US20080173205A1 - Stemming Plug - Google Patents
Stemming Plug Download PDFInfo
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- US20080173205A1 US20080173205A1 US11/660,448 US66044805A US2008173205A1 US 20080173205 A1 US20080173205 A1 US 20080173205A1 US 66044805 A US66044805 A US 66044805A US 2008173205 A1 US2008173205 A1 US 2008173205A1
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- Prior art keywords
- plug
- cup
- stemming
- formations
- cups
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F42—AMMUNITION; BLASTING
- F42D—BLASTING
- F42D1/00—Blasting methods or apparatus, e.g. loading or tamping
- F42D1/08—Tamping methods; Methods for loading boreholes with explosives; Apparatus therefor
- F42D1/18—Plugs for boreholes
Definitions
- This invention relates to a stemming plug for confining explosive blast gasses in a blast hole in mining, tunneling or like operations.
- stemming plugs are produced from natural rubber, synthetic rubber and other suitable polymers and have been used for the above application for many years.
- An unacceptably high degree of failure is, however, experienced by miners and the like as a result of the stemming plugs being expelled from blast holes during a blast.
- Difficulty in inserting existing plugs into holes and, when occasion requires, the removal of a plug are problems frequently encountered in blasting operations.
- a portion of the wall of each cup-shaped member from its rim may be substantially cylindrical around the axis of the plug which passes through the centres of the cup bases to define the circumferential load bearing zone of the plug.
- Each cup-shaped member may include a substantially cylindrical skirt which extends from the substantially cylindrical portion of its wall away from the abutting rims of the cups to surround at least a portion of the cup wall.
- the composite substantially cylindrical outer wall of the plug may be divided into segments by slots which are parallel to the plug axis.
- each of the wall segments could include outwardly projecting formations for gripping the surface of a hole when the segments are brought into load bearing contact with the surface, in use.
- the gripping formations may be ribs which are parallel to the segment defining slots.
- each cup-shaped member may include a line of weakness on the inside of and against the wall of the cup across each of the wall segment slots.
- the line of weakness may be defined by arcuate slots with the ends of each slot being spaced from the ends of adjacent slots.
- each of the cup-shaped members may include a pleat which extends from the ends of each of the arcuate slots in a direction towards the plug axis to expedite expansion of the plug in a radial direction, in use.
- the pleated wall material of each cup-shaped member is preferably thinner than the adjacent cup wall material.
- the pleats may be V or C-shaped in cross-section.
- each of the cup-shaped members may include an aperture through which a fuse or electrical detonator conductors may be passed.
- Each of the cup-shaped members preferably includes a formation which is releasably engageable with a formation on the other cup to ensure that the fuse apertures are in register with each other and to prevent rotation of the cups relatively to each other about the plug axis.
- the releasably engageable formations may be a plurality of circumferentially spaced sockets and spigots which are releasably engageable with the sockets and spigots of the other cup.
- a first of the cup-shaped members may include a holed boss in its base and the second an aperture in its base and the cup base moving means could be a headed elongated element which passes axially through the plug cavity between the first and second cups with its head, which is adapted for rotation by a removable tool, bearing on the outer surface of the second cup around the aperture with a portion of its length from its unheaded end including formations which are movably engageable with complementally shaped formations in the hole in the boss of the first cup member.
- the engageable formations on the end portion of the elongated element and in the boss hole may be helical thread formations.
- a first of the cup-shaped members may include an aperture in its base around the plug axis, at least two outwardly projecting gripper formations which are attached to and project outwardly from the base of the cup to be biased towards the plug axis over the aperture and carry on their faces which face the plug axis ratchet teeth
- the second cup-shaped member may carry an elongated element which passes through the aperture in the first cup and between the gripper formations and carries ratchet teeth which are oppositely directed to those on the faces of the gripper formations with the directions of the ratchet teeth being such that the end of the elongated element may be pulled outwardly from between the teeth of the gripper formations to draw the cup bases towards each other to set the plug, in use, when the pulling tension on the elongated element is relaxed.
- the plug could include two gripper formations which face each other from opposite sides of the aperture in the base of the cup and the portion of the elongated element which carries its ratchet teeth may be square or rectangular in cross-section with the ratchet teeth on two opposite sides of the element while the remaining opposite sides are flat so that the ratchet teeth on the gripper formations will, when the elongated element and the cup to which it is attached is rotated through 90°, be disengaged from the ratchet teeth on the elongated element to enable the base portions of the cup-shaped elements of the plug to move away from each other to reduce the radial dimension of the plug to enable it to be removed from a predrilled hole in the event of a misfire of the explosive in the hole.
