Bulletin 240 Electric Shot Firing in Mines Quarries and Tunnels

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 147
- File Size:
- 4320 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1926
Abstract
Explosives have been fired electrically for several decades. Mountains
have been tunneled, deep shafts sunk, extensive coal and metal
mine workings excavated and, in times of war, railroads, buildings,
bridges, and fortifications have been destroyed by means of electrically
fired explosives. Modern engineering depends so much on explosives
that their safe and efficient handling and especially their
detonation are of prime importance to all those connected with the
use of explosive agents.
Electric shot-firing is only one method of igniting explosives, but
it is rapidly spreading and because of certain inherent safety features
should be encouraged. Data collected by the Bureau of Mines indicate
that in the United States a large percentage of the blasting in
quarries, shafts,· and tunnels, and from 15 to 25 per cent of the blasts
in mining operations, are set off electrically. The Bureau of Mines
is interested in electric shot-firing because of its use in mining, and
especially because electric methods, when properly applied, are undoubtedly
safer than other methods commonly used.
Electrical problems of many kinds must be solved in dealing with
the various phases of electric shot-firing. Success in using an electric
detonator is closely linked with the resistance of its bridge, the
resistance of its leg wires, and the insulation of its current-carrying
parts. The proper layout of a circuit where a number of shots are
to be fired simultaneously depends not only on the types of detonators
that are used and their arrangement and interconnections, but also
on the size and insulation of the wire leading back to the source of
power, and even on the source of power itself. Various types of
electric shot-firing machines have been developed, and these offer
still another field for study.
In investigations of electric detonators and electric blasting equipment,
the oscillograph is valuable because it can record electrical
activity over very short intervals of time. By its use more complete
information about electrical performance can be obtained than by
any other means.
Citation
APA:
(1926) Bulletin 240 Electric Shot Firing in Mines Quarries and TunnelsMLA: Bulletin 240 Electric Shot Firing in Mines Quarries and Tunnels. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1926.