Longer Delay Periods Reduce Rockfall Hazard at a Contour Mine

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Virgil J. Stachura Larry R. Fletcher
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
459 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1985

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines conducted a series of delayed blasting experiments at a West Virginia contour coal mine which resulted in smoother highwalls. The highwalls were smoother due to reduced overbreak and inherently safer due to reduced likelihood of rockfall. Reduced overbreak was accomplished by an increase in the highwall hole delay intervals which changed the effective delay pattern geometry and the direction of burden movement. Three combinations of blast delay intervals in the highwall holes were tested: 1) 50 ms longer than the nominal design, 2) 50- and 100-ms longer delays in the nearest two rows that form the highwall, and 3) 100 ms longer than the nominal design. The mine's nominal blast design was a flat vee formed by 17-ms surface delays between holes and 42-ms surface delays between rows, with 200-ms in-the-hole delays. All three test designs produced highwall improvements over the nominal design with only occasional exceptions because of geologic variations.
Citation

APA: Virgil J. Stachura Larry R. Fletcher  (1985)  Longer Delay Periods Reduce Rockfall Hazard at a Contour Mine

MLA: Virgil J. Stachura Larry R. Fletcher Longer Delay Periods Reduce Rockfall Hazard at a Contour Mine. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 1985.

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