- Each of the gripper formations could include at its free end a surface which tapers from the end of the formation inwardly towards the plug axis for releasing its ratchet teeth from those on the elongated element by means of a suitable tool.
- FIG. 1 is a half-sectioned side elevation of a first embodiment of the stemming plug of the invention
- FIG. 2 is a plan view of the cup-shaped members of the FIG. 1 stemming plug
- FIG. 3 is a sectioned side elevation of the FIG. 1 stemming plug, in use
- FIG. 4 is an isometric view of a tool for setting the FIG. 1 stemming plug
- FIG. 5 is sectioned side elevation of a variation of the FIG. 1 plug
- FIG. 6 is a sectioned side elevation of a second embodiment of a cup-shaped formation of the stemming plug of the invention.
- FIG. 7 is a plan view of the FIG. 6 cup-shaped member
- FIG. 8 shows two fragmentary sectional views which illustrate the function of the pleats in the cup-shaped member of FIGS. 6 and 7 ,
- FIG. 9 is a sectioned side elevation of a typical cup-shaped member of the stemming plug.
- FIG. 10 is an under plan of the cup-shaped member of FIG. 9 .
- FIG. 11 is an under plan of the second cup-shaped member for use with that of FIG. 9 .
- FIG. 12 is a sectioned side elevation of a third embodiment of the stemming plug of the invention.
- the first embodiment 10 of the stemming plug of the invention is shown in FIG. 1 to include two cup-shaped members 12 and 14 with their rims abutting each other and a headed setting screw 16 .
- the cup-shaped members 12 and 14 are made from a suitable resilient plastic material such as polypropylene, a polyamide or the like.
- the screw 16 is made from a suitably rigid polyamide.
- the upper cup-shaped member 18 in FIGS. 1 and 2 is shown to include an outwardly domed wall portion 20 with the rim portion 22 of the cup being inwardly directed to be almost cylindrical about the axis of the plug.
- the cylindrical portion 22 of each cup side wall is extended away from the portion 22 to provide cylindrical extensions 28 which surround the domed wall portions 20 and bases of the cups.
- the base portion of the cup 20 carries a boss 24 which has a threaded bore which is engaged by the male helical thread formation on the screw 16 .
- the cup-shaped formation 14 is substantially identical to the cup 12 save that it carries in its base portion a holed recess formation 26 for accommodating and locating the head of the screw 16 .
- the cylindrical portions 22 of the cup-shaped members 12 and 14 together with their cylindrical extensions 28 provide a substantially cylindrical composite wall which surround the remainder of the cups.
- the composite stemming plug wall is shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 to be divided into segments 30 by vertical slots 32 which penetrate the domed portion 20 of the plug to allow for movement of the segments away from the plug axis and one another, in use.
- the outer surfaces of each of the wall segments 30 carry an outwardly projecting rib 34 the purpose of which is to be deformed under radial pressure against a wall of a hole in which the plug 10 is located, in use, to key into irregularities in the wall surface and so to prevent rotation of the plug as it is being set in the hole.
- the dome portion 20 of each of the plugs carries an aperture 36 , shown only in FIG. 2 , for the passage of a fuse or the conductor leads to an electrically activated detonator.
- FIG. 3 illustrates the stemming plug 10 of FIGS. 1 and 2 set in a predrilled blast hole 38 with its cup-shaped members compressed towards each other by the screw 16 with at least the radially so-moved wall portions 22 of the cup segments 30 pressed hard up against the surface 40 of the hole 38 .
- the stemming plug 10 is set in the hole 40 by means of the tubular tool 42 shown in FIG. 4 .
- the tool includes, from one end, two opposed vertical slots 44 which terminate in round ended circumferential slots 46 .
- the diameter of the bore of the tool 42 is slightly greater than the diameter of the outer portion of the screw 16 head and the width of the slots 44 and 46 are similarly slightly larger than the diameter of the trunnion formations 48 which project from opposite sides of the screw head.
- the tool additionally carries a handle, at its opposite end to that at which the slots 44 and 46 are located, by means of which the tool is rotated in setting the stemming plug.
- FIG. 5 variation 50 of the stemming plug of the invention is similar to that of FIGS. 1 to 3 except that the domed wall portions 20 of the FIG. 1 plug is here replaced by frusto conical wall portions 52 and the boss 24 is replaced by a recessed formation 26 , which is identical to the screw head recess formation 26 of FIG. 1 .
- the upper formation 26 in FIG. 5 carries a threaded plug 54 in which the screw 16 is engaged.
