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Journal: 100 Years / Handling Explosives (Excerpts) Aetna Powder Company (126 pp) Chicago, 1913By Robert Hopler
A detonator is a copper tube about a quarter of an inch in diameter and an inch and a half long, closed at one end and containing in the closed end a small charge of fulminate of mercury, which has be
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / Harper’s Weekly New York May 21, 1870 / (Continued from the March/April 2006 Journal of Explosives Engineering) / The Value of Detonating Caps in BlastingBy Robert Hopler
It is the nature of the initial detonation to the powder around the cap which governs the greater or less effect of the explosion of the whole charge. The cap communicates to the first particles of po
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: 100 Years / New Farms for OldBy Robert Hopler
True there is a certain proportion of nitro-glycerin in dynamite cartridges, but the dangerous explosive is scientifically compounded with wood pulp and some other ingredients in such a way that it ca
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: 100 Years / Postcard mailed from Ironwood, Michigan, 13 April 1909 / A Primer on Explosives for Coal MinersBy Clarence Hall, Charles E. Monroe
Squibs, Fuse, and Detonators It has been made clear in the discussion of combustion and explosion and the description of various explosives that they can be caused to explode by various means. All of
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: 100 Years / Rock Drilling With Particular Reference to Open Cut Excavation and Submarine Rock Removal.By W. L. Saunders, Richard T. Dana
The dynamites are graded according to the percentage of nitroglycerin that they contain. Thus a “40% powder” would be one in which the sticks, weighing one-half pound each, would include one-fifth of
Jan 1, 2013
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Journal: 100 Years / SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN New York December 2, 1911 / Hudson MaximBy Robert Hopler
HUDSON MAXIM A Noted Inventor of High Explosives ALTHOUGH the subject of the present sketch has been a tireless worker in many fields of activity, his name is best known in connection with his work in
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: 100 Years / Scientific American New York December 2, 1911 The First National Mine Safety Demonstration Study Of A Real Mine Explosion By Charles L. Wright, Fuel Engineer, Bureau Of MinesBy Robert Hopler
THE work that is being done by the Government to reduce the dangers of mining was brought out strikingly in the First National Mine-Safety Demonstration which occurred at Pittsburgh, Pa., on October 3
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: 100 Years / The breakup of DU PONTBy Robert Hopler
On June 13, 1912, the final decree of dissolution of the DuPont explosives trust was handed down, and the resulting new companies began operating at the beginning of the new year. The property assets
Jan 1, 2014
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Journal: 100 Years / The Colliery Guardian London July 15, 1904By Robert Hopler
In accordance with the 57th section of the Explosives Act, 1875, the following report on the working of the Act during the year ending December 31, 1903, is submitted. There have been no modifications
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: 100 Years / The Control of the Dynamite Trade.By Robert Hopler
Your petitioner further alleges that at various times, to wit, from 1872 until June 30, 1895, during the existence of the combination and conspiracy in restraint of trade among the various States here
Jan 1, 2013
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Journal: 100 Years / The Piercing of The Simplon The Century Magazine New York June 1905 / Driving Headings in Rock TunnelsBy Robert Hopler
THIS paper deals specifically with heading-driving as distinguished from the broader term tunnel-driving. A heading is a pilot or path-finder for the main tunnel. Some headings are complete tunnels in
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: 100 Years / US Department of Agriculture Farmers' BulletinBy Harry Thompson
In using explosives to blast stumps from the ground in order to prepare it for farming, it is comparatively easy to place the charge under a stump having a semitaproot or a lateral system of rooting b
Jan 1, 2015
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Journal: 19th Annual Photo and Art Contest - Honorable Mention "Pre-Split Wall "By Wood Marcum, Gary McLemore, Randall Franklin
Description of Project: Nelson Brothers/Walter Energy (Choctaw Mine) Pre-Split Wall. Walter Energy – Choctaw Mine is a multi-seam surface coal mine in Northwest Alabama.Pre-splitting is the standard p
Jan 1, 2013
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Journal: A Case Study of Full-Face Blasting in a Highway Tunnel in KoreaBy Hae-Moon Choi, Sang-Don Lee, Chang-Ha Ryu
The purpose of the study presented in this article is to establish a standard blast pattern to yield optimum blasting performance along with an attempt to reduce a difference between design and constr
Jan 1, 2006
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Journal: A Public Relations Plan Based on Structure Generated Sounds and Public InputBy Ken Eltschlager, J Silva Castro, J. M. Hoffman, Braden Lusk
This case study focuses on analysis of sounds inside a house induced by blasts as result of surface mining coal in West Virginia and how to better communicate technical information to the public. The
Jan 1, 2012
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Journal: Blast Vibration and Seismograph Section / Accuracy of Blasting SeismographsBy Bob Turnbull
The International Society of Explosives Engineers (ISEE), at its 1995 annual conference, established a Seismograph Standards Working Group to develop performance standards for blast vibration seismogr
Jan 1, 2007
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Journal: Blastserve A Discussion Forum for ISEE Members / Effects of Line or Channel Drilling on VibrationHello, everyone. Way back in 1965, Devine and others at the US Bureau of Mines showed that a presplit fracture plane did not affect vibration levels transmitted across the plane (RI 6695).
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: Book Review / Micrometer Crack Response to Vibration and WeatherBy ISEE
Micrometer Crack Response to Vibration and Weather, by Prof. Charles H. Dowding of Northwestern University, adds to Prof. Dowding’s already important contributions to the industry with his “Constructi
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: Coal Creek rebirth: Just add explosivesBy Michael Milstein
Northwest Research Station said as more and more older dams are removed to benefit fish, it’s become clearer that rivers rework themselves quickly.“Where the dam is relatively small, it’s a quick resp
Jan 1, 2010
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Journal: Dynamite DazeBy S. S. Bud Jenkins
I went to an underground limestone mine recently to demonstrate the use of borehole liners. The liners were for horizontal holes in a normal “V” cut tunnel round. I hadn’t been in this mine for about
Jan 1, 2010