My buddy had one if these in the early 60's. It was the coolest thing to have next to a BB gun. My parents thought it had too much pop and, like a BB gun, they wouldn't get me one. I had forgotten about it until I watched this video...I still want one!
Mine wouldn't let me have the BB gun ("you'll shoot your eye out" of course) but they gave med one of these when I was 7 years old. Go figure. And like all good American boys, I did the first thing every kid does when recieving one: Figured out what fit in the barrel and made a good bullet for shooting down the plastic army men .... that every good American kid also had back in those days.
Now that's a restoration! Oh the memories. My brother and I each had one of those. When we ran out of powder ammo we used firecrackers. Had those things for years. Wish I knew what finally happened to them. Thanks for a great video!
I got lucky when I found mine in my mom's house as we were clearing stuff out to have it demolished. I got it the day before they pushed it over with an excavator. I was surprised with all the other water damage the cannon was almost pristine.
Im jelouse. Not of your tools that just money. But your patiance something i lack in spades. I had to watch your vid at 1.5x's and still skipped sections. You are a master and i bow to you SIR.
Thank you so very much - you don't know how much you helped me. About 2 months ago I was rummaging around a back room in our lodge storage area. I found one of these (the largess model in black) along with all the things to make it work. No one had seen it in over 30 years and it had been forgotten. I have been playing with it in my spare time with no real idea of what to do even with the original instructions from 1960 - 1962. Now I have seen the workings of it I will be able to get it firing again. Thank you again
My brothers and I were helping clean out our mother’s garage. As we found stuff from our childhood, I lamented that the only thing I really wished I still had was my Big Bang Cannon that I bought in about 1967. Low in behold, my brother says “you’ll never believe what I found” as he held up my cannon. With a few parts from Conestoga, I’m back in business terrorizing the neighborhood! Have fun with yours!
I have my Dad's, I don't have the skills to restore it but I'm glad I found a video demonstrating what it was like when new. Mine has a sticker on the right side of the barrel that reads "DO NOT LOOK INTO BARREL OF CANNON WHEN FIRING"
If it's the igniter that's the issue. You can actually order a new one. Just look up Bangsite cannon. The company is still in business. Has been since 1912.
I had one when I was a kid in the early 70s. I think my father got it for me at a fireworks stand. Loved it. If you got the mixture just right it made a hell of a boom.
I still have my Big Bang Cannon from my childhood. I also have a 15" version (LOUD!!) I do recall that the igniters were always getting lost. IIRC they were cast... yours are a lot nicer. Great job on the wheels. Bangsite (calcium carbide powder) is still available and my cannon still works. I drag it out sometimes for 4th of July demos. Also my Wilesco Steam Engine.
A FAR cry from my high school metal shop course but it's pleasing and gratifying to see the basics are still being utilized. Thoroughly enjoyed this video. Brought back pleasant memories.
Yes! I had one just like it back in the 60's. I loved that thing. That was the beginning of my love affair with cannons. Today mine use black powder! Nice job rebuilding the ignition system.
I had a friend that had one of these. We were at his place one day and spotted it in the garage. He had to get his dad to shoot the thing because he wasn't allowed. It was one of those kind of presents you get from your cool uncle on Christmas.
Tell me about it. Back in the day you could buy your kids the "Gilbert U-238 Atomic Energy Lab" science toy, Complete with a few different types of uranium ore and a Geiger counter !!!! Nowadays we live in a world where toys for teenagers can't even have small parts in case they choke themselves to death on them. How I see it, If you're too stupid to understand that putting the mussel of a firing toy canon in your mouth and setting it off could kill you, Guess what, The gene pool's better off without you. That's called "Natural selection in action".......... Don't let the coffin lid hit you in the ass on your way out. :)
Correct. I have an old toy tank from the soviet union. rotating turret, all metal, rotating tracks.. Now toys kids gets are cheap plastic pieces of crap.
@uncletigger I used powdered safety (brown) match heads, sulphur (evaporated the water out of dead battery acid) & soot (carbon) to make gunpowder for the cannon I made as a teenager in the 1970's. Worked fine. Generation X kids were way smarter than todays Millennials & Generation Z kids. We knew how to figure things out & practicalities when it came to making things.