- the plug carries a key, not shown, which is engageable with a key groove in the recess 26 to prevent rotation of the plug 54 during setting of the stemming plug.
- the composite cylindrical wall of the FIG. 5 stemming plug includes slots 32 , ribs 34 and the fuse aperture 36 in its wall portions 52 which are identical to those described with reference to FIGS. 1 and 2 .
- the second embodiment 56 of the stemming plug of the invention is shown in FIGS. 6 and 7 to include six pleats 58 which are located in the domed or frusto conical wall portions of the cup-shaped members and extend across the segment 30 wall slots 32 as shown in FIG. 7 .
- the outer edges of the pleats 58 terminate in arcuate slots 60 which are made through the cup material to separate the outer wider edges of the pleats 58 from the wall segments 30 .
- the pleats 58 in this embodiment of the invention are outwardly V-shaped, as most clearly shown in FIGS. 7 and 8 .
- the upper sketch in FIG. 8 shows the shape of the edge of the pleat at its slot 60 in the unstressed condition of the stemming plug and the lower sketch illustrates the degree of stretch provided, by the six almost flattened pleats, to enable the cup segments to separate circumferentially when the stemming plug is stressed and set as illustrated in FIG. 3 .
- the pleats need not necessarily have the V-shape shown in FIGS. 7 and 8 and could be C-shaped or have any suitable stretchable shape such as a plurality of tapered corrugations or the like. Whatever the cross-sectional shape of the pleats is the material of the pleats is made to be thinner than the remaining domed or frusto conical cup material adjacent them.
- the pleats and particularly those which are composed of a thinner material, facilitate outward radial and circumferential expansion of the segmented plug wall and markedly reduce the torque which is required to rotate the screw during setting of the stemming device.
- FIGS. 9 , 10 and 11 illustrate the currently preferred arrangement for preventing rotation of the stemming plug cup-shaped members relatively to each other during setting of the stemming plug.
- An arrangement of this sort is applicable to all of the stemming plug embodiments described in this specification.
- the cup-shaped member of FIGS. 9 and 10 is shown to include two spigot formations 62 and four sockets 64 which are supported by and in protuberances 66 which project from the centres of the wall segments 30 .
- the lower ends of the protuberances 66 are flush with the outer surfaces of the rims of the cup shaped members.
- the plan view of the opposite cup-shaped member of the stemming plug is shown in FIG. 11 to include two spigots 62 on either side of the fuse or electrical cord aperture 36 and four sockets 64 .
- the sockets 62 and the spigot 64 of the two cup-shaped members are engaged with each other in the assembled stemming plug.
- each of the cup-shaped members The arrangement of the sockets 64 and spigots 62 on the rim faces of each of the cup-shaped members is firstly to ensure that the two cups are connected in a specific circumferential relationship so that the fuse holes 36 will always be in axial register for the passage of a fuse or detonator conductors through the plug and, secondly, to hold the abutting cup faces together to avoid one segment face portion from being radially displaced from the other as the cups are activated by compression towards each other or by wall irregularities in the blast hole.
- the third embodiment 68 of the stemming plug of this invention is shown in FIG. 12 to include cup-shaped members 70 and 72 , an actuator 74 and two gripper formations 76 .
- the substantially cylindrical wall of the stemming plug is the same segmented arrangement as that of FIG. 1 .
- the actuator 74 is made integral with and projects from the base of the cup 72 .
- the portion of the length of the actuator which carries ratchet teeth 78 is rectangular in cross-section with its non-toothed sides being smooth.
- the two gripper formations 76 without the actuator between them, are strongly biased by the resilience of the material from which they are made, over the aperture in the plug towards the plug axis.
- Each of the gripper formations 76 carries, when the actuator is located between them, ratchet teeth which are biased into engagement with the teeth 78 on the actuator.
- the tooth direction of the engaged ratchet teeth as shown in the drawing, enable the actuator to be pulled upwardly in the drawing from between the actuator ratchet teeth to compress the cup-shaped members, as does the screw of FIG. 1 , to move the wall segments into pressure bearing contact with a hole wall, in use.
- the outward tension on the actuator is relaxed to allow the ratchet teeth to lock the plug in its activated state in the hole.
- a tool having opposite triangular formations is pressed into the triangular gaps between the upper ends of the gripper formations 76 . Pressure on the tool forces the gripper teeth out of engagement with the actuator teeth to allow the tension on the actuator to draw the actuator back into the plug cavity and so release the wall segments from the hole wall.
