Commissioning of Production Blasting with the EXEX 1000 Electronic Delay Detonator Sytem
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 1074 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1995
Abstract
The concept of precise, accurate timing with Electronic Delay Detonators  (EDDs) was first seriously addressed in the mid-1980s and much was  made of the cheapness and profusion of digital watches in terms of the  likelihood of EDDs also being cheap and easy to produce. Ten years later,  with every major explosives company and many electronics groups  having instituted projects to capitalise on the promise of these devices,  production devices are still to come into general use. In South Africa, Expert Explosives units have been used in most  applications during proving trials and more recently for production  blasting in underground ring stoping and open cast coal. The outcome has  been valuable learning both as to the benefits and technical requirements  for electronic delay blasting, and especially, safety aspects. Examples are  shown of production blasts which utilised the power of EDDs. It is evident that it is not delay accuracy alone which determines the  value of these systems, but the whole robustness, flexibility and ease of  delay allocation when harnessing blast engineering knowledge. Muckpile  movement and shape, fragmentation and vibration frequencies have  shown to be greatly influenced by designs which can be implemented no  other way. The flexibility of a system and the power of the software  controlling it are crucial in capitalising on blasting potential, which lies in  integrating control of blast timing with other developing electronic  Technologies.
Citation
APA: (1995) Commissioning of Production Blasting with the EXEX 1000 Electronic Delay Detonator Sytem
MLA: Commissioning of Production Blasting with the EXEX 1000 Electronic Delay Detonator Sytem. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.