I had one of these as a kid in the late 70’s. My grandmother bought it for me one year at our local July 4th fireworks stand. It made a good loud bang. Pretty sure I still have it somewhere. Memories
I remember the Bangsite cannons that worked the same way with the calcium carbide. Of course, that wasn't quite loud enough for us back then, so we used empty paint cans and just poked an igniter hole on the bottom at the edge. A bit of water, 3-4 chunks of the calcium carbide, press the cap on tight, prop the top edge of the can up on a piece of wood and wait 3-4 minutes for the gas to build up. Then wedge a wooden stick match 's head halfway into the igniter hole, light the other end of the match, and back way up. After 3-4 minutes of the gas building up, those things sounded like Howitzers going off. There would literally be 5 or 6 feet of flame shoot from the the can as it blew the lid off. Most times the can couldn't be reused after that as both the can and lid would be rounded out. Yes, we were quite nuts back then.
We did something similar except we used soda cans, tennis balls, and lighter fluid. Coated the inside with lighter fluid, sun it around a couple of time to coat the lining, dropped the ball inside and touched it odd via a hole in the bottom most can. Unfortunately, cans are now made differently which negates this.
@@patrickdonaghy2070 I used to do something similar with tennis balls and pringles cans. We'd put anything we could find that was combustable into the can; Perfume, cooking spray, ground up match heads, maybe a combination of the like... Then jam a tennis ball in as far as we could, poke a hole and use a match as the fuse... Sometimes it was anticlimatic, sometimes we got grounded for breaking windows. Good times.
Father-in-law has one of those cannons. It was missing the cap and ignitor too. He almost threw it away until I found out that the company that made it is still in business and sells replacement parts for all of their cannons. He brings it out every 4th of July.
@@imperialpresence3331 I saw a restoration of one of those toy ovens, can't recall which channel. The toy was also coated in lead paint, of course. After the restoration, the restorer showed how to make brownies. Yum.
@@imperialpresence3331 No seat belts/child seats, allowing the child to sit on their lap and drive, vehicles made of steel instead of aluminum, hiking, exploring the forest and learning about wildlife, both with plants, animals, and insects, learning survival skills in the wild, building tree houses, fishing, camping, family days, road trips, surprise trips to the ice cream parlor or the local swimming hole, hobby shops, everyone together at the table to eat, no electronic distractions, assisting with household chores, upholding responsibilities at home, caring for the pet you JUST HAD to have, both parents making/having time to properly raise and assist their offspring with homework and/or extra curricular activities, playing board/card games, family/neighborhood bar-b-ques, progressive dinners, mutual respect and trust with everyone in the neighborhood, mowing, (landscaping), babysitting, and generally going out and doing things to earn and save money, knowing each other and their children, safely allowing the children to go out on Halloween without parental supervision, allowing children to walk to the nearby village and leave the neighborhood unsupervised, firecrackers, cap guns, working and living together as a family unit, everyone coming together in the neighborhood when help was needed or when adversity struck. Yeah, it was such a pain and dangerous time to be raised back in the 50's and 60's.
Patrick Donaghy Well, yes, but: -The child is endangered by not being on a child seat -**POLIO** -Cold War -Led paint being almost everywhere -AIDS Epidemic -LA Riots -Ferguson -OJ getting away -Great Depression -Economic collapse in the 70s -The ozone layer being fuckin’ erased pretty damn quickly -Violent Crime being a common occurrence in the 80s-90s -Lynching was still a thing -79’s energy crisis And so on Yeah, i’d say back then times were quite different, wouldn’t you?
Awesome. I grew up with one of these (late 70s), so not as old as this one, though it doesn't look any different. Fun tip: more "ammo" produces more of a flame, less produces a louder bang.
That was very cool! I never owned one, but a friend of mine had one we all played with with our G.I. JOE'S in the mid 60's! Brings back some fond memories. And some clouded ones too!😂 Part of being old I guess!😁
The Cannon model kind of looks like it was based off the "Cannone da 149/23" an Italian Heavy Howitzer. It's model of /23 was used from WW1 to the Interwar period where it was later changed out for the modello 35 and later the modello 40. What's interesting is the gun's caliber remained a staple in the Italian army until after the cold war.
Lord Edward you are clearly misunderstood. Kids still have “fun” nowadays, just in different ways. I’m sure firing at each-other with air rifles was fun back in the day, so was riding without a seat built, but braking your back wasn’t. Consoles and phones provide a different kind of fun, and sure, it’s not as physically healthy to do, but you still have a great time. And speaking of free range, kids all over the world still spend loads of times at the park, and stuff. So don’t worry. Just because it’s not fun for your generation, it doesn’t mean that it’s not fun the the children of today.