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Abstract
The invention relates to a stemming plug (10) which is made from a suitably resilient plastic material and comprises two cup-shaped members (12,14) which face each other with their rims (22) in abutment and means, which extends between the centres of the base portions of the cups (20) in the plug (10), which is adapted to move the bases of the cups (20) towards each other to compress the cups (10) and cause a circumferential zone of the plug (10) on either side of the abutting faces of the cups (20) to increase in radial dimension to be brought into load bearing contact with the side of a predrilled hole (38) in which the plug (10) is to be located, in use, and to enable the bases of the cups (20) to be moved away from each other to allow the plug (10) to be withdrawn from the hole (38) in the event of a misfire of the explosive in the hole (38).
Description
- This invention relates to a stemming plug for confining explosive blast gasses in a blast hole in mining, tunneling or like operations.
- A variety of stemming plugs are produced from natural rubber, synthetic rubber and other suitable polymers and have been used for the above application for many years. An unacceptably high degree of failure is, however, experienced by miners and the like as a result of the stemming plugs being expelled from blast holes during a blast. Difficulty in inserting existing plugs into holes and, when occasion requires, the removal of a plug are problems frequently encountered in blasting operations.
- A stemming plug which is made from a suitable resiliently deformable plastics material according to the invention comprises two cup-shaped members which face each other with their rims in abutment and means, which extends between the centres of the base portions of the cups in the plug, which is adapted to move the bases of the cups towards each other to compress the cups and cause a circumferential zone of the plug on either side of the abutting faces of the cups to increase in radial dimension to be brought into load bearing contact with the side of a predrilled hole in which the plug is to be located, in use, and to enable the bases of the cups to be moved away from each other to allow the plug to be withdrawn from the hole in the event of a misfire of the explosive in the hole.
- A portion of the wall of each cup-shaped member from its rim may be substantially cylindrical around the axis of the plug which passes through the centres of the cup bases to define the circumferential load bearing zone of the plug.
- Each cup-shaped member may include a substantially cylindrical skirt which extends from the substantially cylindrical portion of its wall away from the abutting rims of the cups to surround at least a portion of the cup wall.
- The composite substantially cylindrical outer wall of the plug may be divided into segments by slots which are parallel to the plug axis.
- The outer surface of each of the wall segments could include outwardly projecting formations for gripping the surface of a hole when the segments are brought into load bearing contact with the surface, in use.
- The gripping formations may be ribs which are parallel to the segment defining slots.
- The non-cylindrical wall material of each cup-shaped member may include a line of weakness on the inside of and against the wall of the cup across each of the wall segment slots. The line of weakness may be defined by arcuate slots with the ends of each slot being spaced from the ends of adjacent slots.
- The non-cylindrical portion of each of the cup-shaped members may include a pleat which extends from the ends of each of the arcuate slots in a direction towards the plug axis to expedite expansion of the plug in a radial direction, in use. The pleated wall material of each cup-shaped member is preferably thinner than the adjacent cup wall material.
- The pleats may be V or C-shaped in cross-section.
- The non-cylindrical portion of each of the cup-shaped members may include an aperture through which a fuse or electrical detonator conductors may be passed.
- Each of the cup-shaped members preferably includes a formation which is releasably engageable with a formation on the other cup to ensure that the fuse apertures are in register with each other and to prevent rotation of the cups relatively to each other about the plug axis.
- The releasably engageable formations may be a plurality of circumferentially spaced sockets and spigots which are releasably engageable with the sockets and spigots of the other cup.
- A first of the cup-shaped members may include a holed boss in its base and the second an aperture in its base and the cup base moving means could be a headed elongated element which passes axially through the plug cavity between the first and second cups with its head, which is adapted for rotation by a removable tool, bearing on the outer surface of the second cup around the aperture with a portion of its length from its unheaded end including formations which are movably engageable with complementally shaped formations in the hole in the boss of the first cup member. The engageable formations on the end portion of the elongated element and in the boss hole may be helical thread formations.
