DIY fireworks kit

This is a moment that would have made 15 year old me very proud of present-day me: I've just received a DIY fireworks kit in the mail! I love the "Don't Send This Via Airplane" sticker.

turbopyro01a.jpg

turbopyro02.jpg

My friend Heathervescent hipped me to this introductory Turbo Pyro kit from Skylighter. The kit supplies what you'll need to make your own fireworks, including a 206 page eBook that guides you through making ten different fireworks: from tube sparklers to bottle rockets to aerial shells to something called a "Flying Fish Fuse Mine". I've skimmed through the eBook and it looks thorough and professionally done. It has a number of embedded videos in it, which should be pretty helpful.

I've only had moments to scan the contents of the boxes, but they include a lot of paper tubes, charcoal, potassium chlorate, clay, potassium nitrate, sulfer, and other compounds (this endeavor involves making your own gunpowder), a few different kinds of ignition fuses, a bunch of mysterious custom tools for packing the fireworks, a digital scale, mortar casings, a large mortar tube, and more. You have to supply some sieeves, trays, measuring spoons, an electric coffee mill, tape, glue, safety gear, and a few hand tools.

turbopyro03.jpg

turbopyro04.jpg

I'm going to try the simplest projects first, hopefully in time for the 4th of July. Then, if all goes well (and I have the same number of fingers as I'm typing with right now), I'll put together some of the big flying stuff and head out to the desert to fire them off.

You can sign up here to be notified when the next batch of kits is available:TurboPyro

Their blog is pretty cool too, I had no idea people had taken things to this level!


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Comments

Oldest comments listed first.

Posted by: Adrian on July 2, 2009 at 3:49 PM

Fingers?!

"and I have the same number of fingers as I'm typing with right now" - how many DO you have now?


Posted by: John Park on July 2, 2009 at 3:55 PM

That's classified.


Posted by: Tony on July 2, 2009 at 3:59 PM

Don't end up like these guys

Fireworks aren't legal to have everywhere...

http://www.dailybreeze.com/ci_12732762?source=rv


Posted by: John Park on July 2, 2009 at 4:31 PM

Excellent point. We're all responsible for determining the legality (federal, state, & local) of what we're doing.

Here's some more info:
http://blog.skylighter.com/fireworks/2009/06/fireworking-safety-and-law.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fireworks#Laws_and_politics

So, in case after researching all of this it turns out to be horribly illegal for me to make a sparkler, "I was just kidding, your honor, this is all fictitious".


Posted by: zof on July 2, 2009 at 4:44 PM

So much for the video don't incriminate yourself :)


Posted by: pgrim on July 2, 2009 at 9:44 PM

There's always http://www.westernpyro.org/.


Posted by: zof on July 2, 2009 at 4:37 PM

The difference is those guys had a stock pile big enough to cause serious problems and they were probably selling them. I had a friend that would go to Nevada every year and stock up and sell them at a 300% mark up, safe and sane is only so much fun until you need the real stuff.

Thanks for the heads up on the kits, hey think you can post some video?


Posted by: pgrim on July 2, 2009 at 5:05 PM

Please remember this stuff can kill you. And don't work with more then you're willing to blow up in your face when your making it.


Posted by: Kevin Y on July 2, 2009 at 7:45 PM

THIS - IS - AWESOME!

As a licensed fireworks vendor, I've always wanted something like this. Be careful, but really, have fun. Blowing stuff up should be one of our God given rights. Just go slow and I'm sure you'll have a, um... BLAST!


Posted by: Bob D on July 2, 2009 at 7:58 PM

Turbo Pyro

My kit came in last week. Oddly enough, my scale is a "333" (333.0 grams) instead of a "222" like yours.

As far as legality goes, at a federal level it's legal to make your own fireworks in all 50 states (as well as high explosives! Google for "ATF Orange Book". That doesn't mean state and local laws and regs allow it. Also, making fireworks is what's legal (again, at a federal level), NOT storing, selling, buying, or transporting. For these things you need a license from the ATF. This means if you make your own, you shoot it on site if you don't have a license, and you can't store the stuff overnight. You can't drive the mixed comp or product to a shoot site. This kit is perfect for building during the day and shooting at night provided you have the space and use your head (and follow local rules!)

-Bob


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