@@boarbot7829 Pretty sure you misunderstood. I'll let you figure weather your response was needed, warranted or wanted. Not once did he say... well basically everything, you claimed he did. Go away, who asked you to interject your assumption about what he said?
My grandfather owns one of these and its still in perfect condition. I would go out into the backyard and play war with him and we would fire it at troops in trenches.
Frikkin awesome! Mad skillz. You never cease to amaze me. 💯💯
Thanks!
@@AcmeRestorations
Mm0maa11a1p1p¹
My buddy had one if these in the early 60's. It was the coolest thing to have next to a BB gun. My parents thought it had too much pop and, like a BB gun, they wouldn't get me one. I had forgotten about it until I watched this video...I still want one!
Look online there is still a Conestoga facility in Allentown Pennsylvania
@@charlessteinmetz802 they make aluminum cased ones now to there really cool
Mine wouldn't let me have the BB gun ("you'll shoot your eye out" of course) but they gave med one of these when I was 7 years old. Go figure. And like all good American boys, I did the first thing every kid does when recieving one: Figured out what fit in the barrel and made a good bullet for shooting down the plastic army men .... that every good American kid also had back in those days.
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@@giancarlobadiali7406ض ةععتعض
Just the sheer amount of different techniques is mind boggling. Dude, you are a genius.
and good lookin'! Thanks for watching.
Nice work. Beats watching someone restore a vise for the 1000000th time.
That they found in a rice paddy!
So tired of vice restorations
Yes, I used vice instead of vise. Then I restored it to perfection. HA.
Yet you still watched it. HMMMMMMM
Imagine moaning about watching something you literally had a choice to watch.
Now that's a restoration! Oh the memories. My brother and I each had one of those. When we ran out of powder ammo we used firecrackers. Had those things for years. Wish I knew what finally happened to them. Thanks for a great video!
I used firecrackers and fired cut off pieces of candles.
actually you can STILL buy them on line as well as the powder to work them!
I got lucky when I found mine in my mom's house as we were clearing stuff out to have it demolished. I got it the day before they pushed it over with an excavator. I was surprised with all the other water damage the cannon was almost pristine.
Mi er
It is such a pleasure to watch someone so skilled . I sincerely hope you now have endless fun firing it !
My grandad had one of these in the 60’s. Brought back lots of memories. Great job!
I had one of these cannons back in 1964. It was a lot of fun. I would launch projectiles made of wadded aluminum foil.
You were alive back then
@@ArtandCraft2016 Very funny, you young whipper-snapper!
@@ArtandCraft2016 if what C Morales is telling the truth, they would be around 50-70 years old rn
how about tungsten balls for projectiles and c4 for the propellent for more force and power
@@harrygregory6227 A good suggestion, but those items were scarce in the 1960s.
Im jelouse. Not of your tools that just money. But your patiance something i lack in spades. I had to watch your vid at 1.5x's and still skipped sections. You are a master and i bow to you SIR.
I had that same model back in the 70's as a kid. I still have it today!
I like the fact that even though you can still order exact replica parts for it online, you fabricated them yourself. Great job!
Yeah I found out about the available parts after I was done :)
Great restoration! Congratulations, pal!
Thank you so very much - you don't know how much you helped me. About 2 months ago I was rummaging around a back room in our lodge storage area. I found one of these (the largess model in black) along with all the things to make it work. No one had seen it in over 30 years and it had been forgotten. I have been playing with it in my spare time with no real idea of what to do even with the original instructions from 1960 - 1962. Now I have seen the workings of it I will be able to get it firing again. Thank you again
My brothers and I were helping clean out our mother’s garage. As we found stuff from our childhood, I lamented that the only thing I really wished I still had was my Big Bang Cannon that I bought in about 1967. Low in behold, my brother says “you’ll never believe what I found” as he held up my cannon. With a few parts from Conestoga, I’m back in business terrorizing the neighborhood! Have fun with yours!
I have my Dad's, I don't have the skills to restore it but I'm glad I found a video demonstrating what it was like when new. Mine has a sticker on the right side of the barrel that reads "DO NOT LOOK INTO BARREL OF CANNON WHEN FIRING"
If it's the igniter that's the issue. You can actually order a new one. Just look up Bangsite cannon. The company is still in business. Has been since 1912.
