Weather and Blasting

International Society of Explosives Engineers
Jack Eloranta
Organization:
International Society of Explosives Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
170 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2000

Abstract

Transmission of sound through the atmosphere is affected by local conditions. Anecdotal accounts of the sound of cannon fire traveling great distances go back to the Civil War. The Royal Society published a paper near the turn of the century concerning the reports from the cannons fired in London at the funeral of Queen Victoria. Early computers were used by the U.S. Army at Aberdeen in Maryland in the 1950’s to model airblast problems during munitions demolition. Today’s blaster has to have access to weather information beyond a simple local forecast. Surface winds, winds aloft and temperature profiles have a dominant role in neighbors reaction to blasting. Many ground vibration complaints are really airblast complaints. Blasters who maintain ground velocities under . 1 inches/ second are often perplexed by complaints from distant neighbors, even when local monitoring shows airblast to be under 110 dB. This paper will help the blaster identify warning signs of high airblast conditions.
Citation

APA: Jack Eloranta  (2000)  Weather and Blasting

MLA: Jack Eloranta Weather and Blasting. International Society of Explosives Engineers, 2000.

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