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  2. Ballistite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballistite

    The Italian Army swiftly replaced their M1870 and M1870/87 rifles, which used black powder cartridges, by the new M1890 Vetterli, which used ballistite cartridges. As Italy was a competing great power , this was not received well by the French press and public.

  3. Use forms of explosives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Use_forms_of_explosives

    Binary explosives are cap-sensitive (detonatable with a standard #8 blasting cap) two-part explosives mixtures, shipped separately and combined at the use site. Many of these mixtures are based on Ammonium nitrate as an oxidizer plus a volatile fuel, but unlike ANFO (ammonium nitrate fuel oil explosive) these binaries can be detonated by ...

  4. Drilling and blasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drilling_and_blasting

    Rock blasting in Finland. Drilling and blasting is the controlled use of explosives and other methods, such as gas pressure blasting pyrotechnics, to break rock for excavation. It is practiced most often in mining, quarrying and civil engineering such as dam, tunnel or road construction. The result of rock blasting is often known as a rock cut.

  5. Gunpowder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunpowder

    For instance, power grades of black powder, unsuitable for use in firearms but adequate for blasting rock in quarrying operations, are called blasting powder rather than gunpowder with standard proportions of 70% nitrate, 14% charcoal, and 16% sulfur; blasting powder may be made with the cheaper sodium nitrate substituted for potassium nitrate ...

  6. Detonator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Detonator

    The first blasting cap or detonator was demonstrated in 1745 when British physician and apothecary William Watson showed that the electric spark of a friction machine could ignite black powder, by way of igniting a flammable substance mixed in with the black powder. [5]

  7. Hercules Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hercules_Inc.

    Hercules, Inc. was a chemical and munitions manufacturing company based in Wilmington, Delaware, United States, incorporated in 1912 as the Hercules Powder Company following the breakup of the DuPont explosives monopoly by the U.S. Circuit Court in 1911. [1]

  8. Explosives shipping classification system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Explosives_shipping...

    Blasting caps, ingitors 1.1C Rocket motors, smokeless powder. 1.1D Detonating cord, explosive boosters, blackpowder, most secondary explosives. 1.1E 1.1F 1.1G Flash powder, Bulk Salutes, very large fireworks 1.1J Liquid fuelled cruise missiles and torpedoes, incendiary bombs 1.1L 1.2 Projection, no mass explosion: 1.2B Detonating fuzes 1.2C

  9. Water gel explosive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_gel_explosive

    Water gels that are cap-insensitive are referred to under United States safety regulations as blasting agents. Water gel explosives have a jelly-like consistency and come in sausage-like packing stapled shut on both sides. [2] Water-gel explosives have almost completely displaced dynamite, [citation needed] becoming the most-used civil blasting ...