Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
Surface Blasthole Geometry and Explosives Selection in the Great Lakes RegionBy Donald J. Westmaas, Fred C. Drury
The Great Lakes Region, in the states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio, uses approximately 14% of the explosives annually consumed in the United States. While materials being blasted differ wid
Jan 1, 1979
-
Blast Optimisation at an Australian Gold MineBy Stuart Pether, Cedric Goode
The Mt Morgans Minesite is located 800km North East of Perth, the Capital City of Western Australia. The surrounding region has been a significant producer of gold since the turn of the century. The m
Jan 1, 1996
-
Drill/Blast Hands-On TeachingBy D Reid Watson
A unique blend of theory and hands-on teaching of blast hole drilling and explosives technology is being provided at a Canadian Community College. Students graduate at an apprentice level quite capabl
Jan 1, 1987
-
Achieving Ore-Waste Separation By Dual-Fragmentation BlastingBy Robert M. Carland, Horace Gene Biggs, David Holland
At a North Carolina feldspar surface mine, the orebody contains intrusions of waste material occurring at various angles from horizontal to dipping, and varying considerably in thickness. In order to
Jan 1, 1990
-
Integrated Software Tools and Methodology for Optimization of Blast FragmentationBy Kirstin Girdner, Vicki Seppala, Tom BoBo, John Kemeny, Mike Higgins
Optimal blast fragmentation is fundamental to all phases of comminution. Changes in blast design may affect efficiency and productivity of downstream processes such as crushing, milling and leaching,
Jan 1, 1999
-
Research on Program Design for Control Blasting of Reinforced Concrete Frame StructuresBy Wang Hao
"Demolition of reinforced concrete frame structures in building crowded cities is a hardproblem in control blasting. Any mistakes, e.g. wrong toppling direction of multi-storeybuilding or incompleted
Jan 1, 1993
-
Blasting with a Light Touch; Florida State Project 12014-3501 Fort Myers, FloridaBy Doug Wathen, Philip M. E Thomas
The City of Fort Myers needed to replace a 40-year old 42-inch storm sewer line in downtown Fort Myers with a new 54-inch line to accommodate population growth. The old line had to be kept operational
Jan 1, 1996
-
The Challenge of Florida BlastingBy George Pittman, Dan McCutchen
When an explosive manufacturer in the USA wants to put a new explosive formula or detonator design in the toughest proving ground in North American, it is Florida. Florida conditions have baffled many
Jan 1, 1995
-
The Neglected Step to Accurate Blast Monitoring: Proper CouplingBy Donelson A. Robertson
Proper coupling between the seismograph transducer and the surface is the most important aspect of seismograph monitoring but probably receives the least attention in many blasting situations. Without
Jan 1, 1993
-
Influence of Detonator Strength in the Behavior of Cap Sensitive Explosives Under Dynamic Pressure ConditionsBy Jaime Huidobro, Michele Hall
The desensitization of an explosives column by the transmitted effects of the earlier detonations in nearby explosive charges is of vital concern to the explosives and blasting industries. Stress wave
Jan 1, 1994
-
Rock Stitching Coupled with Controlled Blasting - A Cast StudyIt is a case study of huge rock-mass, loosened out from the parent rock-body, & posing a potential danger to structures down below the slope on which this rock mass was standing. Case was dealt in two
Jan 1, 1997
-
A Blast Fragmentation Measurement and Prediction System for Blast OptimizationBy TH Kleine, AR Cameron
Size assessment of fragmentation is all about estimating the population of fragment sizes in the rock pile. A knowledge of the size distribution of particles can be used in applications from evaluatin
Jan 1, 1997
-
Residential Blast Complaint ReductionBy Sheila Luchansky, F M. Babcock, Daniel M. Sanders
A cooperative effort between a blasting vibration consultant, a blasting contractor, and personnel from the City of Las Vegas has dramatically reduced complaints from residential areas near developmen
Jan 1, 1993
-
Mining Applications of High Energy Projectile ImpactBy Robert G. Lundquist
This paper is a brief summary of work done on mining applications of high energy projectiles. Full scale field testing already completed has used cannons to drive a tunnel, drill large diameter holes,
Jan 1, 1977
-
Should Blasthole Subdrilling be Loaded with ExplosivesBy Norman S. Smith, Troy D. Harris, Richard L. Ash
In open-cut bench blasting drilling boreholes below grade level is normally considered essential to insure toes do not remain. The extra drilling and use of explosive below floor level are not only ex
Jan 1, 1978
-
Journal; Safety Talk How Do We Work Safely? Practice, Practice, Practice.By Willard Pierce
Very few people will consciously decide to do an unsafe act. With that said, how many of us unconsciously put ourselves in harms way, sometimes even on a daily basis? Complacency on the job may have v
Jan 1, 2006
-
Influence of delay time accuracy on the fracture process in smooth blastingBy Yoshiharu Tanaka, Keita Morooka, Masaaki Yamamoto, Katsuhiko Kaneko
Smooth blasting is the standard method for underground rock excavation, to reduce over break and remaining rock damage. We already utilized the high accuracy of the electronic delay detonator to inves
Jan 1, 1998
-
Blast Vibration Analysis by a Time Series TechniqueBy Francis O. Otuonye
An application of a time series and systems analysis modeling technique to blast vibration data is discussed. The vibration data was taken from a rock support structure and the surrounding rock mass a
Jan 1, 1994
-
Deep-hole Controlled Blasting in Reconstruction Railway CuttingBy He Guangyi
During rock blasting in extending deep cutting from Jiu Li Mountain to Dong Zhuang Village in Jiao Zhi Railway line, we have drilled deep hole with large scale diving drilling machine and successfully
Jan 1, 1997
-
Safeguarding of Blast-Affected AreasBy Jerry Bennett
A recant Bureau of Mines analysis has shown that failure of blast area security systems is the mayor cause of mine blasting accidents. Accidents occur during scheduled blasting because of failure to c
Jan 1, 1984