Glossary


glossary

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B

Bulled Hole

A blast hole which has been enlarged (chambered) to accommodate extra explosive over a portion of its length (usually at the bottom) by exploding a small charge.

Entry link: Bulled Hole

Burden

The burden is the distance between a blasthole which is to be fired and the nearest void or free space.

Note that two burdens are defined, the drilled burden as shown in the diagram and the dynamic burden which is the true burden at the instant the hole fires.

The dynamic burden is influenced by both the drilled burden and the delay timing.

Drilled Burden

Entry link: Burden

Burn Cut

The burn, or parallel hole, cut relies on larger diameter uncharged holes to provide the initial void to fire into.

wedge cut 1

These ‘reamer’ holes have limited volume so the burn cut starts with firing holes on very small burdens to ‘nibble’ the rock out until sufficient void and a second free face is created.

The initial holes pulverise the small amount of rock in the cut and then use the high pressure gases to clear the void. Unlike bench or stripping blasting the broken rock must undergo a change of direction and be squirted out the narrow cut area. This process takes some time and is the reason for the use of ‘Long Period’ (LP) delays.

burn cut 2

As a second free face and void is developed blasting transitions to stripping geometries with maximum burdens and sufficient relief.

The burn cut requires a high degree of drilling accuracy to be reliable and there is a trend toward machine guidance systems on drilling machines to optimise drill accuracy.

Whilst these have been shown to be very effective in maximising blast effectiveness, and have been widely adopted into construction tunnelling, they have had limited acceptance in mine development due to operator resistance and maintenance issues.

 

 

Entry link: Burn Cut

Burning Front

The distance that the initiation system has functioned in front of the blast firing.

Entry link: Burning Front

Butt

Any portion of a drill hole or blast hole left after blasting.
NOTE: It could contain some unexploded material.

butt

Entry link: Butt

C

Carry Box

A container on a vehicle or at the work site for holding daily requirements of explosives.

bomb ute

Entry link: Carry Box

Category 2

Under the AEC a category 2 load for the transport of explosives is up to 5000 detonators and 250 kg of explosives.

AEC Risk Quantities

Entry link: Category 2

Charge Carrier

The charge carrier is a metal tube with spaced holes to accept perforating charges.

The charge carrier sits inside the gun body after loading. Picture below shows charge carrier being extracted from the gun body.

gun and cahrge carrier

Entry link: Charge Carrier

Charge Site

The area isolated by the nominated shotfirer to manage interaction during the loading of blasts.
This will include all holes to be charged plus a margin.

The charge site is to be demarcated by barriers which can include:

  • Physical barriers, rills and windrows
  • Visual barriers, signs and flagging tapes
  • Communication, notice boards and shift start communications
Entry link: Charge Site

Coefficient of Variance (CV)

Standard deviation expressed as a percentage of the mean.

Entry link: Coefficient of Variance (CV)


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