Great idea! Testing it on ballistics gel would definitely show its impact power in a fun way. I might just give it a shot! What else would you be curious to see it tested on?
@ninefors2 ай бұрын
exactly my thought :)
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Seems like ballistics gel is a popular choice! It’d definitely be satisfying to see the impact in slow motion. Any other materials or tests you think would show off its power even better?
@CombatStone2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations Various fruits and vegtables or piece of meat are always entertaining targets. :D
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Great idea! Fruits, veggies, and even pieces of meat would definitely make for some entertaining (and messy) tests. Slow-mo on those impacts could be pretty epic! Any specific type of fruit or veggie you think would be the most satisfying to see get blasted? 🍉🍏
@0neMadGypsy2 ай бұрын
To keep this thing off the radar of ATF, I would call it a short-range ice dispenser.
@ericatkinson5433Ай бұрын
Good idea. In its current form, it doesn't have much power, being so far as I can tell on par with some of the more energetic airsoft replicas. But ATF has a long history of ignoring the minor detail that it's Congress that makes the laws, not the ATF and arbitrarily declaring things to be illegal with no actual authority to do so. I would not be at all surprised if ATF decided that the ice rifle looked scary and people were having too much fun and something had to be done. He might be able to avoid some trouble by not painting it black, though. Black would make it scarier and, therefore, more dangerous. Oh, and not putting a folding stock on it. Folding stocks make things more dangerous too, well known fact.
@mobiljobeАй бұрын
I don't think he needs to worry about ATF.
@rhabeldibabeldi6812Ай бұрын
@@ericatkinson5433folding stocks improve the lethality by about 73,82 %, everyone knows that!
@geraldholt2755Ай бұрын
@@mobiljobe If he has a dog or children he does. They don't care about things like laws or borders.
@PursuerOfTruthАй бұрын
The term "Firearms" doesn't apply to a water gun.
@LauvinshАй бұрын
I'd call it ice gun. And that's a very good question - can this bullet kill a person? And this idea could spark the interest of CIA... Person killed, penetration hole but no bullet... What could it mean? Ice gun!
@MrLemaire1Ай бұрын
The phrase “getting iced” comes to mind. 🥴😬🥶🤯
@theodorekorehonenАй бұрын
The CIA thing is just clickbait. Sadly it worked on me. This is less dangerous than frozen paintballs
@mitchellwilley7208Ай бұрын
no it cant kill a person.......... yet, that will come in version 3-5
@anthonychristofferson153523 күн бұрын
It's possible, but the problem is the bullet melts from the body heat.
@jjohnson79619 күн бұрын
Why? Even a low powered laser beam will do that and it doesn’t need constant refrigeration.
@lamuraraАй бұрын
"lets test if the pvc pipe will explode" *stands right next to it*
@A.Dubski8713Ай бұрын
Same thing I thought. He would of got crazy shrapnel to the gut if that would of exploded.
@geniferteal4178Ай бұрын
@@A.Dubski8713 at least it was a high work surface😮😊
@ytSuns26Ай бұрын
That was my favorite part as well . Hey what a few shards of PVC going to harm. That is a very elegant method of sealing a pipe.
@johnjohnson798Ай бұрын
Yeah it seems this guy has the age old genius ideas balanced by no common sense dilemma.
@Arrogan28Ай бұрын
Also just because it works once, doesn't mean it won't blow apart after repeated stress, and eventually the material strength is compromised. This guy is clearly smart in some areas, and lacking in a few others. Seems like there was some better choices then using pvc. I mean if you get build the end pieces out of metal, why not also make make a metal sleeve inside the pvc pipe, that way you get a doubling of both strengths to ensure it won't even give. Just add a stainless steel cylinder, or a stainless steel sleeve to the pvc pipe. Either is infinitely better than just pvc pipe...
@runforitman2 ай бұрын
Everyone hates when i bring blocks of ice to a water fight
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
😂
@rexated51482 ай бұрын
😂
@NicoNyon2 ай бұрын
The equivalent of a rock in a snowball
@leenonolee4629Ай бұрын
Like the guys that would dip their snow balls in water and let them freeze. They hurt!
