How to Make Hot Glue Matches for Emergency Repairs

How to Make Hot Glue Matches for Emergency Repairs

Hot Glue Matches
Hot Glue Matches Cooling on Workbench
DIY Hot Glue Matches
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Have you ever needed to fix something but did not have a hot glue gun handy?

Today’s hot glue matches project shows how to combine strike anywhere matches with hot glue so you always have the ability to use hot glue no matter where you are.

It is not hard, and all you really need is some matches and a hot glue gun.

I store mine in an old pill bottle and keep them in the glove box of my truck.

Mine are not as pretty as the video from Facebook where I got the idea, but then again I made several of these in just a few minutes.

The big thing I learned was to cool them standing upright do the glue flowed where I wanted it rather than away from the match head.

I think that if I took more time and continued to swirl the match in my hands as the hot glue match cooled, then the resulting bead would be much more even.   However, even if this was not a pretty project it works and is simple enough to add in a small repair kit for emergency repairs on the go.

How to Extract Nitrocellulose from Ping Pong Balls

How to Extract Nitrocellulose from Ping Pong Balls

 

How to Extract Nitrocellulose from Ping Pong Balls
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Ping pong balls are made of nitrocellulose, I am sure that many would like to create non-nitro based balls, but industry has never been able to create ping ping balls with the same bounce as the nitrocellulose based balls.

Now, while extracting nitrocellulose from ping pong balls is easy, the nitrocellulose is adulterated with camphor.  This turns the explosive potential of the balls down while making them more plastic.

Now, while I like to extract the nitrocellulose to make nitrocellulose lacquer for making e-matches (electric initiators) for my rockets, woodworkers have long used nitrocellulose lacquer for fine furniture and musical instruments.

How to Make Nitrocellulose Lacquer:

  • Ping pong balls, acetone, scissors, a wooden stir stick, and a glass jar with a tight fitting lid.
  • Simply cut up 4 or 5 balls, and cover them with twice as much acetone as you need to cover the balls.
  • Let sit overnight.

Additionally, I like to add in some double based (smokeless) gunpowder that I save from my mistakes while reloading.  It gives me a hotter flame for igniting my model rockets.  Additionally, it allows me to waste less powder when reloading.

So now you know how to extract nitrocellulose from Ping Pong Balls.  Its easier than editing actually, I just realized that for some time this said nitroglycerine.  I guess that was a Freudian slip, because it would be really neat to have a easy way to get nitroglycerin, but it would probably be illegal, and I would not want to break the law.

How to Use Fire to Make a Burned Bowl

How to Use Fire to Make a Burned Bowl

Burned Bowl
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One of my more vivid childhood memories is sitting around a campfire with my dad as I made a burned bowl using coals.

This a fun way to make a useful item.  Additionally, this technique has been used by natives to build much larger items.  Things as large a log canoes were built this way.

I mention in my spoon carving post, that you can also use this to make the bowl of a spoon.

It is very simple to do, and doesn’t take much time.  However, as with any fire project, you need to take care not get burned.  You should ensure you have some means to extinguish fire close at hand.

Material:

  • Small or medium sized piece of solid wood.
  • Campfire
  • Boiled linseed oil or vegetable oil

Tools:

  • Metal tongs, or a green limb trimmed in the middle and bent into tongs
  • Metal spoon, sharp rock or other scraper
  • Fire extinguisher, water hose, or bucket of sand.
  • Knife
  • Straw (Optional)
  • Sandpaper
  • Rag

Procedure:

