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  • ISEE
    A non-toxic, safe and reliable non-primary-explosives detonator

    By Marco Antonio Falquete

    Conventional detonators and blasting caps make use, as igniters, of flame-shock-, andfriction-sensitive primary explosives, such as lead azide, lead styphnate, mercury fulminate, etc, most of them sev

    Jan 1, 2007

  • ISEE
    Calculation of Rock Motion During Bench Blasting

    By Elaine Gorham-Bergeron

    CAROM is a distinct element, dynamic code developed at Sandia National Laboratories to calculate the motion of rock fragments during blasting.[1] It has recently been improved to incorporate a mechani

    Jan 1, 1987

  • ISEE
    A Linear Shape Charge System for Contour Blasting

    By Finn Ouchterlony, Gert Bjarnholt, Robert Holmberg

    A system for contour blasting with a linear shape charge principle has been studied /10/. In one operation the charge creates two notches along the bore hole wall and breaks the rock mass. The built i

    Jan 1, 1983

  • ISEE
    Limited Void Volume Blasting

    By Thomas E. Ricketts

    Limited void volume blasting (LVVB) occurs when rock is blasted into a volume that is not sufficient to let the rock expand to its free-bulking value. The freebulking value is obtained when the rock p

    Jan 1, 1989

  • ISEE
    Controlled Shaft Sinking Using Electronic Delay Detonators and Water Ballast

    By Greg Rappard, Francois Holowenczak, James Rickard

    The King George V (KGV) Shaft forms part of MTR Corporation Limited (MTRCL) Works Contract 703 extension of the underground West Island Line on Hong Kong Island. The Shaft and the associated adit was

    Jan 1, 2013

  • ISEE
    Application of Cross-Correlation and Autocorrelation to Far-Field Digital Seismic Data for Determination of Delay Timing

    By Gregory P. Lorsbach

    Significant information about any blast is contained within the seismic signal generated by the blast. In this study, standard digital signal processing techniques are utilized to extract source param

    Jan 1, 1991

  • ISEE
    Safety Considerations when Using Short Lead, (5 cm), Magnadet Detonators

    By Lon D. Santis

    This paper reports on an evaluation of the safety characteristics of short lead, 5 centimeter (cm), Magnadet1 detonators. The Magnadet initiation system uses magnetic induction principles to transfer

    Jan 1, 1992

  • ISEE
    Blasting Application With 50% of Used Oil in Emulsion Fuel

    By Dadan Munawar, Benny Gunawan

    Blasting at Sebesi in Central Tutupan Pit area in South Kalimantan, Indonesia is planned to be using emulsion, where used oil makes up 50% of the total emulsion fuel. The significant amount of used oi

    Jan 1, 2015

  • ISEE
    Repeated Blasting: Fatigue Damaging or Not?

    By Mark S. Stagg, David E. Siskind

    The Bureau of Mines arranged to have a wood-frame test house built in the pat of an advancing surface coal nine so it could investigate the effects of repeated blasting on a residential house. Structu

    Jan 1, 1985

  • ISEE
    Bridge Demolition in an Environmentally Sensitive Area

    By Ron J. Elliott, Corry Coumans

    The following is a detailed description of the blasting procedures used in the successful demolition of the Stave River bridge, Mission, British Columbia, Canada. This highway bridge spans a highly se

    Jan 1, 1998

  • ISEE
    Micro-Meter Measurement of Cracks to Compare Blast and Environmental Effects

    By Michael Louis, Charles Dowding

    Concern over construction vibration-induced cracking has led to development of a new approach to vibration monitoring called autonomous crack measurement (ACM) and illustrated in Figure 1. This paper

    Jan 1, 2003

  • ISEE
    Pitfalls of Residential Blasting—Experiences of a Field Blaster

    By Chuck Kliche, Bill Clements

    This paper relates some of the experiences, good and bad, of blasting adjacent to residences of the primary author during his 15+ years of field blasting in the Northern Great Plains region. During th

    Jan 1, 2009

  • ISEE
    An Introduction to the Halo Effect

    By Paul Worsey, Seokbin Lim

    In many high explosive applications, the explosives are covered or clad by a metal. This metal cover may serve a variety of purposes including: 1) to protect and prevent the disturbing or misshaping o

    Jan 1, 2005

  • ISEE
    Wight Pit High Grade Wall Slash

    By Art Frye, Lee Pratt, Gaichang Zhao, Greg Newman

    This paper will discuss the Wight Pit wall slash at the Mount Polley open-pit copper-gold mine that scavenged a high grade block of ore from two double-benches of the pit wall. The Wight Pit orebody,

    Jan 1, 2011

  • ISEE
    Airdek: an Update

    By Michael D. McGill, John L. Turner, Don Sieger, Doyle Newhouse

    Since its introduction by Atlas Powder Company in late 1986 as a means of highwall stabilization in surface coal mines (1), applications of the basic AirDek (2) blasting technique have multiplied rapi

    Jan 1, 1991

  • ISEE
    Practical Rules of Thumb for Close-Quarter Utility and Construction Blasting in Basalt

    By Jerry R. Wallace

    Infrastructure improvements and industrial plant expansion and modernization often require rock blasting within 20 feet of existing structures. In many instances trenchlines must cross beneath existin

    Jan 1, 1994

  • ISEE
    Underground Pillar Blasting with Bulk Emulsion explosives

    By H Russell

    An account of an experimental blast at the Sullivan Mine involving a small pillar drilled with 4 1/2" diameter up-holes, and loaded with emulsion explosives from a truck-mounted tank/pump unit.

    Jan 1, 1984

  • ISEE
    New Development in Mechanized Uphole Charging of Explosives

    By Bengt Ljung

    Manual charging of long upward drilled holes in mines is a heavy and risky job today. Mechanization of this work has been requested for some time by miners, their supervisors, industrial safety organi

    Jan 1, 1978

  • ISEE
    Blasting In Hong Kong

    By R L. Keller

    Hong Kong has some of the most restrictive practices regarding blasting than any place in the world. Regulations regarding vibration limitations are 1 in/sec for structures and 0.5 in/sec (or even les

    Jan 1, 1997

  • ISEE
    Pyrotechnics for Breaking Rock and Concrete in Sensitive Environments

    By Tom Hale

    Developers and blasters are faced with increasing public demand and regulatory restrictions to maintain the lowest possible levels of noise and vibration from blasting operations in populated urban ar

    Jan 1, 2008