@chantelleleplatrier9478Ай бұрын
Hahahah
@FortniteDubsАй бұрын
You should consider adding a dehumidifier module to produce water for infinite ammo. And solar inlays to infinitely charge the device. With these enchantments I’d like to name the device “The Icebreaker.”
@sayorancodeАй бұрын
that seems like it would be slow to reload
@FortniteDubsАй бұрын
@ Oh it would but you’d guarantee unlimited ammo. Plus he already solved the deicing problem so..
@Showoff45CornerbackАй бұрын
That name is already trademark and registered by Bungie in their game Destiny 1 and Destiny 2
@MrBioWhizАй бұрын
Borderlands ass weapon
@BLEEDINGSKELOS29 күн бұрын
Watch it be in Borderlands 4@@MrBioWhiz
@olegallito57422 ай бұрын
As everyone else have already pointed out, its an ice rifle and it is indeed a perfect assassination tool
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
But are ice rifles already a thing or would this be the first one in that category?😋
@tomclanys2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations pretty sure the CIA had one long ago. It could inject poisons with ice projectiles
@marvinmurphy55232 ай бұрын
What makes a rifle is the riffling, so arguably most modern pistols are rifles and this gun is not. How many firearm enthusiasts is this going to irritate?
@dracodragon1052 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations the cia has an ice pistol that contained shellfish toxin that fades pretty quickly. vrymsmall projectile to basically no wound. practically a modern day poison dart tube.
@theoriginalbeanboy2 ай бұрын
@@marvinmurphy5523 rifling is only part of the classifications, meaning that you are half correct, most modern pistols are closer to being a rifle than this ice gun would be a more accurate statement
@edeciotheghost1637Ай бұрын
You might consider reshaping the interior channel where the ice is formed, and rifling the barrel. Since you are making the ice on demand, you can shape it as you wish to make the bullet more aerodynamic and rifle the barrel to impart spin on the projectile. This will keep the projectile stable at longer distances and reshaping the ice to be more shaped like a bullet may increase muzzle velocity and would reduce air resistance by making the projectile more aerodynamic. Source: my first job was as a gunsmith, i grew up in a military family in the southeastern US. Edit: I hope the original creator sees this comment feed. There are some good ideas in my replies
@RaiJolt2Ай бұрын
At this rate multiple gov agencies are scanning the comments and the video for ideas. This gun is actually pretty scary looking rn. But it’s not thaaaat deadly. yet
@fermitupoupon1754Ай бұрын
But he can't shape it as he wishes, because the slug needs to be able to slide out of the chamber into the barrel. So no diabolo skirt or any sort of domed head. At best he could boat-tail the rear of the slug. But that would make the CNC more expensive I guess. Now all it needs it a couple holes to be drilled into it and some threads tapped.
@FirstLast-gw5mgАй бұрын
I am pretty sure that rifling the barrel would just shred the ice pellet.
@eugeneng2721Ай бұрын
@@FirstLast-gw5mg I think that may cause helical grooves on the ice to form. It would be a neat thing to try.
@FirstLast-gw5mgАй бұрын
@@eugeneng2721 Ice is fragile enough that I think any reasonable amount of pressure would just shear off whatever grooves could form. It might be possible to get the ice pellet spinning but I think you'd have difficulty getting it up to a good velocity without it shattering.
@Milosz_OstrowАй бұрын
(3:25) Pressure-testing a length of PVC pipe in this manner is the utmost in foolishness. If it bursts, it is likely to send shrapnel flying that could seriously injure or kill someone close by. The test should have been performed with the pipe behind a heavy wood or masonry barrier. For use in the water gun, the entire length of PVC pipe should be enclosed in a braided stainless steel tube, as the plastic housing of the gun is unlikely to safely contain the shrapnel when the pipe eventually bursts.
