Search Documents
Search Again
Search Again
Refine Search
Refine Search
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
Sort by
- Relevance
- Most Recent
- Alphabetically
-
The Odd Challenges of Backcountry Trail BlastingBy Ed Billington, Mike Shields
The trail blaster is faced with a wide range of workrelated challenges, not the least being the work setting itself. It is usually remote, being anywhere from 5 to 30 or more miles (8 to 50 km) from a
Jan 1, 2004
-
Evaluation and Selection of Blasthole Drilling Equipment Based on Application and Overall CostBy George D. Raitt
Anyone who has spent any time in and around the drilling and blasting profession knows that probably the most critical part is the drilling portion. A blasthole is nothing more than a cylindrical vehi
Jan 1, 1990
-
Reducing Overall Toxic Fumes at Fixed Work Output, by FormulatingBy Michael Wieland
For shooting rock properly, some relatively fixed quantity of rock work is required from the total charge mass, while keeping the overall toxic fumes to a minimum. The overall fumes weighted for the t
Jan 1, 2006
-
Controlling Vibrations Caused by Underground Blasts in LKAB Malmberget MineBy Z X. Zhang
Ground vibrations from the blasts of the LKAB mine at the Malmberget town had reached 18-19 mm/s from year 2000 to 2002. From 2004 to 2010 the maximum vibrations had been reduced to 9 mm/s and most vi
Jan 1, 2012
-
New Dimensions in Initiation SystemsBy Curtis G. Kremer
"New explosives initiation systems continue to be developed as new technologies make advancements possible. Due to recent initiator developments, explosives users now have the most reliable, accurate
Jan 1, 1991
-
Part A: Structural Response from Surface Coal Mine Blasting on a Residential Structure; Part B: House Response from Blast-Induced Low Frequency Ground Vibrations and Inspections for Related Interior CrackingBy John H. Weigand, Stephen V. Crum
"VIBRONICS, INC. instrumented and monitored a residential structure for response to,blasting at aMidwestern surface coal operation. The residence was owned by the mining company and was extremely clos
Jan 1, 1998
-
Back to the Basics; Nonelectric Initiation Shock Tube Systems, Part 2: General ApplicationsBy Larry Schneider
I n the simplest application of a shock tube initiation system, the tubing acts as a “relay line” which passes a detonation signal from borehole to borehole. When the signal arrives at each borehole,
Jan 1, 1995
-
Innovative Blasting - Oversize Reduction at the Timbarra Gold Mine in AustraliaBy G. Hames, A. Drake, B. Sampson
The Timbarra opencut gold mine is located about 30 km(19 miles) southeast of Tenterfield in northern NSW some 4 hours by car from Brisbane, the capital city of Queensland in Australia. It was a small
Jan 1, 2003
-
Why We Keep Blast ReportsBy Paul Kunze
For some of us, the most disagreeable part of being the blaster- in - charge is doing the required paperwork. Cost coding on time cards, drilling reports, magazine inventory logs, and blast records al
Jan 1, 2004
-
The Exex 1000 Computer Aided Blasting (CAB) SystemBy Ronald L. Cocklin, Vivian Patz
Blasting techniques are becoming increasingly sophisticated as the need for improving mining efficiency grows. One of the areas of blasting that has never been fully exploited, due to a lack of a cont
Jan 1, 1995
-
Shape Charge DesignBy David Cole, Paul Cooper, Dale Preece, Jerome Stofleth
The Explosive Destruction System (EDS) has been designed at Sandia National Laboratories for the disposal of chemical munitions (phosgene, mustard gas, sarin etc.), many dating back to World War I. ED
Jan 1, 2002
-
Laser Initiation of Explosives (For Use in Conventional Electric, Nonelectric and Electronic Detonators)By Don Novotny, Dana Spencer
In this workshop our intent is quite simple; that is that we will introduce a relatively new technology that may have applications in blasting applications. This technology is the laser initiation of
Jan 1, 1994
-
Advanced Technology for Blast Design, Execution & AssessmentAQUILA Mining Systems Ltd., designs, develops and delivers systems for measurement, analysis, simulation, control and automation to the mining, construction and petroleum industries. The objective of
Jan 1, 1994
-
Using the Superposition of Seed Waveforms to Predict Seismic Effect by BlastingBy Yang Jun, Qu Mei, Zheng Yao-wu, Chi Li-yuan
Due to the necessity of the prediction of blasting seismic effect around strip mine bench blasting area, the paper provides a method to predict the blasting seismic effect by employing the superpositi
Jan 1, 2015
-
Speedwave - A New, Multichannel, High Resolution, High-Speed Blast Monitor for Near and Far Field Monitoring ApplicationsBy Christopher Cloete Uys, Luis Manuel Poinha Valentim
The purpose of this workshop is to describe and demonstrate the use of SPEEDWAVE, a high speed data recorder, its VOD enhancements, and the software which binds the system together. The system was des
Jan 1, 1995
-
Use of Single Charge Vibration Data to Interpret Explosive Excitation and Ground Transmission CharacteristicsBy O E. Jr Crenwelge
Frequency domain, single-charge vibration signatures are used to interpret the characteristics of explosive impulse excitation and ground vibration transmission. The effects of charge height, charge s
Jan 1, 1988
-
The Importance of Saving the Full Wave Form and Frequency AnalysisBy Randy Wheeler
The importance of having full wave form information for recorded blast events cannot be overstated. Knowing the peak particle velocity and the frequency at the peak are the tip of the iceberg. This pr
Jan 1, 2005
-
Techniques to Assess the Influence of Blast Design Parameters on Airblast and Blast VibrationBy Robert Hivick, Frank Sames
The control of environmental effects, especially blast vibration and airblast, has become a dominating planning criterion for most surface blasting operations. Compliance with existing regulations is
Jan 1, 1999
-
Is that Normal? Fundamental Observations for Best Practive Blast Vibration AnaysisBy W. J. Birch, A. Wetherelt
The scaled-distance model for blast vibration analysis is the standard method employed throughout the surface mining and quarrying industries to model Peak Particle Velocity (PPV) data. Although empir
Jan 1, 2005
-
Drill Monitoring and GPS Developments and their Impact on the Drill to Mill ProcessBy John Vynne
Too often, a mine’s operations, including drilling, blasting, loading, hauling, crushing, processing, etc., are considered independent steps, rather then a continuous process. In fact, these are inter
Jan 1, 2001