Whoops - missed one point. The old electric dets or 'hot wire' dets did have a fair reputation for being unreliable. They used very dodgy primary explosives like azides and styphnates that go off with exposure to heat or percussion.
If anyone does go this route you want to use the more modern, much safer, exploding bridge-wire (EBW) type. These use a much safer secondary explosive like PETN. The vaporizing bridge-wire initiates the shock that causes detonation in the PETN.
You can also get them with a little toroid core that means they can only be fired at a specific frequency of current - lowers risk due to electrical noise (but not capacitive discharge). I think the brand name is Magnadet or something like that.
Always have an experience explosives engineer on hand when tackling anything like this etc. etc. etc.
If anyone does go this route you want to use the more modern, much safer, exploding bridge-wire (EBW) type. These use a much safer secondary explosive like PETN. The vaporizing bridge-wire initiates the shock that causes detonation in the PETN.
You can also get them with a little toroid core that means they can only be fired at a specific frequency of current - lowers risk due to electrical noise (but not capacitive discharge). I think the brand name is Magnadet or something like that.
Always have an experience explosives engineer on hand when tackling anything like this etc. etc. etc.