@arihieu5 күн бұрын
pipe bomb 💀
@kmank082 күн бұрын
Or just use a metal pipe 🤷
@PhysicsViolator2 ай бұрын
4:04 no pressure gage no safety , you’re a madman 😂
@FriendlyNeighbourlyPerson2 ай бұрын
It’s a pipe bomb
@vladidiazkutchov2872 ай бұрын
"I would like to see if this 3bars rated pvc pipe will explode under 10bars of pressure" * Proceed to put his face at 50cm without any screen protection *
@AlexBuznik2 ай бұрын
@@vladidiazkutchov287, he did have a lighted cig prepared though
@fnym9rdsavsffdik9a252 ай бұрын
@@AlexBuznik good point everybody know that if you have a camera or a lit cigarette in your hand you become invincible
@skyvenrazgriz8226Ай бұрын
lets see if it burst and shot a shard into my gut, thats why it is importent to stand right next to it!
@Enderbro33002 ай бұрын
Holy fucking shit dude. I would not have stood there as your pressure tested that pvc. Pvc shatters when it fails and makes shrapnel. It's incredibly dangerous. I love everything else but I was screaming at that part. Stay safe ❤️
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Totally get where you’re coming from! PVC under high pressure is no joke, and it’s definitely a safety risk if it fails. I’ll be extra cautious in the future and maybe switch to safer materials for pressure testing. Appreciate the concern and advice-safety first! ❤️
@sheriffoftiltover2 ай бұрын
Was thinking the same thing, holy shit lol. Could've ended up with shrapnel wounds!
@Starfighterace4212 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations and as I said in a different comment the shrapnel doesn't show up on x-rays so it is very difficult to get fixed up at the hospital.
@marcforrester77382 ай бұрын
Is it worth maybe wrapping it in some sort of carbon
@MrDoItNice2 ай бұрын
@@sheriffoftiltover I was worried the metal parts on either end would fly across the room would fly like bullets from a real gun!
@Jukejointjeze0nАй бұрын
If I were you, Id get in touch with The SlowMo Guys and Demolition Ranch. They might be enthused to help you with some testing and video.
@herrhartmann303612 күн бұрын
Or Kentucky Ballistics
@csmall7842Ай бұрын
Like many other commenters, I’m gonna have to tell you to not use pvc pipe as pressure vessel. Use steel or at least brass pipe. Also, if not mistaken, you can power the thermoelectric junctions in reverse and thereby get your melting point perfectly in’s sync with your trigger. Make a sequence like this; trigger should have several “points” of action. First part of trigger action=freeze, second level=thaw, final level = activate all valves to release the “bullet”. You can have indicator lights to let you know what exactly you’re doing at any point in the cycle.
@mickdabzАй бұрын
Smart
@Resist4Ай бұрын
He didn't even take safety precautions testing the PVC pipe under pressure. I was waiting for it to explode into him.
@GlobovoyeurАй бұрын
@@Resist4 He did a test, but he didn't gauge it to know how high the inside pressure got.
@MaxZen1968Ай бұрын
Having watched a man run the high pressure air lines in his shop w pvc (not recommended) and seeing what happened after a little over pressure caused them to explode, don't do it. If you want a plastic grenade it's great way to go. I just hope you or your friends aren't around.
@wilfredprins9718Ай бұрын
A tank from a fire extinguisher is safer for a pressure tank
@DarkJarris2 ай бұрын
I remember reading one of those classic "military fiction thriller books written by an ex soldier" type books about 20 years ago about a delta force squad in the arctic that had a type of gun where they put snow in a hopper at the top and it compressed it down into ice balls. the idea of that gun has lived rent free in my mind all that time as "thats such a cool idea" this is basically that.
@felixkonig72732 ай бұрын
In "Deception Point" by Dan Brown there is a Delta Force Squad in the arctic which uses this technology.
@samuelmendoza93562 ай бұрын
@@felixkonig7273 it was implied to be Delta IIRC. All I know is that Delta won't be flying planes like on that one chapter that involves assassination of the false leads on who is behind the cover up, the villain, of the story.
@samuelmendoza93562 ай бұрын
also, Dan Brown was never a soldier
@nowonmetubeАй бұрын
@@sliceofbread2611you mean like... Glass bullets?
@nowonmetubeАй бұрын
@sliceofbread2611 so basically a sand blaster?
@sikliztailbunch19 күн бұрын
10:15 It is an ice-rifle.
