The study of the damage effects resulting from the explosions of cylindrical charges holds significant importance in both military and civilian fields. In contrast to spherical charges, the explosive characteristics of the cylindrical charge exhibited spatial irregularities. To comprehensively quantify the influences of borehole diameter and buried depth on the damage effects, including the crater size and stress wave, experimental and numerical investigations on explosions induced by cylindrical charge are carried out in this paper. Firstly, a set of tests is conducted to provide fundamental data. Then, based on the meshfree method of Smoothed Particle Galerkin (SPG) and the K&C model, the variations in crater dimensions and the peak stress are fully simulated with a range of borehole diameters and buried depths. Finally, the influence of borehole and buried depth on the coupling factor is discussed. Both the buried depth and the borehole diameter impact the utilization of blast energy enormously. Furthermore, materials with distinct impedance values exert an influence on the distribution of the stress wave. Following the dimensional analysis, several empirical formulae expressing the crater size and peak stress are established, all of which can predict explosion damage rapidly and accurately.