ATEX certified pneumatic rock drill in underground coal mine — Set Makina TIGER series

ATEX-Certified Drilling Equipment: Why It Matters for Underground Mining Safety

In underground mining, the difference between ATEX-certified equipment and non-certified equipment goes far beyond compliance paperwork — it determines whether your drilling crew goes home at the end of the shift. In this article, we explain what ATEX certification actually means, which underground environments legally require it, and how pneumatic rock drills from Set Makina meet the standard in practice.

01What ATEX certification actually means

ATEX is the European framework governing equipment used in potentially explosive atmospheres. The name comes from the French ATmosphères EXplosibles. Specifically, it is defined by two EU Directives: Directive 2014/34/EU (ATEX 114), which covers the design and manufacture of equipment, and Directive 1999/92/EC (ATEX 137), which covers the health and safety obligations of employers operating in hazardous locations.

For a mining equipment manufacturer to carry the ATEX mark, engineers must design, test, and independently certify its products to confirm they cannot act as an ignition source in an explosive atmosphere. In practice, this means eliminating or controlling all potential sources of sparks — whether mechanical, electrical, thermal, or electrostatic.

Key point for procurement teams: ATEX certification is not a quality mark — it is a legal requirement. As a result, deploying non-ATEX equipment in a classified zone is both a regulatory violation and a direct liability exposure for the operation manager, site engineer, and purchasing organisation.

Consequently, Set Makina’s pneumatic rock drills carry ATEX certification alongside CE marking and ISO 9001 quality certification — a combination that satisfies procurement requirements across European, Middle Eastern, and African mining regulatory frameworks.

02Understanding explosive atmosphere zones in underground mining

ATEX regulations classify hazardous locations into zones based on the frequency and duration of the explosive atmosphere present. Importantly, the correct zone classification determines which equipment category is permitted on site. Underground mining operations typically encounter zones across both the gas/vapour group and the dust group.

Gas — Zone 0
Zone 0
Explosive gas atmosphere is present continuously or for long periods.
e.g. inside sealed gas drainage lines
Gas — Zone 1
Zone 1
Explosive gas atmosphere is likely to occur during normal operation.
e.g. active coal mine tunnels and headings
Gas — Zone 2
Zone 2
Explosive gas atmosphere is not likely but may occur infrequently.
e.g. mine roadways with intermittent ventilation
Dust — Zone 20
Zone 20
Explosive dust cloud present continuously or for long periods.
e.g. inside coal crushing or conveyor enclosures
Dust — Zone 21
Zone 21
Explosive dust cloud likely during normal operation.
e.g. coal cutting and drilling face areas
Dust — Zone 22
Zone 22
Explosive dust cloud unlikely but may occur occasionally.
e.g. mine floor and general underground areas

Indeed, coal mines are particularly demanding because they present both gas and dust hazards simultaneously. Firedamp (methane) accumulates in poorly ventilated headings while coal dust — explosive at concentrations as low as 50 g/m³ — is generated by every drilling and cutting operation. Therefore, any equipment operating in these areas must hold certification for the appropriate zone categories across both hazard groups.

03Why pneumatic drills have a structural safety advantage underground

The ATEX framework applies to all equipment categories — electrical, mechanical, hydraulic, and pneumatic. However, pneumatic rock drills carry an inherent design advantage in explosive atmospheres that is important for procurement engineers to understand.

No electrical ignition source

Pneumatic drills are powered entirely by compressed air. There are no motors, switches, contactors, or wiring runs that could spark, arc, or generate electromagnetic energy in the drilling zone.

Spark-free mechanical design

Set Makina’s ATEX-certified drills use non-sparking materials in all components that contact the work face, and apply surface treatments that prevent frictional ignition under normal and fault conditions.

Intrinsically safe operation

Because compressed air is the energy carrier rather than electricity, pneumatic drills eliminate the most common ignition pathways in hazardous environments — no overheating windings, no short circuits, no static build-up.

Lower surface temperatures

ATEX categories specify maximum permissible surface temperatures (T-class). Pneumatic mechanisms generate far less heat than equivalent electric or hydraulic systems, making temperature compliance straightforward to achieve and maintain over the tool’s service life.

Important: While pneumatic design provides an inherent safety advantage, it does not automatically confer ATEX certification. Therefore, the drill must still undergo independent testing and certification by a Notified Body. In other words, specifying “pneumatic” is not sufficient — the product documentation must show a valid ATEX certificate number and the applicable equipment category and zone.