@ains290411 күн бұрын
ice is just solid water
@calebS.Buddy_Rich_Best_Soloist9 күн бұрын
It's not a rifle because it's not rifled, it's just pressurized and shot
@MrThePaprika2 ай бұрын
Did you try reversing the polarity of the Pelztier elements to heat up the block? This would decrease the part count and complexity
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
No I haven't but will definitely give it a try today to see if it works😯
@Swordfish422 ай бұрын
I love how this comment sounds like classic techno-babble, but it's not lol
@ivesennightfall67792 ай бұрын
did you just combine piezo and peltier elements into one word, or am I overthinking it?
@saellanya2 ай бұрын
Was about to comment that. It surely seems like it would work and make it simpler.
@vincentpaynecole2 ай бұрын
It should work! Typically reversing the flow of DC current will reverse the flow of heat travel.
@samueljoseph72 ай бұрын
How long does it take for the water to freeze? I thought you would pre-prepare the ice bullets but the way you made them inside the gun was genius.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
It takes about 12-15 minutes to freeze each ice projectile inside the gun. Pre-preparing ice bullets was an option, but I wanted to see if the gun could handle the whole process itself-glad you enjoyed the approach!
@EuphCat2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations I'm also curious how you power the gun. A battery pack? A power cord? How much power does it consume?
@vladidiazkutchov2872 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations thanks for the answer i was wondering how long reload was
@julianochs82212 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations Just increase the cooler size of the hot side. It will be much easier to cool
@sexylexy22100Ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations it might be more efficient to spray some of the pressurized propellant over a heat exchanger tec are notoriously inefficient
@msasar_1986Ай бұрын
By adding a small amount of polymer, you might be able to keep water in laminar flow during the entire flight time. This will basically eliminate the need to freeze the water and will increase the speed of the water. You can contact me or someone specializing in non-Newtonian fluid dynamics!
@callmetony131925 күн бұрын
would it be as effective as using ice as shown in the video?
@Jazz-nm1kfАй бұрын
Calling this a water gun is like calling a nuke a box full of rocks
@ConceptCraftedCreationsАй бұрын
Haha, that’s one way to put it! This might be a little overkill for a “water gun,” but sometimes it’s fun to push boundaries. Any ideas for the next “extreme” project?
@pedropimenta896Ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreationsIce Trebuchet.
@vincentrobinette1507Ай бұрын
I would call this an "airsoft" gun. It uses air pressure to propel a solid, non-metallic projectile.
@212cabooseАй бұрын
It shoots water. You're not bright.
@therevomanАй бұрын
@@vincentrobinette1507air soft??? More like airhard!
@AlexanderSverdlovАй бұрын
You should add fine sawdust to the ice. This will make the 'bullets' 20x stronger.
@ConceptCraftedCreationsАй бұрын
Interesting suggestion!🤓 Sawdust could definitely add some structural strength to the ice. Have you experimented with this before, or is this a new idea?
@AlexanderSverdlovАй бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations it is a long known fact about ice and sawdust.
@SodiumSyndicateАй бұрын
@@AlexanderSverdlov The british tried to build a ship in WW2 with sawdust & Ice mix being cooled by refrigeration lines to save cost of steel. They called the material as PYKRETE.
@mho...Ай бұрын
i bet you would add pebbles to your "snowballs" in a fight too?! -.- shame!
@DonariaRegiaАй бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations I'm not saying do this, but what would happen if you replaced the water with mercury or a low temperature alloy? 🤔
@Beargawn16 күн бұрын
Idea Gatling gun style: Each rotating freeze chamber timing based on freezing time of projectile divided by 2, 4, 6, 8 etc. The next round would be ready for firing. Try using a Teflon coating for the freezing chamber and in the rifle barrel. Another idea is to have multiple bullet freezing chambers that ejects the frozen pellet in a "chamber" that has stiff Teflon coated bar it lands on top of with another bar above it. These Teflon bars would be attached a rotating belt that goes downward (or upward depending on freezing chamber placement) in the shape of and extended clip. This clip would contain the frozen pellets and move them to firing chamber(s). Timing would be based on freezing time from each of the chambers. Due to the freezing process, the frozen pellets placement in the belt would skip one or two feeder belt slots but by the time the pellets reach the barrel, all feeder slots would be filled and ready for firing.
