Current through Register Vol. 51, No. 3, September 1, 2024
NECESSITY, FUNCTION, AND CONFORMITY: KRS 351.335 requires the
Department for Natural Resources to promulgate rules and administrative
regulations concerning the manufacture, transportation, sale, storage, or use
of explosives and assembled components of explosives, and the maintenance of
such explosives which has a direct bearing on safety to life and property. This
administrative regulation effects the provisions of that law.
Section 1.
(1) Electric blasting caps shall not be used
where sources of extraneous electricity make the use of electric blasting caps
dangerous. Blasting cap leg wires shall be kept short-circuited (shunted) until
they are connected into the circuit for firing.
(2) Before adopting any system of electrical
firing, the blaster shall conduct a thorough survey for extraneous currents,
and all dangerous currents shall be eliminated before any holes are
loaded.
(3) In any single blast
using electric blasting caps, all caps shall be of the same style or function,
and of the same manufacture.
(4)
Electric blasting shall be carried out by using blasting circuits or power
circuits in accordance with the electric blasting cap manufacturer's
recommendations, or those of an approved contractor or his designated
representative.
(5) When firing a
circuit of electric blasting caps, care shall be exercised to insure that an
adequate quantity of delivered current is available, in accordance with the
manufacturer's recommendations.
(6)
Connecting wires and lead wires shall be insulated single solid wires of
sufficient current-carrying capacity. In addition, the lead wire shall be of
sufficient length to allow the blast to be detonated from a safe distance and
location.
(7) Bus wires shall be
solid single wires of sufficient current-carrying capacity.
(8) When firing electrically, the insulation
on all firing lines shall be adequate and in good condition.
(9) A power circuit used for firing electric
blasting caps shall not be grounded.
(10) In underground operations, when firing
from a power circuit, a safety switch shall be placed in the permanent firing
line at intervals. This switch shall be made so it can be locked only in the
"off" position and shall be provided with a short-circuiting arrangement of the
firing lines to the cap circuit.
(11) In underground operations there shall be
a "lightning" gap of at least five (5) feet in the firing system ahead of the
main firing switch; that is, between this switch and the source of power. This
gap shall be bridged by a flexible jumper cord immediately before firing the
blast.
(12) When firing from a
power circuit, the firing switch shall be locked in the open or "off" position
at all times, except when firing. It shall be so designed that the firing lines
to the cap circuit are automatically short-circuited when the switch is in the
"off" position. Keys to this switch shall be entrusted only to the
blaster.
(13) Blasting machines
shall be in good condition and the efficiency of the machine shall be tested
periodically to make certain that it can deliver power at its rated
capacity.
(14) When firing with
blasting machines, the connections shall be made as recommended by the
manufacturer of the electric blasting caps used.
(15) The number of electric blasting caps
connected to a blasting machine shall not be in excess of its rated capacity.
Furthermore, a series circuit shall contain no more caps than the limits
recommended by the manufacturer of the electric blasting caps in use.
(16) The blaster shall be in charge of the
blasting machines and no other person shall connect the leading wires to the
machine except under the direction of the blaster.
(17) Blasters shall test all electric
blasting caps and electric blasting cap circuits by using only a blasting
galvanometer, blasting ohmmeter, or blasting multimeter, designed specifically
for the purpose of testing individual electric blasting caps and circuits
containing electric blasting caps. Such instruments shall be clearly marked as
being designed for such purposes, and shall be used in accordance with the
manufacturer's recommendations.
(18) Whenever the possibility exists that a
leading line or blasting wire might be thrown over a live powerline by the
force of an explosion, care shall be taken to see that the total length of
wires are kept too short to hit the lines, or that the wires are securely
anchored to the ground. If neither of these requirements can be satisfied, a
nonelectric system shall be used.
(19) Leading wires shall remain shorted and
not be connected to the blasting machine or other source of current until the
charge is to be fired.
(20) After
firing an electric blast from a blasting machine, the leading wires shall be
immediately disconnected from the machine and short-circuited.
(21) All blasting machines, other than
rack-bar and twist type generators, shall have a normally open firing switch
equipped with a spring device or other self-returning mechanism that
automatically returns it to the nonfiring position after the shot has been
detonated.
(22) Due precautions
shall be taken to prevent accidental discharge of electric blasting caps or
explosives from current induced by radar, radio transmitters, lightning,
adjacent powder lines, dust storms, or other sources of extraneous electricity.
These precautions shall include:
(a) The
shunting or short-circuiting of detonators in holes which have been primed
until wired into the blasting circuit.
(b) The suspension of all blasting operations
and removal of persons from the blasting area during the approach and progress
of an electric storm.
(c) The
prominent display of adequate signs, warning against the use of mobile radio
transmitters, on all roads within 1,000 feet of blasting operations. Whenever
adherence to the 1,000-foot distance would create an operational handicap, this
distance may be modified so long as the modification is adequately designed in
compliance with paragraph (e) of this subsection to prevent any premature
firing of electric blasting caps. Specimens of signs which satisfy these
requirements are as follows:
Blasting Zone
1,000-ft.
about 48" X 48"
|
Turn Off
2-Way Radio
about 42" X 36"
|
This paragraph shall not apply to surface mining
operations.
(d) Mobile radio
transmitters which are less than 100 feet away from electric blasting caps in
other than original containers may be left "on" for receiving purposes, but may
only be used to transmit if in compliance with paragraph (e) of this
subsection.
(e) Compliance with the
recommendations of the Institute of Makers of Explosives with regard to
blasting in the vicinity of radio transmitters as stipulated in "Safety Guide
for the Prevention of Radio Frequency Radiation Hazards in the Use of
Commercial Electric Detonators," IME Publication No. 20, December 1988,
incorporated herein by reference. This document may be reviewed or copied at
the Department for Natural Resources, 300 Sower Boulevard, Frankfort, KY 40601
during normal business hours from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
(23) All electric blasts shall be fired with
an electric blasting machine or power source designed specifically for
detonating electric blasting caps.
(24) In parallel blasting circuits, the
circuit shall be wired so that the resistances in all series are
balanced.
(25) When blasting
electrically, a blasting galvanometer, blasting ohmmeter, or blasting
multimeter shall be used to test:
(a)
Resistance of individual caps, series of caps, or the resistance of multiple
balanced series to be connected in parallel prior to their connection to the
blasting line;
(b) Continuity of
blasting lines prior to the connection of electric blasting cap series;
and
(c) Total blasting circuit
resistance prior to connection in the power source.
(26) Immediately after the blast has been
fired, the firing line shall be disconnected from the blasting machine, or
where power switches are used, they shall be locked open or in the "off"
position.