What is Intraline distance?

Intraline distance means the minimum distance permitted between any two explosive hazard facilities in the ownership, possession or control of one launch site customer.

How much separation distance does HC D 1.1 require?

4,000 feet
For HC/D 1.1 (mass detonation) quantities greater than 500 pounds NEW, all bombs, and explosives greater than 5-inch caliber, minimum distance is 4,000 feet. 3.2. For dropped or partially armed explosives with no fire involved, withdraw to 300 feet. 3.3.

What is the purpose of Intermagazine distance?

1 Intermagazine Distance (IMD). The IMD to protect against the prompt propagation of an explosion of Class/Division 1.1 material between magazines is provided in table 2-1 of reference (1).

What is an interline journey?

Interlining, also known as interline ticketing and interline booking, is a voluntary commercial agreement between individual airlines to handle passengers traveling on itineraries that require multiple flights on multiple airlines.

What is NEC weight?

The net explosive quantity (NEQ), also known as net explosive content (NEC) or net explosive weight (NEW), of a shipment of munitions, fireworks or similar products is the total mass of the contained explosive substances, without the packaging, casings, bullets etc.

What is explosive K factor?

K-factor – A scaling factor correlating the distance (D) and Net Explosive Weight (W) with a particular peak incident overpressure based on the Kingery-Bulmash relationship, as shown in Figure 1.

Why do airlines do codeshare?

Codeshares allow us to sell seats on flights operated by other airlines. This means you can easily combine American and flights with other partner airlines to create a single itinerary to multiple destinations.

How do you tell if a flight is a codeshare?

How do you know if a flight is a codeshare? Airlines are legally mandated to clearly state when a flight is operated as a codeshare. You should see this in the booking process, usually under the flight number with the words “operated by,” displaying the operating airline’s name.