When sods are used the branch is filled for about 3 feet with sods carefully laid and packed with the joints filled with earth. About 3 feet of earth is solidly packed against this, then alternate layers of sods and earth until the desired length of tamping is obtained. To tamp with wood and earth or sand-bags, a wooden shield is first placed across the branch and firmly braced; behind this, earth is solidly packed or sand-bags carefully laid until the required length of tamping is obtained. Sometimes a second shield is put up behind the earth tamping, and firmly braced in position. The strength of the tamping is also increased by pieces of timber crossing each other diagonally, with their ends resting against the sides of the branch. Sand-bags make the best tamping, as they offer high resistance and are easily placed and removed.
The tamping should have a length equal to at least 1½ times the line of least resistance of a common mine corresponding to the charge, and if not of the best quality, to twice this line.
73. Firing Mines.—If electric fuses are used the main conductors or lead wires coiled upon a reel are taken in and the ends properly joined to the fuse wires; they are then led through the galleries, attached to the battery, and fired at the designated instant. Under no circumstances should the main lead wires be connected to the battery or dynamo until everything is ready for firing.
If a Bickford fuse is used its length is regulated to the desired time of firing from its known rate of burning. The miner lights the end and retires; the explosion takes place approximately at the calculated time. With the “Lightning Gomez” or similar fuses a length reaching to the firing-point may be used. It is lighted at the desired time, and burns with such rapidity that for lengths not exceeding 300 or 400 feet the time of burning is inappreciable.
Instead of using great lengths of these fuses, they may be cut shorter and their ends be brought together and inserted in a little mealed powder which is fired by a piece of safety-fuse, slow match or port-fire, etc., long enough to give the miner time to retire to a safe distance after igniting it.
Bickford fuse is best ignited by a piece of cotton wicking soaked in oil and loosely tied around it. This, when lighted, will burn through the covering and set fire to the composition. By this device many fuses may be ignited in a short time. A slow match or “touch-paper” for igniting quick-burning fuses or powder-trains may be made by soaking common paper in a strong solution of nitre and drying it.
CAMOUFLETS BY BORING.
74. In favorable soil a camouflet or small mine may sometimes be placed and fired very quickly by the following process:
A hole 2" to 3" in diameter and of the desired depth is bored in the proper direction with an auger or boring-bar. A cartridge containing from ½ lb. to 2 lbs. of dynamite is pushed down to the bottom and fired. The explosion increases the diameter of the hole somewhat throughout, and obstructs it more or less with loose earth. At the same time it enlarges the part near the seat of the charge into a bottle-shaped cavity, whose size varies with the charge used and the nature of the soil. The hole is rapidly cleared out with a long-handled scoop, the cavity filled with powder, primed, and fired.
The enlargement made by the charges of dynamite above given may contain from 50 to 100 lbs. of gunpowder under favorable circumstances.