RI 2226 Dangers In Using Low-Grade Foreign Detonators

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Charles E. Munroe
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
2
File Size:
344 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 1921

Abstract

"It has been recently learned that certain foreign manufacturers are offering far importation into this country detonators at greatly reduced prices, some of these detonators being of such low grade (No.4), that their use would greatly increase the dangers in blasting.Detonators and electric detonators are used in initiating the explosion of the various high explosives that are now so extensively employed in a great variety of mining operations. Originally a large number of different grades (or ""strengths"") of detonators and electric detonators were marketed, the grade number indicating the weight of the charge of fulminating material contained in the copper case of the detonator. As late as 1914, a report of the Bureau of Mines (Bulletin 80, A primer an explosives for metal miners) shows that grades Nos. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, containing from 0.54 to 2.00 grams each, were being offered for use. However, the writer bad observed as early as 1896, when the more insensitive types of explosives like nitro-substitution explosives began to be introduced for use in mining and other blasting operations, that use of a high-grade detonator was essential to insure certainty of discharge."
Citation

APA: Charles E. Munroe  (1921)  RI 2226 Dangers In Using Low-Grade Foreign Detonators

MLA: Charles E. Munroe RI 2226 Dangers In Using Low-Grade Foreign Detonators. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1921.

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