- In a variation of the above stemming plug a first of the cup-shaped members may include an aperture in its base around the plug axis, at least two outwardly projecting gripper formations which are attached to and project outwardly from the base of the cup to be biased towards the plug axis over the aperture and carry on their faces which face the plug axis ratchet teeth, the second cup-shaped member may carry an elongated element which passes through the aperture in the first cup and between the gripper formations and carries ratchet teeth which are oppositely directed to those on the faces of the gripper formations with the directions of the ratchet teeth being such that the end of the elongated element may be pulled outwardly from between the teeth of the gripper formations to draw the cup bases towards each other to set the plug, in use, when the pulling tension on the elongated element is relaxed. The plug could include two gripper formations which face each other from opposite sides of the aperture in the base of the cup and the portion of the elongated element which carries its ratchet teeth may be square or rectangular in cross-section with the ratchet teeth on two opposite sides of the element while the remaining opposite sides are flat so that the ratchet teeth on the gripper formations will, when the elongated element and the cup to which it is attached is rotated through 90°, be disengaged from the ratchet teeth on the elongated element to enable the base portions of the cup-shaped elements of the plug to move away from each other to reduce the radial dimension of the plug to enable it to be removed from a predrilled hole in the event of a misfire of the explosive in the hole.
- Each of the gripper formations could include at its free end a surface which tapers from the end of the formation inwardly towards the plug axis for releasing its ratchet teeth from those on the elongated element by means of a suitable tool.
- A number of embodiments of the invention are now described by way of non-limiting examples only with reference to the drawings in which:
-
FIG. 1 is a half-sectioned side elevation of a first embodiment of the stemming plug of the invention, -
FIG. 2 is a plan view of the cup-shaped members of theFIG. 1 stemming plug, -
FIG. 3 is a sectioned side elevation of theFIG. 1 stemming plug, in use, -
FIG. 4 is an isometric view of a tool for setting theFIG. 1 stemming plug, -
FIG. 5 is sectioned side elevation of a variation of theFIG. 1 plug, -
FIG. 6 is a sectioned side elevation of a second embodiment of a cup-shaped formation of the stemming plug of the invention, -
FIG. 7 is a plan view of theFIG. 6 cup-shaped member, -
FIG. 8 shows two fragmentary sectional views which illustrate the function of the pleats in the cup-shaped member ofFIGS. 6 and 7 , -
FIG. 9 is a sectioned side elevation of a typical cup-shaped member of the stemming plug, -
FIG. 10 is an under plan of the cup-shaped member ofFIG. 9 , -
FIG. 11 is an under plan of the second cup-shaped member for use with that ofFIG. 9 , and -
FIG. 12 is a sectioned side elevation of a third embodiment of the stemming plug of the invention. - The
first embodiment 10 of the stemming plug of the invention is shown inFIG. 1 to include two cup-shaped members 12 and 14 with their rims abutting each other and a headedsetting screw 16. - The cup-
shaped members 12 and 14 are made from a suitable resilient plastic material such as polypropylene, a polyamide or the like. Thescrew 16 is made from a suitably rigid polyamide. - The upper cup-
shaped member 18 inFIGS. 1 and 2 is shown to include an outwardlydomed wall portion 20 with therim portion 22 of the cup being inwardly directed to be almost cylindrical about the axis of the plug. Thecylindrical portion 22 of each cup side wall is extended away from theportion 22 to providecylindrical extensions 28 which surround thedomed wall portions 20 and bases of the cups. - The base portion of the
cup 20 carries aboss 24 which has a threaded bore which is engaged by the male helical thread formation on thescrew 16. - The cup-shaped formation 14 is substantially identical to the
cup 12 save that it carries in its base portion aholed recess formation 26 for accommodating and locating the head of thescrew 16. - As shown on the left in
FIG. 1 and inFIG. 2 thecylindrical portions 22 of the cup-shaped members 12 and 14 together with theircylindrical extensions 28 provide a substantially cylindrical composite wall which surround the remainder of the cups. - The composite stemming plug wall is shown in
FIGS. 1 and 2 to be divided intosegments 30 byvertical slots 32 which penetrate thedomed portion 20 of the plug to allow for movement of the segments away from the plug axis and one another, in use. The outer surfaces of each of thewall segments 30 carry an outwardly projectingrib 34 the purpose of which is to be deformed under radial pressure against a wall of a hole in which theplug 10 is located, in use, to key into irregularities in the wall surface and so to prevent rotation of the plug as it is being set in the hole. Thedome portion 20 of each of the plugs carries anaperture 36, shown only inFIG. 2 , for the passage of a fuse or the conductor leads to an electrically activated detonator. -
FIG. 3 illustrates thestemming plug 10 ofFIGS. 1 and 2 set in apredrilled blast hole 38 with its cup-shaped members compressed towards each other by thescrew 16 with at least the radially so-moved wall portions 22 of thecup segments 30 pressed hard up against thesurface 40 of thehole 38. - The
stemming plug 10 is set in thehole 40 by means of thetubular tool 42 shown inFIG. 4 . The tool includes, from one end, two opposedvertical slots 44 which terminate in round endedcircumferential slots 46. The diameter of the bore of thetool 42 is slightly greater than the diameter of the outer portion of thescrew 16 head and the width of theslots trunnion formations 48 which project from opposite sides of the screw head. The tool additionally carries a handle, at its opposite end to that at which theslots - The