  1. Light a campfire and let it burn to coals.
  2. If you don’t have a set of metal tongs, make one,  Find a straight length of green branch about 2 feet long and as big a round as an adult thumb. Make sure this is from a non-poisonous hardwood tree like oak.
    1. Next, trim off any small side branches.  Carefully scrap down a few inches of the branch in the center of the limb. Scraping down a little past halfway through the green branch.  You should be able to bend it without breaking.
    2. Finally, trim the ends to make a semi flat end to enable you to use the bent branch as tongs to pick up small rocks. Don’t cut too much or the hot coals may burn through.
  3. Once the fire is burned to hot coals, use tongs to pick up a couple coals and place them on the center of the wood.
  4. Then. blow gently on the coal where it meets the wood. A straw may help direct the air. The idea is to carefully burn small areas of the wood in a controlled area.
  5. Once the wood chars a little, dump out the coal and scrape out the charred area.
  6. By strategic use of the coals, air, and scraping, a depression can be burned out of the log.
  7. Once the log is burned deep enough to make a bowl that satisfies, scrape it out completely.
  8. Next, sand it until you are happy with both the inner bowl and outer wood.
  9. Once sanded, pour oil onto the bowl and rub it in with the rag*. It may take several coats and a couple days.  Eventually the oil will soak in and harden and make a very pretty and useful bowl.

*Oils and natural rag fibers can become hazardous. As the oil oxidizes in the rag it will make heat. Many shops have burned when the heat ignites the rag. I always burn my rags after using them with oil.

Lessons Learned:

This project teaches the confidence of mastering fire.  It shows that with knowledge and care dangerous things can be mastered and turned into tools.

It is also a primal outlet for creativity and artistry. These bowls are useful, but they can be beautiful and valuable works of art.

It also can be used to grow appreciation for modern items like plastic bowls.

Windmills and Wind Motors

Book Review: Windmills and Wind Motors
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I bought Windmills and Wind Motors from the now defunct Lindsey Books company.  I immediately jumped on buying this book as a reference when I saw that it was a guide for making and using your own windmills, even to generate electricity!

Free, clean, and sustainable energy: wind power is an essential resource everyone can harness.

This comprehensive and compact historical work provides everything you need to learn about the theory and construction of everyday windmills, from small ones intended solely as models to those large enough to generate electricity.

Powell provides all the necessities to get you on your way, including detailed, step-by-step instructions, illustrations, and designs for every part of the project.

Types of windmill projects include:

  • A model windmill with sails two feet across
  • A working windmill with sails six feet across, suitable for pumping water
  • A practical windmill with sails ten feet across, capable of producing up to one-half horse power and able to run light machinery

For those interested in developing alternate, off-the-grid sources of energy, or even those who like to build for fun, Windmills and Wind Motors is a classic, useful guide to harnessing wind power.

110 black & white illustrations

Herbal Drugstore

Book Review: Herbal Drugstore
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The book The Herbal Drugstore is billed as symptoms, fight disease, and supercharge immunity– All without Drugs or Chemicals!  While this is a lot to believe (especially as marketing copy) – I believe that herbal medicine does have merit.  Especially when the normal drugstore is not available.

You’re about to enter a completely different kind of drugstore. One where herbal medicines are offered right alongside conventional pharmaceuticals. Where bottles of feverfew stand next to bottles of aspirin, and echinacea has its place among other cold and flu remedies.

The Herbal Drugstore is the only place where you can compare mainstream drug treatments and their herbal alternatives for close to 100 common health problems. You’ll find herbs that have the same healing powers as many prescription and over-the-counter medications– only they’re cheaper and gentler, with few or no side effects.

Whether you need fast first-aid or long-term relief, The Herbal Drugstore has a remedy for you. Here’s just a sampling:

* Immobilized by arthritis? Rub on capsaicin cream, a natural pain reliever made from hot peppers (page 96)

* Can’t sleep? Start snoozing with valerian– it’s as effective as Valium, but it isn’t addictive (page 352)

* Want to lose a few pounds? Get a helping hand from psyllium, an herbal alternative to appetite suppressants (page 448)

* Feeling stressed? Calm jangled nerves with ginseng– it won’t undermine alertness (page 509)

* Battling bronchitis? Clear up that cough with licorice, a natural expectorant (page 129)

* Need help with high blood pressure? Turn to hawthorn– it has much in common with beta blockers, except for the side effects (page 326)

The Herbal Drugstore features these and many more herbal remedies– 712 in all! They’re profiled right next to their pharmaceutical counterparts, so you can make your own comparisons and decide which treatments are best for you.