It's fireworks time! Skylighter.com has a recipe for a more powerful version of those balls that bang when you knock them together. You paint smooth rocks with a mixture that contains powdered glass, potassium chlorate, and sulfur (all disclaimers in place). Then let dry. Drop or throw the rocks, and they'll "bounce" repeatedly with a loud explosion each time.
Link (scroll down to middle of page).
Crack Balls
It's fireworks time! Skylighter.com has a recipe for a more powerful version of those balls that bang when you knock them together. You paint smooth rocks with a mixture that contains powdered glass, potassium chlorate, and sulfur (all disclaimers in place). Then let dry. Drop or throw the rocks, and they'll "bounce" repeatedly with a loud explosion each time.
Link (scroll down to middle of page).
Recent Entries
- Make: Holiday Gift Guide 2009: Mischief Maker's Gift Guide
- Grounding tips for mixed signal PCBs
- Virgil England's fantasy-land
- Novation Launchpad teardown
- Laptop Etch-a-Sketch via Arduino & Processing
- iPhone macro lens carousel
- New in the Maker Shed: OLLO kits
- BlueSMiRF found in credit card sniffer
- Mystery iPhone musical instrument - World's most expensive ocarina
- Stained glass d20s
Comments
Oldest comments listed first.
Leave a comment
Subscribe to MAKE Magazine!
Subscribe today, save 42% and get web access to MAKE free. MAKE Digital Edition is available only to subscribers.
$34.95 / 1 year
(4 Quarterly Issues)




































You know, one of the really compelling reasons for getting a house and yard would be to be able to do projects like this.
Reply to this comment
wow, I never thought it would be make magazine telling me how to make crack rocks.
Reply to this comment
I tried this and they work. Th rounder the rock, the better. Also throw it hard onto the ground. The arder, the better.
Reply to this comment