Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
-
Surface Mining Methods Employed in the United States Coal Fields
By Mark A. Williams
Topography and geology greatly impact the decision of how to plan and operate a surface mine. To extract coal, five primary surface mrning methods are practiced in the United States. These include con
Jan 1, 1991
-
Engineering Field Controls and Hole Deviation
By Mick Fritz, Tom Treleaven
The success of any blast is dependent on the accuracy of the blast design and field controls placed at the shot location. The procedure by which the data is collected and analyzed is paramount to acco
Jan 1, 1998
-
Electrodet a New Precise, Reliable, Easy to Use and Cost Effective Electronic Delay Detonator System
By Noel Dent
Increasing interest is being expressed in the development and availability of Electronic Delay Detonators throughout the world. Particularly in open-cast mining, the benefits associated with precise,
Jan 1, 1994
-
Study on Safe Criterion of Blasting Excavating Oil-Gas Pipeline Ditches
By Qi Shifu, Guo Tao, Liu Haoquan, Yao Chaogui, Zheng Li
Abstract: To excavate oil-gas pipeline ditches in a rocky region or area the explosive method is needed. When a parallel ditch is to be dug by blasting near or in the vicinity of an existing pipeline,
Jan 1, 2014
-
Possibilities with Accurate Delay Times: Results of Some Field Tests Using Electronic Deotnators
By Johan Svard
"Two years of field testing have shown that blasting results are improved both in surface and underground applications when Nitro Nobel electronic detonators are used. The delay times canbe chosen wit
Jan 1, 1992
-
Evaluation and Selection of Blasthole Drilling Equipment Based on Application and Overall Cost
By George D. Raitt
Anyone who has spent any time in and around the drilling and blasting profession knows that probably the most critical part is the drilling portion. A blasthole is nothing more than a cylindrical vehi
Jan 1, 1990
-
Dynamic Stress Field around a Blast Hole – A Laboratory Study
By R. Raghavaraju
Estimation of the dynamic stress field in terms of its amplitude and decay around a blast hole is a key input parameter in all numerical modeling and blast prediction exercises. However, there is very
Jan 1, 2014
-
Blasting Induced Rock Fragmentation Prediction Using the RHT Constitutive Model for Brittle Materials
By Dale Preece, Stephen Chung
Blasting induced rock fragmentation is an art that has been developed and refined for hundred’s of years through blasting and recording the results. Good blasting fragmentation practices were thus dev
Jan 1, 2003
-
Notes on Detonation Physics
By P D. Katsabanis
According to Persson(1) steady state detonation along a cylindrical charge can be regarded as a self propagating process in which the axial compressive effect of the shock front discontinuity changes
Jan 1, 1989
-
Demolition of a Storehouse by the Blasting and the Simulation of the Demolition by DDA Method
By Kunihisa Katsuyama, Yuji Ogata, Yuji Wada
The one free surface blasting of a concrete block was simulated by Discontinuous Deformation Analysis(DDA) method. Comparing the simulated results with the concrete block blasting experiment, the crac
Jan 1, 1996
-
WIPFRAG - A Breakthrough in Fragmentation Measurement
By John A. Franklin, Tom C. Palangio, Norbert H. Maerz
No blast evaluation is complete without fragmentation measurements which until now were inaccurate, costly, time consuming and created delays in production. “WipFrag.s”is a fully automated PC based fr
Jan 1, 1995
-
History of the Development and Use of Bulk Loaded Explosives, from Black Powder to Emulsions (4e042d52-81d4-408b-9ff9-49bce6caf7ef)
By Robert B. Hopler
Emplacing explosives in the borehole by bulk methods is utilized today for about 35% of all of the explosives used in the United States. Although different from today's methods, some bulk emplacement
Jan 1, 1992
-
3000t Controlled Chamber Standing Shot
By He Guangyi
Combining living examples, the paper introduces the controlled chamber standing shot of more than 3000t explosives initiated at one time with Nonel under complicated circumstances and the experience o
Jan 1, 1998
-
Software Blasting Tools Integrated with Electronic Initiation Systems
By Thierry Bernard, Jean Marc Laboz
This paper explains why and how integration of EIS (Electronic Initiation System) with dedicated software tools can increase benefits to blasters and at the same time simplify the design of blast sequ
Jan 1, 2000
-
Near-Source Observations from Signle and Multiple Cylindrical Explosions in a Coal Mine
By Xiaoning Yang, C David Pearson, Brian W. Stump
An experimental study of ground motion from explosions designed to remove overburden in an open pit coal mine is reported. The purpose of this study is a characterization of these ground motions in th
Jan 1, 1994
-
The High Explosives Industry in the United States: The First 20 Years - 18654 885
By Robert B. Hopler
The history of the first twenty years of the high explosives industry in the United States begins as an illustration of the free enterprise system at its best and ends with the industry virtually take
Jan 1, 1994
-
Optimizing the Initiation Position of Geophysical Exploration Charges
By E. McCullough, D. Preece, M. Ortel
Geophysical explosive charges are used in mineral resource exploration. They are detonated subsurface and radiate sonic waves into ground monitors, which detect the vibration waves and their interacti
Jan 1, 2013
-
Quarry Blasting is Boring
By Darcey Baker
Quarry Blasting is usually boring, and that is how we like it. By this, boring means routine, straightforward, meat and potatoes blasting. Quarries typically will not utilize cast blasting, coyote tun
Jan 1, 2009
-
The Journal of Explosives Engineering - Vol 20 No 3 Creating Awareness about Carbon Monoxide - The Silent Hazard
By Nobel Insurance Service
[Executive Director’s note: ISEE is committed to continuing its efforts to ensure that blasters be made aware of the issue of migration of carbon monoxide resulting from blasting operations. In the Ju
Jan 1, 2004
-
The Right Tool for the Job
By Eric Kelley
Having been retained as a legal expert for the fatality at the Canberra, Australia project, it made me aware of how good intended blasters profess to be implosion experts. Owners and contractors can b
Jan 1, 1999