In other countries they use plastic on the lift charge cover. What happens to that plastic when the charge is fired and the canister goes up? Is there plastic pieces left in the tube permanently?
Iv done this both ways using xylene and bonding the hemis together and pasting with gummed tape. Both were built identical with 2.5 grams of flash dusted over hulls and the paper pasted shell burst almost twice as hard and threw the stars twice as far. NOT A WASTE OF PAPER. IMHO. But to each there own.
Nice I personally use the paper hemis but these plastic ones are great for flash broken shells and especially spider shells. Thanks for sharing
Looks good. Would love a wasp someday.
Great work, pasting machine pro stuff
In other countries they use plastic on the lift charge cover. What happens to that plastic when the charge is fired and the canister goes up? Is there plastic pieces left in the tube permanently?
Without a doubt, even the paper cups leave debris
Thats a dope lil edit & must be nice to have a pasting machine I getting tired or doing it by hand lol
The machine can be a pain in the ass at times but nothing beats a hand pasted shell
Yeah Ive heard that before about the machines & true I just start getting lazy after pasting like three shells haha
How would somebody get into being a professional pyrotechnician?
You could start by working for a company that does shows and go from there.
Badass!
🤧🔥
*WASP 🐝 IT UP!!!! Yeeee yeeeee*
Idk, why paste the shell as it is already made to launch as it is just plain plastic just a waste of paste paper,
Iv done this both ways using xylene and bonding the hemis together and pasting with gummed tape. Both were built identical with 2.5 grams of flash dusted over hulls and the paper pasted shell burst almost twice as hard and threw the stars twice as far. NOT A WASTE OF PAPER. IMHO. But to each there own.
without pasting, the shell wont survive the launch
@@flarenatornever dealt with them but they are advertised to be used without paste