@CordovanSplotchVT5 күн бұрын
Sounds awfully complicated, Just link multiple ice rifles together like on those naval AA gun batteries and have them timed to alternate fire.
@VeniceInventors2 ай бұрын
Beautiful and clever build. It doesn't fall within chatGPT's safety definition, so it's not a water gun anymore, but it's definitely an ice gun. Or if you put fruit juice in it instead of water, it's a long range high-velocity popsicles delivery system :-)
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Haha😄 a "long range high-velocity popsicle delivery system" actually makes it sound like something that's pretty safe to use😋 Like it!
@DrTheRich2 ай бұрын
Wait, if i read your comment right, if something doesn't fall in a definition made by an AI it's not true anymore??? We're further gone than i thought...
@fernando471802 ай бұрын
@@DrTheRich My thoughts exactly. I'd say God help us, but I doubt even He could stop this madness. He'd sooner just wipe the slate clean.
@eduardostapenko68082 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations next time built a "long range high-velocity Pawpsicle delivery system" and sell it to Nick Wilde and Finnic
@FAB11502 ай бұрын
@@DrTheRich well, if people generally agree with the definition yeah. And that definition of pretty agreeable
@matthewgtylerАй бұрын
That'll be amazing on a hot day when a mate needs some ice in his drink. "Can I have a snipe of ice, please?"
@InservioLetumАй бұрын
I'm reasonably sure the fountain of glass shards would put a damper on his enthusiasm pretty damn quickly.
@geniferteal4178Ай бұрын
Were you not looking when the glasses exploded?😊
@laulaja-7186Ай бұрын
Goes and sits at the FAR END of the bar from you.
@sayorancodeАй бұрын
@@geniferteal4178 make a stronger glass then
@AsbestosCigar29 күн бұрын
Sure you can get a snipe of ice *breaks expensive glass*
@lostHandleАй бұрын
Needs to freeze the water in the shape of a bullet, and add rifling to the barrel. Water should have sawdust mix in before freezing, might cause clogs so you might have to feed it in seperately during the freezing process. Beefing up the materials for higher psi would also increase power. Add a scope
@KyleBlumreisinger2 ай бұрын
It is not a water gun, it is most definately an ice gun. That said, is it *better* than a water gun? It definately is an impressive feat of engineering that I haven't seen done before! Well done!
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Thanks!😎
@jankauza86942 ай бұрын
you load water ,so it is not 100% ice gun.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
@jankauza8694 True, it starts as water but turns into ice just before firing. It’s like the gun has its own mini ice-making factory! What would make it feel like a true “100% ice gun” to you?
@jankauza86942 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations 100% ice gun would be way more boring, where you load ready ice bullets.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
True, loading ready-made ice bullets would definitely take away some of the fun! There’s something satisfying about the whole ice-making process happening right inside the gun. Keeps it a bit more “DIY,” don’t you think?
@Wohren_OssАй бұрын
I've played enough fallout to know that this is a cryolator with the long barrel conversion 😂 I've read some of the comments and I'd recommend the reverse cone shaped chamber with maybe a slightly larger opening on the ejection port and a riffled barrel that slightly tappers at the beginning to make sure the ice doesn't break apart inside. I'd also recommend reversing the polarity of the Pelztier elements to heat up the block, or having sort of jacketed chamber that you can pass a separately heated liquid (maybe heated using the same Peltzier elements) through quickly just to loosen the ice. Another idea would be to use teflon inside the chamber and remove the need entirely. Last thing I'd recommend would be to use another P element to keep the water reservoir cool. The closer it already is to freezing, the faster it will freeze. Maybe set up a small venturi line that takes in air or some gas that compresses so that when the water freezes it has room to expand. Can't wait to se V2!
