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Safety and Loading Procedures on the Spillway at Plant SchererBy Richard Dooley
The purpose of this paper is to give a description of a controlled blasting program and why Georgia Power now has one; mainly because of the Spillway Project.
Jan 1, 1981
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Cap Testing at the Minntac MineBy Jack Eloranta
To improve control of blasting, tests were performed to assess non-electric cap accuracy. Simultaneous testing using a Velocity of Detonation Recorder (VODR), Red Lake LoCam and an Instantel DS-677 bl
Jan 1, 1992
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The Effect of Calculated Explosive Energy Output on Blast Design (be4e0078-0e0d-443b-8163-53799c5d51b4)By P D. Kasbanis, Lyall Workman
The energy output of an explosive is typically calculated using an equation of state and computer applications. Results are reported as weight and bulk strength, either in absolute terms or relative t
Jan 1, 1996
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What a Gas: Blasting Under Pressure (8726b99d-0c1c-4f90-bc37-7481da7b7d20)By Jerry R. Wallace
This project consisted of blasting for expansion of a major interstate natural gas transmission pipeline pump station. The pump station handled 400-500 million cubic feet (11-14 million cubic meters)
Jan 1, 1996
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Detonation Velocity Measurements of Blasting AgentsBy Ronald R. Rollins
A continuous propagation velocity measurement probe has been utilized to determine velocities of slurry explosives, whole prills, crushed prills, aluminized crushed prills, in bulk and plastic screw t
Jan 1, 1984
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Three Laboratory Tests for Explosive RuggednessBy Michael Wieland
Three laboratory tests were developed for rating the wave-impact ruggedness of cap-sensitive explosives that are used for blasting in underground coal mines. Destructible pipe fixtures, called simulat
Jan 1, 1996
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Fragmenting Oversize BouldersBy J Mensah, G C. Sen
Often large boulders of rock have to be fragmented in civil or mining engineering operations. These oversize boulders are encountered after primary blasts in both surface and underground excavations o
Jan 1, 1989
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Fines Reduction Program at the Canadian Salt CompanyBy John M. Bolger, Keith E. McMaster
Excessive salt fines are undesirable in underground salt mining as they are considered a costly waste byproduct. This paper describes an extensive explosive application program conducted at The Canadi
Jan 1, 1996
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Working With Explosives Suppliers to Optimize Pit Productivity and CostsBy Thomas J. Snyder
Modern quarry management should be alert to every opportunity to improve productivity and reduce operating costs. In this paper, the author outlines areas in which explosives suppliers should be encou
Jan 1, 1988
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Quantification of Production Quarry Blasting - the Search for the Most Effective Blasting TechnologiesBy S C. Brashear, D A. Anderson, A P. Ritter, S R. Winzer, R Broughton
Results of quarry blasts can be quantified to show the effects of controlled variables. Two studies have been carried out: one to document the effect of delay on fragmentation and the other to show th
Jan 1, 1985
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Blasting Techniques for Pit Wall Control at Inco Limited's Thompson Open PitBy Nan Lee, Stephen H. Chung, Peter Lienberger
INCO Limited's Thompson Open Pit has researched extensively into improved blasting techniques towards increased productivity as well as optimum pit wall protection. Blasting with excessive amounts of
Jan 1, 1992
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The Effects of Fault Planes on the Propagation of Vibration WavesBy Abdulkadir Karadogan, Zikri Keti, Umit Ozer, Mehmet Aksoy, Ulku Kalayci
This paper presents an investigation about how the motions of blast induced vibration waves were affected by the presence of the fault planes. This study was carried out at Espey Open- Pit Boron (Cole
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: Blastserve A Discussion Forum for ISEE MembersDrilling through unconsolidated material I need to drill blastholes through a mix of consolidated and unconsolidated material. This material is hung up in an underground ore pass. The total length of
Jan 1, 2011
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Journal: 100 Years / DRIVING HEADINGS IN ROCK TUNNELS Transactions of the American Institute of Mining Engineers New York 1910By W. L. Saunders
RBH Note: In the early days of drill & blast tunneling the jobs utilized large crews of drillers and muckers. Advance per round was limited (typically around four feet) but two rounds per 8-hour shift
Jan 1, 2011
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Cooperation in RegulationsBy John Petty, John Loviza
Single sentence describing content-- "The best ally an Explosives Engineer can have in a court of law is a regulations enforcer stating all codes and standards were met on a jobsite".
Jan 1, 1996
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The Application of SOM Networks on Rock Blastability ClassificationBy Jiang Han, J. F. Shao
Based on the rock blasting engineering, The Self-Organizing Map (SOM) network has been implemented for the concept and method of rock blastability classification. The Self-Organizing Map (SOM) is a ne
Jan 1, 2002
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Blast Optimisation at the Porgera Gold Mine in Papua New GuineaBy Peter Bellairs, Anthony Bubb
The Porgera Gold Mine is located at an altitude of 3000m in the central highlands of Papua New Guinea some 600 km Northwest of Port Moresby the capital city. Access to the mine is via a five hour trip
Jan 1, 1997
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Improved Drill and Blast Designs Free $3.6M of Ore for Surface Copper Mine Tacio Ferreira, Dyno NobelBy Tacio Ferreira
A surface copper mine in the Western United States faced challenges in recovering rock and ore from final walls because of geotechnical constraints that require restrictions on methods for loading bla
Jan 21, 2025
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Back to Basics - The Evolution or Growth of Safety in an Individual or BusinessBy Ronald Thomas
The scope of this paper is to examine the growth of safety in an individual and offer new goals in that development. The paper will examine the individual's natural growth and show how it parallels th
Jan 1, 2001
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Signal Filtering for Safe, Efficient Explosive Use Near Engineered StructuresBy Pierre Allard, Wilfrid Comeau
Near-field and close-in blasting can be safe and efficient, near engineered structures, if the dynamic reaction of structural members to blasting vibrations are considered. Safe particle velocity crit
Jan 1, 1991