Personally I like using a couple ultrasonic atomizers, They're commonly seen for ponds and such, makes that low thick 'fog' and worked well for my case, since I didnt want to use a fog machine, or dry ice. I wanted something that worked by simply adding water now and then.
Dallas Bagley if you use water, with a rotating thing at the bottom of a container such as a jar, bottle or a cup, and it will go from top to bottom. I don't know if it'll do it with dry ice unless you have the bowl on top and the fan on bottom but I don't think that'll be a good idea because it'll just blow the air somewhere else.
Only way to make a top forming tornado is if you get the pressure to drop low enough to create a condensation cloud like s real tornado, this would take a very strong fan though, sometimes jet engines can do this because they are able to drop the pressure low enough to make the formation of one of these possible
Personally I like using a couple ultrasonic atomizers, They're commonly seen for ponds and such, makes that low thick 'fog' and worked well for my case, since I didnt want to use a fog machine, or dry ice. I wanted something that worked by simply adding water now and then.
Blah blah blah
Well done
Do you have an estimate for the amount of updraft force that thing creates?
This is in my science fair i used to got to
Any way to make a top forming tornado simulator?
Dallas Bagley if you use water, with a rotating thing at the bottom of a container such as a jar, bottle or a cup, and it will go from top to bottom. I don't know if it'll do it with dry ice unless you have the bowl on top and the fan on bottom but I don't think that'll be a good idea because it'll just blow the air somewhere else.
Only way to make a top forming tornado is if you get the pressure to drop low enough to create a condensation cloud like s real tornado, this would take a very strong fan though, sometimes jet engines can do this because they are able to drop the pressure low enough to make the formation of one of these possible