FIG. 5 variation 50 of the stemming plug of the invention is similar to that ofFIGS. 1 to 3 except that thedomed wall portions 20 of theFIG. 1 plug is here replaced by frustoconical wall portions 52 and theboss 24 is replaced by arecessed formation 26, which is identical to the screwhead recess formation 26 ofFIG. 1 . Theupper formation 26 inFIG. 5 carries a threadedplug 54 in which thescrew 16 is engaged. The plug carries a key, not shown, which is engageable with a key groove in therecess 26 to prevent rotation of theplug 54 during setting of the stemming plug. - The composite cylindrical wall of the
FIG. 5 stemming plug includesslots 32,ribs 34 and thefuse aperture 36 in itswall portions 52 which are identical to those described with reference toFIGS. 1 and 2 . - The
second embodiment 56 of the stemming plug of the invention is shown inFIGS. 6 and 7 to include sixpleats 58 which are located in the domed or frusto conical wall portions of the cup-shaped members and extend across thesegment 30wall slots 32 as shown inFIG. 7 . The outer edges of thepleats 58 terminate inarcuate slots 60 which are made through the cup material to separate the outer wider edges of thepleats 58 from thewall segments 30. - The
pleats 58 in this embodiment of the invention are outwardly V-shaped, as most clearly shown inFIGS. 7 and 8 . The upper sketch inFIG. 8 shows the shape of the edge of the pleat at itsslot 60 in the unstressed condition of the stemming plug and the lower sketch illustrates the degree of stretch provided, by the six almost flattened pleats, to enable the cup segments to separate circumferentially when the stemming plug is stressed and set as illustrated inFIG. 3 . The pleats need not necessarily have the V-shape shown inFIGS. 7 and 8 and could be C-shaped or have any suitable stretchable shape such as a plurality of tapered corrugations or the like. Whatever the cross-sectional shape of the pleats is the material of the pleats is made to be thinner than the remaining domed or frusto conical cup material adjacent them. - The pleats, and particularly those which are composed of a thinner material, facilitate outward radial and circumferential expansion of the segmented plug wall and markedly reduce the torque which is required to rotate the screw during setting of the stemming device.
-
FIGS. 9 , 10 and 11 illustrate the currently preferred arrangement for preventing rotation of the stemming plug cup-shaped members relatively to each other during setting of the stemming plug. An arrangement of this sort is applicable to all of the stemming plug embodiments described in this specification. - The cup-shaped member of
FIGS. 9 and 10 is shown to include twospigot formations 62 and foursockets 64 which are supported by and inprotuberances 66 which project from the centres of thewall segments 30. The lower ends of theprotuberances 66 are flush with the outer surfaces of the rims of the cup shaped members. The plan view of the opposite cup-shaped member of the stemming plug is shown inFIG. 11 to include twospigots 62 on either side of the fuse orelectrical cord aperture 36 and foursockets 64. - The
sockets 62 and thespigot 64 of the two cup-shaped members are engaged with each other in the assembled stemming plug. - The arrangement of the
sockets 64 andspigots 62 on the rim faces of each of the cup-shaped members is firstly to ensure that the two cups are connected in a specific circumferential relationship so that the fuse holes 36 will always be in axial register for the passage of a fuse or detonator conductors through the plug and, secondly, to hold the abutting cup faces together to avoid one segment face portion from being radially displaced from the other as the cups are activated by compression towards each other or by wall irregularities in the blast hole. - The third embodiment 68 of the stemming plug of this invention is shown in
FIG. 12 to include cup-shapedmembers gripper formations 76. - The substantially cylindrical wall of the stemming plug is the same segmented arrangement as that of
FIG. 1 . - The actuator 74 is made integral with and projects from the base of the
cup 72. The portion of the length of the actuator which carries ratchetteeth 78 is rectangular in cross-section with its non-toothed sides being smooth. The twogripper formations 76, without the actuator between them, are strongly biased by the resilience of the material from which they are made, over the aperture in the plug towards the plug axis. Each of thegripper formations 76 carries, when the actuator is located between them, ratchet teeth which are biased into engagement with theteeth 78 on the actuator. The tooth direction of the engaged ratchet teeth, as shown in the drawing, enable the actuator to be pulled upwardly in the drawing from between the actuator ratchet teeth to compress the cup-shaped members, as does the screw ofFIG. 1 , to move the wall segments into pressure bearing contact with a hole wall, in use. When the plug is set in a hole the outward tension on the actuator is relaxed to allow the ratchet teeth to lock the plug in its activated state in the hole. - To release the holding tension on the actuator to enable the plug to be removed from the hole, after use, a tool having opposite triangular formations is pressed into the triangular gaps between the upper ends of the
gripper formations 76. Pressure on the tool forces the gripper teeth out of engagement with the actuator teeth to allow the tension on the actuator to draw the actuator back into the plug cavity and so release the wall segments from the hole wall. - The invention is not limited to the precise details as herein described and is limited only by the scope of the invention as defined by the claims in this specification.