Another channel added to my "perfect restoration channels to binge watch" list.
Subbed.
Thank you!
That was a first class job mate. Congratulations.
I had one when I was a kid in the early 70s. I think my father got it for me at a fireworks stand. Loved it. If you got the mixture just right it made a hell of a boom.
Great job !!
👏🌹🙏 May God bless you !!
🇳🇵Hail Nepal !!!
I still have my Big Bang Cannon from my childhood. I also have a 15" version (LOUD!!) I do recall that the igniters were always getting lost. IIRC they were cast... yours are a lot nicer. Great job on the wheels. Bangsite (calcium carbide powder) is still available and my cannon still works. I drag it out sometimes for 4th of July demos. Also my Wilesco Steam Engine.
A FAR cry from my high school metal shop course but it's pleasing and gratifying to see the basics are still being utilized. Thoroughly enjoyed this video. Brought back pleasant memories.
The Big Bang toy cannon, isn't just a theory. Good job man.
LOL
I had one like that one but it was made around the 70s. It was great fun and was very loud. That a great restoration job.
Never seen anything like this ....cool restoration
A really great restoration, and a lot of fabrication of missing and worn out parts. Very well done!👍👍👍
Forget the restoration. I'm salivating over the tools!
Yes! I had one just like it back in the 60's. I loved that thing. That was the beginning of my love affair with cannons. Today mine use black powder! Nice job rebuilding the ignition system.
Xe để
I played with one of these as a kid in the sixties, it was alot of fun. Liked it so much i built a Larger one!
Nice! Yeah I've had a lot of fun with it.
Wow, super restoration my friend :)
Many thanks
You sir, are a master craftsman!
The attention to detail is above and beyond.
I like it when you restore very old things
I really love your way of doing it. I look forward to exchanging and recovering with you
Straordinario! Bravissimo..
Good working I like it
That is fantastic. I've never seen one of these before. Congratulations on a wonderful restoration.
My best friend had one of these and we played with it frequently. We usually split the costs for supplies. Lots of fun for a couple of pre-teen boys!
I just found out about these. Missed out as a kid. Made up for it yesterday though!
As kid i went to the local blacksmith and sweeped the floor there for the fuel. He used it to make the gas for his torches.
I had a friend that had one of these. We were at his place one day and spotted it in the garage. He had to get his dad to shoot the thing because he wasn't allowed. It was one of those kind of presents you get from your cool uncle on Christmas.
My dad had one of these! I never knew it was missing pieces and this is certainly the first time I’ve ever seen it fire! Thanks muchly!
You are the master blaster....unreal...great job.....excellent...
They still manufacture and sell these cannons ten minutes from where I live in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Every kid I knew had a cannon.
Yes! My next video, should be up on Friday, is a Conestoga Big Bang Tank. They haven't made them for a long long time. Stay tuned.
The amount of fabrication is unreal with fantastic skills! I've learned more about chemistry watching this channel than my chemistry class lol!!!
Wow, thank you!
I had this cannon in 1965. It worked great Very loud bang my neighbors hated it
Back in the day when toys were cool.
NOW, KIDS ARE NOT ALLOWED TO OWN A CAP GUN!
Bextar636 yes you are
Tell me about it.
Back in the day you could buy your kids the "Gilbert U-238 Atomic Energy Lab" science toy, Complete with a few different types of uranium ore and a Geiger counter !!!! Nowadays we live in a world where toys for teenagers can't even have small parts in case they choke themselves to death on them.
How I see it, If you're too stupid to understand that putting the mussel of a firing toy canon in your mouth and setting it off could kill you, Guess what, The gene pool's better off without you. That's called "Natural selection in action".......... Don't let the coffin lid hit you in the ass on your way out. :)
Correct. I have an old toy tank from the soviet union. rotating turret, all metal, rotating tracks.. Now toys kids gets are cheap plastic pieces of crap.
@uncletigger I used powdered safety (brown) match heads, sulphur (evaporated the water out of dead battery acid) & soot (carbon) to make gunpowder for the cannon I made as a teenager in the 1970's. Worked fine.
Generation X kids were way smarter than todays Millennials & Generation Z kids. We knew how to figure things out & practicalities when it came to making things.