@ecosignals26 күн бұрын
I'm thinking the entire thing doesn't need to be ice, just the tip. The laminar air flow around the rest could plausibly keep a pocket of water traveling together. This would also shrink the size of the cooling mechanism required. But beyond this, I would wonder if there is a slight process and/or additive that could be added. Again perhaps just the tip. To gel the tip or a "casing", bringing along the water. Tune thickness for temperature and distance, and I presume you could have fully liquid impact. Not sure what electricity does to the surface tension of water, but maybe something there too. For sure, standard water has a ton of impurities in it. If you could identify and manipulate some, temporarily "magnetizing" etc one end, then conceivably you could change properties there (or process gather from reservoir), inject for the tip etc. But yah, I would think if it's all water on impact, you may have a case for "water gun"
@TabooRevolution1312 күн бұрын
The Cryolator is a mist... Imagine if you used dry ice. I could use it to fight fires.
@acesn8s895 күн бұрын
Really cool! Amazing work! But I think this would be more effective without the heating element. The goal of the heating element, as described, is to slightly melt the exterior of the ice pellet so that it doesn’t get stuck in the chamber. But this line of reasoning ignores that the pellet will be forced out by the compressed air regardless of its expansion or adhesion. In the diagram shown the biggest factor holding the pellet in place is not expansion or adhesion, but the connection of the pellet after freezing to the ice in the pressure relief channels off to the side. These solid connections are currently either currently being broken by the air pressure or melted away by the heating. But if you just left the whole pellet after freezing and applied sufficient pressure it would overcome the very low friction between the pellet and the chamber and shear the connections to the pressure relief channels. Additionally, the gun is currently losing a lot of power that could be transferred to the pellet because the pellet is initially incased in water after heating. The benefit of the long barrel is lost if the pellet doesn’t fit tightly into the barrel, because the pressure behind the pellet will displace the liquid water around the pellet faster than the solid pellet itself. The lighter water is being moved out of the way, creating a gap between the pellet and barrel wall that the air will bleed through, which decreases the pressure behind the pellet. This action allows the majority of the pressurized air to escape without transferring its force to the projectile, and because the pellet is loose in the barrel it will hit the sides and be slowed by friction in addition to being less accurate. I’d love to see a version without the heating element. Just size the inner diameter of the barrel a couple millimeters smaller than the chamber (or rifle it with the groove depth a couple millimeters smaller than the chamber if you really want a great seal) and use sufficient pressure to break the pellet free immediately after it finishes freezing through.
@friskydingo5370Ай бұрын
Thanks! This is truly a unique and super cool toy. Maybe in version 2, you could use an electrical motor to spin a cylinder( like spin launch) with centrifugal force to eject the ice. It would get rig of the air compression and you would only be limited by battery. Stay awesome and keep engineering those concepts.👍
@AFlameofVenganceАй бұрын
You would have thought that 3:33 would have put the fear of pipe bomb in him, but nope. This madlad does it again after something already exploded right next to him.
@JustineyediaАй бұрын
😅
@smokeybowls187Ай бұрын
The way he just picked up his smoke, man was afraid of nothing. He was cooking an idea to fix the problem soon as he saw it happen.
@foundingfartherАй бұрын
1:03 are clothing irons and steamers considered water guns?
@Markxgaming22 ай бұрын
Instead of the pvc pipe you could use a standard metal water pipe. Add a 200-300 bar reservoir, a quick loading valve for an external dive tank and maybe a stainless barrel. Springload a hugh pressure valve to the trigger. Boom, you have a proper NUG.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
That sounds intense! Upgrading to metal components with a high-pressure reservoir and dive tank setup would turn this into a serious piece of tech. A stainless steel barrel and spring-loaded high-pressure valve on the trigger would definitely take it to the next level. “NUG” sounds about right-this would be a next-level Nerf upgrade! 😆 Ever built anything like this yourself?
@getsturdy2 ай бұрын
You ain’t fooling me this is straight up a ChatGPT answer
@Th3-WhOwOl3y-TrEeNiT3a2 ай бұрын
What is a NUG?
@priestesslucy2 ай бұрын
NUG?
