In this article, YouTube author "George Kosilov" will tell you how to make a very interesting toy.
So, the rifle is a bottle shoot, as its author called it, a copper-tubular-wood propane bottle shoot.
Materials
- Water plastic pipe
- A piece of board
- Copper corners
- polyethylene hose
- Perforated steel tape
- Gas torch with piezo ignition
- Wood screws
- Flaxseed oil.
Instruments, used by the author.
- Electric jigsaw
- Orbital sander
- Manual frezer
- Gas-burner
- screwdriver
- Step drill
- A screwdriver.
Manufacturing process.
The author began making homemade products by cutting out the base from the board.
Then he milled all sharp edges.
And polished the surface.
To give a beautiful color, the author burns wood with a gas burner.
Not everything went smoothly, the workpiece fell and cracked. I had to restore by gluing the parts into place, and fixing with screws.
Now follows the processing of linseed oil.
And here is the burner itself with the nozzle hose
The master fixed the burner on the base, put on the adapter.
Now passes the hose through the holes, connects it to the corner.
In a water pipe, I drilled one edge with a step drill, inserted a piece of hose.
Set the barrel in place, connected the hose.
Now he put the bottle on the barrel, launched the gas-air mixture into the hose, and pressed the piezo ignition button. Fascinating - just like a blaster. It shoots with a slight delay until the flame reaches the bottle.
Slightly changed the design, moving the barrel forward.
It became even more interesting.
It also plows very loudly, the bottle flies all the way the garage.
And one more version, without delay. The author simply disconnected the spiral from the hose, and connected it directly.
And I drilled holes on the barrel tube to make the ignition even better. And the spiral rings can be made smaller, and the delay will decrease accordingly.
Thanks to the author for an interesting toy idea! By the way, there is a lot of rumble from her.
Observe safety precautions - after all, this is gas!
All good mood, good luck, and interesting ideas!