The Back Pressures Associated With Resin Rock Bolt Installations And Methods To Control And Predict It (1a0250a7-1c1e-4686-8a66-dbfc2dd6e095)

International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Anthony S. Spearing
Organization:
International Conference on Ground Control in Mining
Pages:
6
File Size:
1661 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2009

Abstract

The vast majority of the estimated 100 million rock anchors installed in mines in the USA per year use resin cartridges (Tadolini and Mazzoni, 2006). About 4.5 million per annum of these are bolts with a mechanical shell that if properly installed become effective active supports on installation. In addition, cable anchors (mostly passive) are installed with typically 4 ft of effective resin anchorage length sometimes with mechanical shells, which further makes the installation more difficult. This is because the cable (even with a stiffener tube) is not very rigid. When installing bolts with mechanical shells and cable bolts in the holes, the back-pressure can be so high that the installation is unsuccessful often creating a ?spinner? (an un-tensioned bolt) at best or buckling the bolt thus requiring another bolt/cable to be installed, or leaving a poorly functioning unit. The installation problems can create a significant potential safety hazard and waste time and money. Using a purpose designed test rig that physically inserts different rock anchors into pipes with resin and measure the back-pressure developed with time during the insertion/ installation. The test installation procedure is designed to mirror that used underground by rockbolt operators in coal mines. In addition a computer model has been calibrated that can predict the approximate back pressure of new anchor and resin combinations acting as a screen before physical testing. This research has lead to an understanding and quantification of the insertion back-pressures and this already resulted in improved prototype designs that could lead to more reliable mechanical shell and resin bolt installations.
Citation

APA: Anthony S. Spearing  (2009)  The Back Pressures Associated With Resin Rock Bolt Installations And Methods To Control And Predict It (1a0250a7-1c1e-4686-8a66-dbfc2dd6e095)

MLA: Anthony S. Spearing The Back Pressures Associated With Resin Rock Bolt Installations And Methods To Control And Predict It (1a0250a7-1c1e-4686-8a66-dbfc2dd6e095). International Conference on Ground Control in Mining, 2009.

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