I had one of these as a kid in the late 70’s. My grandmother bought it for me one year at our local July 4th fireworks stand. It made a good loud bang. Pretty sure I still have it somewhere. Memories
Awesome!
Fantastic! You are so skilful. Well done! Greetings from South Africa.
Hello!
Nice what I am looking for, good dazzling job well done
Very nice machine work creating the back cap
i always wanted a "Big-Bang" cannon! Awesome video! well worth a sub!
Great job
I remember the Bangsite cannons that worked the same way with the calcium carbide. Of course, that wasn't quite loud enough for us back then, so we used empty paint cans and just poked an igniter hole on the bottom at the edge. A bit of water, 3-4 chunks of the calcium carbide, press the cap on tight, prop the top edge of the can up on a piece of wood and wait 3-4 minutes for the gas to build up. Then wedge a wooden stick match 's head halfway into the igniter hole, light the other end of the match, and back way up. After 3-4 minutes of the gas building up, those things sounded like Howitzers going off. There would literally be 5 or 6 feet of flame shoot from the the can as it blew the lid off. Most times the can couldn't be reused after that as both the can and lid would be rounded out. Yes, we were quite nuts back then.
nothing nuts about that at at all. too bad the kids today won't have those kinds of memories. All they will remember is helicopter parents.
I never had fun like that when I was a kid. Taking notes ...
We did something similar except we used soda cans, tennis balls, and lighter fluid. Coated the inside with lighter fluid, sun it around a couple of time to coat the lining, dropped the ball inside and touched it odd via a hole in the bottom most can. Unfortunately, cans are now made differently which negates this.
@@patrickdonaghy2070 I used to do something similar with tennis balls and pringles cans. We'd put anything we could find that was combustable into the can; Perfume, cooking spray, ground up match heads, maybe a combination of the like... Then jam a tennis ball in as far as we could, poke a hole and use a match as the fuse... Sometimes it was anticlimatic, sometimes we got grounded for breaking windows. Good times.
We used hair spray in our tennis ball mortars. LOL.
This would have been the absolute best toy ever for me when I was a child. God damn I would have had fun with this.
Father-in-law has one of those cannons. It was missing the cap and ignitor too. He almost threw it away until I found out that the company that made it is still in business and sells replacement parts for all of their cannons. He brings it out every 4th of July.
I'm speachless. Fantastic. Such skills!
Good Job! 👌🙂❤️
Very fun! Nice job!
I’m not remotely interested in a gas cannon,but the skills to restore it were absolutely amazing.First class craftsmanship.
My five boys would have loved this cannon. Great restoration.
Your skills never cease to amaze me, a like and a subscribe
Thanks!
Beautiful simply beautiful
Well done you! That was an awesome restoration to watch. Loved that it worked perfectly! (As usual..) love your work.
This is a new level of restoration. Fantastic.
How much do you want for it
Wavv
Good job thanks for showing it
Toys were different back in the day lol
These are still made today in Allentown Pa.
@@imperialpresence3331 I saw a restoration of one of those toy ovens, can't recall which channel. The toy was also coated in lead paint, of course. After the restoration, the restorer showed how to make brownies. Yum.
@@imperialpresence3331 No seat belts/child seats, allowing the child to sit on their lap and drive, vehicles made of steel instead of aluminum, hiking, exploring the forest and learning about wildlife, both with plants, animals, and insects, learning survival skills in the wild, building tree houses, fishing, camping, family days, road trips, surprise trips to the ice cream parlor or the local swimming hole, hobby shops, everyone together at the table to eat, no electronic distractions, assisting with household chores, upholding responsibilities at home, caring for the pet you JUST HAD to have, both parents making/having time to properly raise and assist their offspring with homework and/or extra curricular activities, playing board/card games, family/neighborhood bar-b-ques, progressive dinners, mutual respect and trust with everyone in the neighborhood, mowing, (landscaping), babysitting, and generally going out and doing things to earn and save money, knowing each other and their children, safely allowing the children to go out on Halloween without parental supervision, allowing children to walk to the nearby village and leave the neighborhood unsupervised, firecrackers, cap guns, working and living together as a family unit, everyone coming together in the neighborhood when help was needed or when adversity struck. Yeah, it was such a pain and dangerous time to be raised back in the 50's and 60's.
