction, quarry, pipe line etc. where blasting
Jan 1, 2000
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Techniques of Precision Blasting in the Excavation of Drilled Piers
By George Young Mosteller
This paper is summary of the practical solutions developed in the excavation of drilled piers (caissons) at GPCo's Plant Scherer, Juliette, GA. Plant Scherer is a 3,245 Megawatt Fossil Fuel Powerhouse
Jan 1, 1980
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Using Dry ANFO in the Pacific Northwest Rainforest: Washington State
By William C. Lane
The Pacific Northwest has an abundance of seamy, coarse granite and basalt rock. It is used primarily for road construction. Small quarries are opened nearest the road work to cut the cost of hauling.
Jan 1, 1986
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Mechanics of the Run up on Linear Shaped Charges Cutting
By Jason Baird, Seokbin Lim
Run up is a factor in Linear Shaped Charge (LSC) cutting for which an account must be made. It occurs on the initiation segment of the charge, and the cutting performance during this period is signifi
Jan 1, 2006
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The Calculated Risk of Experiencing a Lightning Caused Unplanned Detonation
By Lon D. Santis
This paper presents data and theorem to calculate the risk of experiencing undesirable lightning related events while blasting or while engaged in other lightning sensitive activities. The paper provi
Jan 1, 1998
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Blasting Factors Influence the Choice of Blasthole Size for Quarrying
By N L. Thomas
Hole size affects many factors which directly influence fragmentation in the muckpile and hence, the cost effectiveness of the entire operation. These factors include production capability, explosives
Jan 1, 1986
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Blasting the Coleson Cove Poer Plant Cooling Water Outfall Plug
This is the story of a blast - not a large blast by todays standards as it only involved a total of approximately 50 cubic yards of rock. Nor did this blast involve any new or revolutionary blasting t
Jan 1, 1976
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Dynamic Photoelastic Experiment on the Fracture Caused by a Blasting
By Yuji: Wada Ogata, Kunihisa Katsuyama
It is well known that a compressed stress wave reflects at the free face, it propagates to the backward as a tensile stress wave, and cracks grow when the tensile stress becomes the dynamic tensile st
Jan 1, 1993
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Numerical Simulation of Fragmentation During the Throw Stage of Blasting
By C H. Ryu
This paper presents a simplified two-dimensional numerical model of block fragmentation in a Jointed rock mass during the late or throw stage of a blast after wave effects have subsided. The model is
Jan 1, 1986
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Using State-of-the-Art Techniques for Positioning Mining Equipment
By George P. Schivley
The careful positioning of the drill rigs that drill the holes into which explosives are then loaded is critical to the success of the subsequent blast. Today a system of satellites in space, each tra
Jan 1, 1996
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Blasthole Pressure: What it Really Means And How We Should Use it
By Claude Cunningham
Blasthole pressure is the starting point for many blast design calculations, but the way in which it is usually derived, from measured detonation velocity, indicates that more thought is needed as to
Jan 1, 2006
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New Development of Gassed Emulsion Explosive for Cost Optimization and Environmental Control
By Yessica Idrogo, Omar Gómez, Francisco Pérez, Eduardo Yrigoyen
Rock blasting is one of the most important operations in the mining cycle value chain, requiring optimized explosives mixtures to get good results. A new and better strategy, and that which is discuss
Jan 1, 2019
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Evaluation of Soil Cratering and Ground Vibration through Small-Scale Airblast Experiments
By Courtney Vallejo, Rafiqul Tarefder
This study examines the effects of small scale airblast experiments on cohesive soils and the resulting ground vibrations and crater geometries. Relationships for ground vibration attenuation with soi
Jan 1, 2013
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Tigerwin - a Windows PC Code from Computing Explosives Performance and Thermodynamic Properties
By Per-Anders Persson
TIGERWIN, now on CD, is a user-friendly personal computer code (running under Windows) which determines the detonation and expansion state of an explosive from its known chemical composition. TIGERWIN
Jan 1, 2000
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The Impact of Blasting on Excavation Design - A Geomechanics Approach
By Cameron McKenzie, John Heilig, Patrick Andrieux, Andree Drolet
It is widely accepted that both underground and surface blasting operations can de-stabilise excavations to the point where it can threaten the feasibility of mining through personnel safety or OK dil
Jan 1, 1994
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A New Innovative Drilling Bit for Straighter Blast Holes and Improved Productivity
By R D. Skaggs
A good blast is dependent on a well engineered design. However, a good design's performance depends on the control of the drilling and loading of the blast holes. The key stone to good blasting is the
Jan 1, 1991
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Improved Blast Control Through the Use of Programmable Delay Detonators
By C Deacon, M Jones, P Duniam
Electronic blast timing has been in use around the world since the mid-eighties, and, whilst it has yet to be used commercially by large operations on an ongoing basis, significant inroads have been m
Jan 1, 1997