04Set Makina’s ATEX-certified underground drilling products

Set Makina manufactures a range of pneumatic rock drills and drilling units certified for use in explosive atmospheres. In particular, the two primary products for underground mining applications are the TIGER YT28 air-leg drill and the TIGER RD20 coal auger unit.

Specification TIGER YT28 — Air-Leg Rock Drill TIGER RD20 — Coal Auger Unit
Primary application Tunnel, mine heading & stope drilling Coal mine blast-hole & drainage drilling
Certification ATEX · CE ATEX · CE
Operating pressure 6 bar 5 bar
Air consumption 60 L/s at 6 bar 54 L/s at 5 bar
Impact frequency 36 Hz N/A (rotary)
Drilling diameter 34 – 42 mm 42 mm
Weight 26 kg 8 kg
Shank size 22 × 108 mm 12×13 mm / 16 mm
Rock hardness range f8 – f18 (medium to hard) Coal seams
Key safety feature Spark-free, kıvılcımsız Spark-free, lightweight

05Real-world application: Zonguldak coal basin, Turkey

Case Study · Underground Coal Mining
Deep underground coal mine, Zonguldak Basin, Turkey

A deep underground coal mine in the Zonguldak Basin — one of Turkey’s most demanding mining environments — was experiencing recurring failures with electrically powered equipment in wet, corrosive conditions. Roof and rib drilling operations were causing operator fatigue from heavy machines, and compliance with underground safety protocols was being compromised.

Reduced unplanned equipment downtime across drilling fleet
Improved daily advance rates after TIGER YT series deployment

Set Makina deployed ATEX-certified TIGER air-leg rock drills across the operation’s roof and rib drilling stations. As a result, the spark-free pneumatic design eliminated the electrical failure modes causing downtime. Furthermore, the lighter machine weight — compared to the electric units previously in use — reduced operator fatigue and improved safety protocol compliance across shifts.

“The TIGER products provided by Set Makina allowed our teams to advance faster, more safely, and with less effort. They proved reliable even in conditions where other equipment had failed.”

— Underground Maintenance Supervisor, Zonguldak Coal Mine (identity withheld — public institution)

065 questions procurement teams should ask about ATEX drilling equipment

  1. Does the product carry a valid ATEX certificate — not just a declaration?

    Self-declarations of conformity are not sufficient for higher-risk zones. Specifically, Zones 0, 1, and 20 require independent certification by a recognised Notified Body (NoBo). Always request the actual certificate number and verify it against the issuing body’s registry. Notably, Set Makina products include full certification documentation.

  2. Is the equipment category matched to your zone classification?

    ATEX equipment categories (1, 2, 3) must correspond to the zone in which they will operate. For example, Category 1 is required for Zone 0/20, Category 2 for Zone 1/21, and Category 3 for Zone 2/22. Consequently, procuring Category 3 equipment for a Zone 1 environment is a compliance breach even if the product carries an ATEX mark.

  3. What is the maximum surface temperature classification (T-class)?

    Different flammable substances ignite at different temperatures. The T-class of your equipment must be lower than the auto-ignition temperature of the hazardous substance present on site. For methane (firedamp), common in coal mines, the auto-ignition temperature is approximately 537°C — equipment must carry at minimum T1 classification.

  4. Are all system components — not just the drill — ATEX certified?

    The ATEX requirement applies to the entire system, including hoses, oilers, air legs, fittings, and ancillary connections. In other words, a certified drill connected to non-certified accessories may still constitute a compliance gap. Set Makina can advise on full system configurations for classified zones.

  5. Does the manufacturer provide documentation for regulatory inspection?

    Mines are subject to regulatory inspection, and inspectors will request equipment documentation. This includes EC-type examination certificates, conformity declarations, technical files, and maintenance records. Therefore, ensure your supplier provides a complete documentation package and supports re-certification when required.

Equipping an underground mining operation?

Set Makina’s technical team can confirm equipment certification, advise on zone-category matching, and provide full ATEX documentation packages for regulatory compliance.

Request a technical consultation

All ATEX references in this article are based on EU Directives 2014/34/EU and 1999/92/EC. Set Makina products referenced carry valid ATEX certification from recognised Notified Bodies. Certificate documentation is available on request. This article is intended for informational purposes — always verify zone classification and equipment category requirements with a qualified competent person for your specific site.

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