Claims (20)
1. A stemming plug which is made from a suitable resiliently deformable plastic material, characterised in that the plug comprises two cup-shaped members which face each other with their rim faces in abutment, a plurality of circumferentially spaced and releasably engaged socket and spigot formations in arid projecting from the abutting cup rim faces and means, which extends between the centres of the base portions of the cups in the plug, which is adapted to move the bases of the cups towards each other to compress the cups and cause a circumferential zone of the plug on either side of the abutting faces of the cups to increase in radial dimension to be brought into load bearing contact with the side of a predrilled hole in which the plug is to be located, in use, and to enable the bases of the cups to be moved away from each other to allow the plug to be withdrawn from the hole in the event of a misfire of an explosive in the hole.
2. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 1 wherein a portion of the wall of each cup shaped member from its rim is substantially cylindrical around the axis of the plug which passes through the centres of the cup bases to define the circumferential load bearing zone of the plug.
3. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 2 wherein each cup-shaped member includes a substantially cylindrical skirt which extends from the substantially cylindrical portion of its wall away from the abutting rims of the cups to surround at least a portion of the cup wall.
4. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 3 wherein the composite substantially cylindrical outer wall of the plug is divided into segments by slots which are parallel to the plug axis.
5. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 4 wherein the abutting rim faces of each of the wall segments are connected to each other by the socket and spigot formations.
6. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 5 wherein the outer surface of each of the wall segments include outwardly projecting formations for gripping the surface of a hole when the segments are brought into load bearing contact with the surface, in use.
7. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 6 wherein the gripping formations are ribs which are parallel to the segment defining slots.
8. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 4 wherein the non-cylindrical wall material of each cup-shaped member includes a line of weakness on the inside of and against the wall of the cup across each of the wall segment slots.
9. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 8 wherein the line of weakness is defined by arcuate slots with the ends of each slot being spaced from the ends of adjacent slots.
10. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 9 wherein the non-cylindrical portion of each of the cup-shaped members includes a pleat which extends from the ends of each of the arcuate slots in a direction towards the plug axis to expedite expansion of the plug in a radial direction, in use.
11. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 10 wherein the pleated wall material of each cup-shaped member is thinner than the adjacent cup wall material.
12. A stemming plug as claimed in either one of claim 10 wherein the pleats are V-shaped in cross-section,
13. A stemming plug as claimed in either one of claim 10 wherein the pleats are C-shaped in cross-section.
14. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 5 wherein the non-cylindrical portion of each of the cup-shaped members includes an aperture through which a fuse or electrical detonator conductors may be passed.
15. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 13 wherein the sockets and spigots on the rim faces of each of the cup-shaped members are so arranged that the fuse apertures in each cup-shaped member are in register with each other and to prevent rotation of the cups relatively to each other about the plug axis.
16. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 1 wherein a first of the cup-shaped members includes a holed boss in its base and the second an aperture in its base and the cup base moving means is a headed elongated element which passes axially through the plug cavity between the first and second cups with its head, which is adapted for rotation by a removable toot, bearing on the outer surface of the second cup around the aperture with a portion of its length from its unheaded end including formations which are movably engageable with complementally shaped formations in the hole in the boss of the first cup member.
17. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 16 wherein the engageable formations on the end portion of the elongated element and in the boss hole are helical thread formations.
18. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 1 wherein, a first of the cup-shaped members includes an aperture in its base around the plug axis, at least two outwardly projecting gripper formations which are attached to and project outwardly from the base of the cup to be biased towards the plug axis over the aperture and carry on their faces which face the plug axis ratchet teeth, the second cup-shaped member carries an elongated element which passes through the aperture in the first cup and between the gripper formations and carries ratchet teeth which are oppositely directed to those on the faces of the gripper formations with the directions of the ratchet teeth being such that the end of the elongated element may be pulled outwardly from between the teeth of the gripper formations to draw the cup bases towards each other to set the plug, in use, when the pulling tension on the elongated element is relaxed.
