Mechanism of cut blasting

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
S. P. Singh
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
5
File Size:
2830 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 1995

Abstract

The purpose of the cut is to provide a free face to which the remainder of a development or breasting round can break. The results of field testing in drifts and at a quarry face were used as a basis for a description of the rock breakage and flushing mechanism in the cut. It was concluded that the important features of a cut design are proper hole spacing, sufficient relief volume, drilling accuracy and relief holes slightly longer than the planned length of the round. The void space provided by the relief holes should be about 15% of the cut volume, with more required in weak, highly fissured rocks. The importance of drilling accuracy increases with round length, an error being magnified by the small blasthole spacing. The first hole pulls only about 20% of the round length, 4-6 holes having to be fired before the cut is pulled close to its design depth. The first four blastholes should be fired with a minimum inter-hole delay of 100 ms to provide progressive relief of burden and avoid the superimposition of ground vibrations. The earliest-firing charge should be closest to the relief area and act laterally, while the first of the vertically-fired charges to be detonated should be the uppermost. Problems during cut-pulling include sympathetic detonation, dynamic pressure desensitisation, charge disruption and freezing of the cut
Citation

APA: S. P. Singh  (1995)  Mechanism of cut blasting

MLA: S. P. Singh Mechanism of cut blasting. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1995.

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