Richard Smith
2023-12-17 18:56:06 UTC
Anyone here know about blasting person-height&width tunnels in hard
rock?
I have some contacts here (UK), but broadening the casting around for
information. Maybe bringing in North American perspective.
Especially noting how much I have gained here from previous ask about
mine haulage-shafts and skips.
New to me. If I'm pointed in the right direction and told the real
deal(s) to look out for, I can do a lot of my own reading.
Some of the rock here is "killas" - a heated "metamorphosed"
sedimentary rock which is quite brittle. Usually associated with
"wet" mines.
Then there is hard granite. Very hard. A 4-carbide-teeth drill bit
cannot touch some when driven by a rock-drill which can go 1~1/2metres
in minutes with a simple chisel-edged carbide-tipped drill bit. Mines
in that can go a mile out under the sea and be dry.
As best I can explain from what I have seen; being a metallurgist and
welder.
There's something which would be very useful here making everything
possible, so it seems.
Something about electronically timed detonators which can serially
detonate "go off at the same time" charges a few microseconds apart,
which is apparently enough that at the surface only the effect of one
charge is felt.
So pointers on that would be appreciated.
Blasting mine tunnels is done radially here I gather from what I have
seen explained at mining museums - blast from the middle outwards,
sending the fractured rock towards the middle (heard of the central
hole being "reamed" - no charge in it obviously - provides the first
void to collapse the first ring of rock into).
Historically gelignite but noted that "ampho" is usually cheaper now.
Another reason for asking for a North American viewpoint is that folk
are much less restricted there - and therefore you get a lot of very
practically experienced folk. eg. when in Texas my host took me to
the range every morning with two holdalls full of hardware - learned a
lot quickly.
Everyone has to be very stern and restricted here trying to appease
the powers-that-be that everyone is very serious and narrow focussed -
no "plinking" or anything like that - and carries over into methods to
make lighter of rearranging rock.
Searching the Web on my own, I wouldn't know when I am "finding gold"
and when it's rubbish.
If you want to personal-message me, go to my website "weldsmith.co.uk"
and use the "Contact me" form and we can pick up on a private email
chat if you prefer that.
Thanks in advance,
Rich Smith
rock?
I have some contacts here (UK), but broadening the casting around for
information. Maybe bringing in North American perspective.
Especially noting how much I have gained here from previous ask about
mine haulage-shafts and skips.
New to me. If I'm pointed in the right direction and told the real
deal(s) to look out for, I can do a lot of my own reading.
Some of the rock here is "killas" - a heated "metamorphosed"
sedimentary rock which is quite brittle. Usually associated with
"wet" mines.
Then there is hard granite. Very hard. A 4-carbide-teeth drill bit
cannot touch some when driven by a rock-drill which can go 1~1/2metres
in minutes with a simple chisel-edged carbide-tipped drill bit. Mines
in that can go a mile out under the sea and be dry.
As best I can explain from what I have seen; being a metallurgist and
welder.
There's something which would be very useful here making everything
possible, so it seems.
Something about electronically timed detonators which can serially
detonate "go off at the same time" charges a few microseconds apart,
which is apparently enough that at the surface only the effect of one
charge is felt.
So pointers on that would be appreciated.
Blasting mine tunnels is done radially here I gather from what I have
seen explained at mining museums - blast from the middle outwards,
sending the fractured rock towards the middle (heard of the central
hole being "reamed" - no charge in it obviously - provides the first
void to collapse the first ring of rock into).
Historically gelignite but noted that "ampho" is usually cheaper now.
Another reason for asking for a North American viewpoint is that folk
are much less restricted there - and therefore you get a lot of very
practically experienced folk. eg. when in Texas my host took me to
the range every morning with two holdalls full of hardware - learned a
lot quickly.
Everyone has to be very stern and restricted here trying to appease
the powers-that-be that everyone is very serious and narrow focussed -
no "plinking" or anything like that - and carries over into methods to
make lighter of rearranging rock.
Searching the Web on my own, I wouldn't know when I am "finding gold"
and when it's rubbish.
If you want to personal-message me, go to my website "weldsmith.co.uk"
and use the "Contact me" form and we can pick up on a private email
chat if you prefer that.
Thanks in advance,
Rich Smith