Patrick Donaghy Well, yes, but:
-The child is endangered by not being on a child seat
-**POLIO**
-Cold War
-Led paint being almost everywhere
-AIDS Epidemic
-LA Riots
-Ferguson
-OJ getting away
-Great Depression
-Economic collapse in the 70s
-The ozone layer being fuckin’ erased pretty damn quickly
-Violent Crime being a common occurrence in the 80s-90s
-Lynching was still a thing
-79’s energy crisis
And so on
Yeah, i’d say back then times were quite different, wouldn’t you?
@@golepelogelopelo1953 Nothing like a doom-saying liberal to spoil everything for everyone.
I had one just like it as a child.
That was fantastic! Congratulations. Great job!!!
Good job bro
Nicely done. I have one of those Big Bang cannons in a different style. Amazing how loud they are. Thumbs Up!
Yeah. I watched a video on youtube and the guy said they weren't very loud. My first shot...ears ringing for a few minutes. Too fun!
Great work.
Nice job on the restoration!
Thanks!
everybody: see's scrap
ACME Restorations: see's a whole army of robots waiting to be assembled
Atomic_Bombs lol
Awesome. I grew up with one of these (late 70s), so not as old as this one, though it doesn't look any different.
Fun tip: more "ammo" produces more of a flame, less produces a louder bang.
My man you have done it again I love watching your work, you are a true craftsman
Thank you very much!
2:15 I love how you avoid saying "I make a new one" 😀
LOL
@@AcmeRestorations great restoration by the way
Ah sim! Assisto muito de suas restaurações. Ficam boas; bonitas e funcionais. Parabéns.
Nice work bro, very cool cannon
Мы в детстве из баллонов от дихлофоса карбидом стреляли. А тут все по науке 😁
Loved it. Great job! Thanks for the entertainment.
Багато кропіткої праці,ви Майстер своєї справи!
Nice work
I had that Cannon when I was a kid ! That and a howitzer gas Cannon !
Click BOOOMMM !!! WOOHOO !!
Yeah, this turned out to be WAY more fun that I thought it would be! Thanks for watching.
I need it in my life.
That was very cool! I never owned one, but a friend of mine had one we all played with with our G.I. JOE'S in the mid 60's! Brings back some fond memories. And some clouded ones too!😂 Part of being old I guess!😁
What an amazing restoration ! This man is a great machinist and a true perfectioniist! Wonderful work!!
Thank you very much!
Subbed, nice to see new parts made for missing ones. nice work!!
perfect restoration very cool congratulations
I love these kind of channels
Kids' toys were so cool back then.
Wow, you did awesome work, bravo. 👏👏👏👏👏
Thank you very much!
isso ai
OMG - this is unbelievable!
Cool restoration. You are very skilled and talented.
I'm new to the channel already a fan really nice work
Good Restoration Done 👌
.
.
Thumbs up 👍
Awesome restoration. Great job. I can’t say enough good things about this job. Just perfect. 👍👍
Thank you very much!
The Cannon model kind of looks like it was based off the "Cannone da 149/23" an Italian Heavy Howitzer. It's model of /23 was used from WW1 to the Interwar period where it was later changed out for the modello 35 and later the modello 40. What's interesting is the gun's caliber remained a staple in the Italian army until after the cold war.
From an era when "free range" kids used to have fun.
Lord Edward you are clearly misunderstood. Kids still have “fun” nowadays, just in different ways. I’m sure firing at each-other with air rifles was fun back in the day, so was riding without a seat built, but braking your back wasn’t. Consoles and phones provide a different kind of fun, and sure, it’s not as physically healthy to do, but you still have a great time. And speaking of free range, kids all over the world still spend loads of times at the park, and stuff. So don’t worry. Just because it’s not fun for your generation, it doesn’t mean that it’s not fun the the children of today.
and lost some fingers
@@boarbot7829 Pretty sure you misunderstood. I'll let you figure weather your response was needed, warranted or wanted. Not once did he say... well basically everything, you claimed he did.
Go away, who asked you to interject your assumption about what he said?
Just brilliant. Love it
That was really cool
I like the calibrated eye dremel work. Not everything needs precision tools and setup :)
really a nice toy!
You recreated an amazing rare piece of damage Thanks. you very much. Keep creative
My grandfather owns one of these and its still in perfect condition. I would go out into the backyard and play war with him and we would fire it at troops in trenches.