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United States Bureau of Mines
Industry: Mining
Number of terms: 33118
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
The U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM) was the primary United States Government agency conducting scientific research and disseminating information on the extraction, processing, use, and conservation of mineral resources. Founded on May 16, 1910, through the Organic Act (Public Law 179), USBM's missions ...
A bit designed for drilling in soft formations and for use on a double-tube core barrel, the inner tube of which fits snugly into a recess cut into the inside wall of the bit directly above the inside reaming stones. The bit is provided with a number of holes drilled longitudinally through the wall of the bit, through which the circulation liquid flows and is ejected at the cutting face of the bit.
Industry:Mining
A bit designed to grind or cut foreign metallic material or junk in a borehole into pieces small enough to be washed out of the hole or recovered by a basket. Compare: milling bit; rose bit.
Industry:Mining
A bit equipped with hardened serrations or teeth used to grind or cut away metallic materials or junk obstructing a borehole.
Industry:Mining
A bit equipped with hardened serrations or teeth used to grind or cut away metallic materials or junk obstructing a borehole.
Industry:Mining
A bit insert with diamonds or other cutting media.
Industry:Mining
A bit into which inset cutting points of various preshaped pieces of hard metal (usually a sintered, tungsten carbide-cobalt powder alloy) are brazed or hand-peened into slots or holes cut or drilled into a blank bit. Hard-metal inserts may or may not contain diamonds.
Industry:Mining
A bit into which inset cutting points of various preshaped pieces of hard metal (usually a sintered, tungsten carbide-cobalt powder alloy) are brazed or hand-peened into slots or holes cut or drilled into a blank bit. Hard-metal inserts may or may not contain diamonds.
Industry:Mining
A bit made by reusing the sound diamonds salvaged from a used drill bit and setting them in the crown attached to a new bit blank. Some new diamonds usually are added to those salvaged, since generally not all of the salvaged or recovered stones are reusable.
Industry:Mining
A bit made by reusing the sound diamonds salvaged from a used drill bit and setting them in the crown attached to a new bit blank. Some new diamonds usually are added to those salvaged, since generally not all of the salvaged or recovered stones are reusable.
Industry:Mining
A bit set with diamonds arranged in successive layers beneath the surface of the crown. Compare: impregnated bit; surface-set bit.
Industry:Mining