Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Energy, Strength and Performance, and Their Implications in Rating Commercial ExplosivesBy B Mohanty
Several parameters such as, Energy, Strength, Brisance, Impulse, and Bubble Energy, are in common use in the explosives industry today to rate commercial explosives in terms of blasting performance. H
Jan 1, 1981
-
Explosives Safety is a New Ball GamesBy Joe Dannenberg
One must be cautious in talking about blasting safety, because the very act of making a blast involves the creation of an infernal machine. You are setting up for the instant release of tremendous ene
Jan 1, 1975
-
Use of Corrtex to Measure Explosive Performance and Stem Behavior in Oil Shale Fragmentation TestsBy Gerald G. Schmitt, Richard D. Dick
Continuous Reflectometry for Radius vs Time Experiments (CORRTEX) was used to monitor several conditions of blasts such as the detonation velocity of the explosive column, the functioning of different
Jan 1, 1985
-
Blasting Accidents in MiningBy Michael A. Peltier, Dennis V. D'Andreal, Larry R. Fletcher
Accident data obtained from the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) were analyzed by the Bureau of Mines to determine the most frequent causes of blasting accidents in U.S. mining and to exam
Jan 1, 1987
-
Surface Vibration Measurements from Deep Hole BlastsBy Jesus Pascual, Jose Sanchidrian, Pablo Segarra
The surface vibration field in the area above an underground mine prior to its development has been investigated, in order to assess the vibration levels expected in existing buildings and in the plan
Jan 1, 2002
-
Laboratory Study on Prevention Method of Detonation Failure Caused by Channel EffectBy Fumihiko Sumiya, Kunihisa Katsuyama, Yuji Ogata, Yukio Kato, Yuji Wada, Yoshikazu Hirosaki
Smooth blasting technique is widely applied for tunneling road or railway construction in Japan. However, smooth blasting technique often causes problem related to detonation failure in explosive colu
Jan 1, 2003
-
Flyrock Range & Fragment Size PredictionBy Cameron McKenzie
Flyrock is a complex issue involving interaction between the charging crew, the blast design, and the local geology, and once conditions on the shot meet certain criteria, the probability of a flyrock
Jan 1, 2009
-
Safe and Reliable Remote Blasting with Electronic Initiation SystemsBy Riaan Van Wyk, Gys Landman
In today’s mining environment the use of radio communications in the form of two-way radios, cellular phones and even automated mining, form a vital part of the daily operations of a mining site. The
Jan 1, 2011
-
The Development of a New Cable Cutting DeviceBy Richard B. O'Meara
"The demand by a customer to an Explosives supplier to fulfill a specialised productrequirement was met by a level headed decision to try to satisfy that demand. This paperwill describe the fundamenta
Jan 1, 1993
-
Protection from Liability Before, During, and After Blast DetonationBy Ralph E. Burnham, J. Kelly Ratliff
"The words “dynamite,” “TNT,” “explosives,” and “blasting” typically cause the general public, andjurors, apprehension and fear. Although blasting operations conducted by well-trained, skilled, andexp
Jan 1, 2016
-
Shock-Wave Refraction Tape (S.R.T.) a New Type of Explosive Fracturing ChargeBy S C. Alford
Explosive fracturing of metal is usually considered to be an imprecise process but, by careful consideration of shock-wave geometry, precise results are obtainable. The limited development of such cha
Jan 1, 1986
-
Controlled Perimeter Blasting in Cold RegionsBy Malcolm Mellor
Practical procedures that have been developed for pre-split blasting and smooth blasting in common rocks are reviewed systematically. Topics covered include shothole spacing, charge weight per unit le
Jan 1, 1976
-
The Largest Rock Fill Dam in the United StatesBy L. L. Oriard
he Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (MWD) supplies water to some 16 million people in a semi-arid region. Most of this water is imported. Some of the supply lines cross over the San
Jan 1, 2000
-
Attenuation of Blasting Vibrations in South Florida, Part IIBy Greg Mclellan, Mark Johnson, John Pepper
In this paper, the measured vibrations are plotted in terms of the individual PPV components versus Scaled Distance (SD) on logarithmic scales. The maximum PPV is pIotted on a separate graph and equat
Jan 1, 2001
-
A Coyote Blast at Rhone-Poulenc's Maiden Rock Silica QuarryBy John C. Adams, Darrel D. Porter
After conventional drill and shoot methods were determined to be unfeasible due the fractured nature of the ground, a "coyote" blast was designed to produce 250,000 tons of rock from Rhone-Poulenc's M
Jan 1, 1993
-
Pre-Blast Surveys and the Importance of Photographic TechniqueBy James Ballard, Charles H. Dowding
Recent Office of Surface Mining regulations have called for pre-blast surveys of residences within one-half mile of blasting. Unless lighting effects and the multiple origins of cracks are recognized,
Jan 1, 1979
-
History and Expansion of the Panama CanalBy R Frank Chiappeta, Eduardo Nixon, John Dean Smith, Tom Treleaven
"The creation of the Panama Canal was far more than a vast, unprecedented feat of engineering. It was a profoundly important historic event and a sweeping human drama not unlike that of war. Apart fro
Jan 1, 1998
-
Instrumentation and Monitoring Criteria to Determine Structural Response from BlastingBy H Y. Fang, H Sutherland, R M. Koerner
Due to the increased number of complaints by property owners to blasting related industries an apparent need for a clearer understanding of blasting-related damage is needed. We feel that direct struc
Jan 1, 1976
-
Improving the Amount of Material Cast at Highvale Mine Using Electronic DetonatorsBy Robert Slivinski, Kyle Hobbs, Michael Stern, John Willox, Brad Jewson
Prairie Mines & Royalty Ltd. produces over 12 million tonnes annually of thermal coal for TransAlta’s Sundance and Keephills power stations from the Highvale Mine. This opencast mine is next to a lake
Jan 1, 2008
-
"Blast Vibration and Seismograph Section - A History of the Development of Instrumentsfor Measuring Vibrations of the Earth - Part 2"By Robert Hopler
In part one we discussed a Chinese seismoscope allegedly invented and used in the year 136 (or 132, depending on the source). Interestingly, historical references to the measurement of earth movement
Jan 1, 2006