IC 7477 Shaft Sinking by Diamond Drilling, Bellefonte Mine, National Gypsum Co., Centre County, Pa
    
    - Organization:
 - The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
 - Pages:
 - 18
 - File Size:
 - 2955 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Oct 1, 1948
 
Abstract
The diamond-drill method was tried at the site selected for driving a
5- by 6 -foot air shaft at the east end of the Bellefonte mine . This method
of sinking consisted , first , of drilling a 5-3/4 -inch-diameter cut hole from
the surface , then drilling parallel 1.5 - inch ( EX ) holes around it at appropriate
distances for a balanced blasting round . The cut hole was not charged
with explosive but served as a relief chamber for the incipient expansion of
the ground broken by. blasting the surrounding 1.5 - inch holes . The length of
each hole was 236 feet , which was the finished depth of the shaft .
The nature of the work in the air shaft was largely experimental , and
many difficulties arising from the lack of special equipment and proper
technique for precise alinement of the drill holes caused expensive delays
before they could be overcome . Drilling the 5-3 /4 - inch hole , which was
impeded by frequent core blocks in the core barrel , required 10 shifts .
average advance per shift for an EX hole was about 150 feet .
The
The holes were charged and fired from the surface . The length of the
section blasted in one cycle was 10 feet . Blasting progressed from the
bottom of the shaft upward . The broken stone dropped into a chute , from
which it was drawn into cars on the haulage level .
The Bellefonte mine is an underground limestone mine.3/ The primary
objective in undertaking the research on shaft sinking by diamond drilling
was to perfect a method for driving connections between levels of the mine .
Citation
APA: (1948) IC 7477 Shaft Sinking by Diamond Drilling, Bellefonte Mine, National Gypsum Co., Centre County, Pa
MLA: IC 7477 Shaft Sinking by Diamond Drilling, Bellefonte Mine, National Gypsum Co., Centre County, Pa. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.