19. A stemming plug as claimed in claim 18 including two gripper formations which face each other from opposite sides of the aperture in the base of the cup and the portion of the elongated element which carries its ratchet teeth is square or rectangular in cross-section with the ratchet teeth on two opposite sides of the element while the remaining opposite sides are flat so that the ratchet teeth on the gripper formations will, when the elongated element and the cup to which it is attached is rotated through 90°, be disengaged from the ratchet teeth on the elongated element to enable the base portions of the cup-shaped elements of the plug to move away from each other to reduce the radial dimension of the plug to enable it to be removed from a predrilled hole in the event of a misfire of the explosive in the hole.
20. A stemming plug as claimed in either claim 18 wherein each of the gripper formations includes at its free arid a surface which tapers from the end of the formation inwardly towards the plug axis for releasing its ratchet teeth from those on the elongated element by means of a suitable tool.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
ZA200408225 | 2004-10-12 | ||
ZA2004/8225 | 2004-10-12 | ||
PCT/ZA2005/000152 WO2006042342A1 (en) | 2004-10-12 | 2005-10-06 | Stemming plug |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US20080173205A1 true US20080173205A1 (en) | 2008-07-24 |
Family
ID=35462247
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US11/660,448 Abandoned US20080173205A1 (en) | 2004-10-12 | 2005-10-06 | Stemming Plug |
Country Status (5)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US20080173205A1 (en) |
AU (1) | AU2005295144A1 (en) |
CA (1) | CA2577481A1 (en) |
WO (1) | WO2006042342A1 (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA200701340B (en) |
Cited By (7)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20180238171A1 (en) * | 2015-08-12 | 2018-08-23 | Evolution Resource Group Pty Ltd | Method and apparatus for creating a void for underground mining |
US10378870B1 (en) * | 2018-05-30 | 2019-08-13 | The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army | Energy absorbing flange for meltable fuze plug |
CN110793403A (en) * | 2019-11-19 | 2020-02-14 | 中交第二公路勘察设计研究院有限公司 | Novel high-efficient carbon dioxide phase transition send and splits ware |
CN111238330A (en) * | 2020-03-16 | 2020-06-05 | 中国电建集团成都勘测设计研究院有限公司 | Blast hole filling device for tunnel blasting construction |
CN111336879A (en) * | 2020-04-08 | 2020-06-26 | 中国电建集团成都勘测设计研究院有限公司 | Blast hole blocking device |
CN112414244A (en) * | 2020-12-02 | 2021-02-26 | 河海大学 | Self-sealing type orifice clamping device and construction method thereof |
CN112556526A (en) * | 2020-12-04 | 2021-03-26 | 中南大学 | Blast hole plugging device and method |
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Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US20180238171A1 (en) * | 2015-08-12 | 2018-08-23 | Evolution Resource Group Pty Ltd | Method and apparatus for creating a void for underground mining |
US11111787B2 (en) * | 2015-08-12 | 2021-09-07 | Moore Management Company Pty Ltd | Method and an apparatus for creating a void for underground mining |
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CN110793403A (en) * | 2019-11-19 | 2020-02-14 | 中交第二公路勘察设计研究院有限公司 | Novel high-efficient carbon dioxide phase transition send and splits ware |
CN111238330A (en) * | 2020-03-16 | 2020-06-05 | 中国电建集团成都勘测设计研究院有限公司 | Blast hole filling device for tunnel blasting construction |
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CN112414244A (en) * | 2020-12-02 | 2021-02-26 | 河海大学 | Self-sealing type orifice clamping device and construction method thereof |
CN112556526A (en) * | 2020-12-04 | 2021-03-26 | 中南大学 | Blast hole plugging device and method |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
ZA200701340B (en) | 2008-08-27 |
AU2005295144A1 (en) | 2006-04-20 |
CA2577481A1 (en) | 2006-04-20 |
WO2006042342A1 (en) | 2006-04-20 |
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Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
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AS | Assignment |
Owner name: DYSON, RICHARD ARTHUR, SOUTH AFRICA Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:GARDNER, GRAHAM COOPER;REEL/FRAME:020101/0979 Effective date: 20070122 Owner name: HAWKINS, GLEN ROBERT, SOUTH AFRICA Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:GARDNER, GRAHAM COOPER;REEL/FRAME:020101/0979 Effective date: 20070122 |
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STCB | Information on status: application discontinuation |
Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO PAY ISSUE FEE |