In the "rubber stars" comp that you use, I replace the .11 red gum with .9 phenolic resin and the colors are even more vivid. It takes less solvent (denatured alcohol) and is easier to work into a paste if you're going to cut or pump the stars. At the moment, phenolic resin is much cheaper than red gum.
Nice black cat tat! Been following you for a while but never have commented until I just seen that black cat tattoo pretty cool. Keep up the good work and thanks for doing these videos as they greatly help me in my firework building
I don't know if this is universal, but my experience with measuring devices(scales, calipers, micrometers, etc..) Is that the last place on the measurement it shows represents the tolerance(aka slop). I'd guess that the manual or calibration info of this scale would show something like +/-0.05, meaning it's only meant to be accurate to 0.1ths. If you NEED to measure accurately to 0.01 you'll need a scale that's stated tolerance is +/-0.005. Not sure why the last decimal is 5. My guess is because it's the middle.
In the "rubber stars" comp that you use, I replace the .11 red gum with .9 phenolic resin and the colors are even more vivid. It takes less solvent (denatured alcohol) and is easier to work into a paste if you're going to cut or pump the stars. At the moment, phenolic resin is much cheaper than red gum.
Nice black cat tat! Been following you for a while but never have commented until I just seen that black cat tattoo pretty cool. Keep up the good work and thanks for doing these videos as they greatly help me in my firework building
Glad your back man!
Appreciate it!
Please share the next video i am eager to learn more. Thanks for the wonderful video.
I don't know if this is universal, but my experience with measuring devices(scales, calipers, micrometers, etc..) Is that the last place on the measurement it shows represents the tolerance(aka slop). I'd guess that the manual or calibration info of this scale would show something like +/-0.05, meaning it's only meant to be accurate to 0.1ths. If you NEED to measure accurately to 0.01 you'll need a scale that's stated tolerance is +/-0.005. Not sure why the last decimal is 5. My guess is because it's the middle.
Interesting! Thanks!
Would this still work if you subbed the barium nitrate with barium carbonate?
I doubt it. The barium nitrate is used as an oxidizer in this formula.
Look up Veline green
@@johnanderson186 i have. veline uses both nitrate 24 parts and carbonate 15 parts.
Hay viết rõ công thức bằng tiếng Anh
Be careful with that Barium! Gives me the shit's every time! 🤢😂
Traduzir para portugues
You said Magnalium is 5% magnesium and 95% aluminum? I thought it was 50/50 no?
Id have to go back and see what I said, but yes it is 50/50 mixture
Thanks….