@Markxgaming22 ай бұрын
@@Th3-WhOwOl3y-TrEeNiT3a An Oh four dubbelya dubbelya nug ;) (MASH quote)
@ilaycohen6978Ай бұрын
1:37 "Purpose: it's designed to spray water for fun"
@dearthditchАй бұрын
Depends on the definition of “fun” I guess 😅
@carterweinstein4030Ай бұрын
I’m really tired of seeing creators say “we need to define this so I asked ChatGPT” like it contains the ultimate answers about the universe. Like literally just use a dictionary. That’s what it’s scraping anyways, and it doesn’t have the noise of incorrect or deceptive definitions from other sources distorting it. “Type in the prompt and push the button”; oh you thought I was referencing ChatGPT, no that’s how google works too (and don’t use google’s AI response either, look one line lower).
@noobriser23052 күн бұрын
as an engineer myself who worked on a project similar to that but for different purposes, you just earned a sub. i used peltier module to cool down water and then pump it through a bag to try and make a cooler. but the thing is that the process was quite slow. so i wonder how much time it took to freeze the water. should be like 20mins+. awesome project mate but you should add some safety valve in case the pressure inside the barrel(pvc tube) exceeds the limit
@JohnAltenburg2 ай бұрын
My brother would dip his snow balls in water and let them freeze. He always won the "snow" ball fights.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
😂
@eduardostapenko68082 ай бұрын
bruh, if i had one of those in a fight, i'd get a free ride on an ambulance for mine opponent.
@dumbcook422 ай бұрын
I always pull out my snow balls and dip them in any liquid i see as well
@survidmt2 ай бұрын
Had same type memory from this, similar principal.
@AeronHaleАй бұрын
Ya know... That's a lot easier than how I did it as a kid lmao. I'd use my hands to melt and compress the surface until I had a super dense ball of ice. Though I usually didn't throw those at people. I used them to knock down the snow walls we'd make for cover.
@rosza636Ай бұрын
11:13 "Armor hit, deflection! Target still standing!" 😅
@PottydeАй бұрын
Surprisingly fair price from PCBway. Kudos
@TheMattC9999Ай бұрын
Honestly for custom made one off parts with that level of detail I honestly expected the price to be about 10 times what he actually paid. That's a fantastic deal and if I ever need anything made like that I definitely know where I'm going.
@gamingandcodingstuff7512 ай бұрын
Instead of using the heating rods you can just flip the polarity of the current of the thermo block which you used to make ice it will no longer need extra material and also help in making more bullets for the next round faster as the other side will be colder already to exchange heat
@dwp6x9e422 ай бұрын
You may be able to avoid the heat cycle if you made the freeze chamber cone shaped with the small end out the back. Anodizing it may also help. I would also water cool the petliers hot side with water from reservoir. Then air cool the water reservoir.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
That’s a smart approach! A cone-shaped freeze chamber could make it easier for the ice to pop out without needing to heat it up. And combining water cooling for the Peltier with air cooling for the reservoir sounds like it’d boost efficiency. Have you used this kind of cooling setup before?
@dwp6x9e422 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations I have not, but CPU water coolers should be easy enough to find. Going back and looking at the design you would also want to put a draft angle in the small water inlet and outlet holes in the direction of flow. You would also want to try and insolate the larger water inlet and outlet holes to try to prevent them from freezing. Maybe cutting a ring around them down far enough so they still have enough support would do the trick.
@maudiojunky2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations My initial thought was to use the TEC waste heat for steam generation, skipping the compressor entirely. I haven't run any feasibility calculations for this, but food for thought. It's simple enough to add a resistive heater to supplement the TEC if needed. Obviously your pressure vessel needs to change if it's holding hot gas, but there should be a lot more space and weight budget without an air compressor.
@mrpocockАй бұрын
I don't know how cantered (right word?) you would need the ice freezing chamber to ensure clean emptying, particularly given that it slightly expands.
@DsonophorusАй бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations unless I don't understand something, the cone would have to be wide front small rear - which is aerodynamically unstable and opposite of what you want.
@zXxTripwirexX10 күн бұрын
This and the tree-power video are the first I'm seeing of you. I cant understand how you aren't more famous already, these are genius designs.
@friskydingo53702 ай бұрын
Thanks! Incredible concept. Amazing creation 👍 Nice use of the pelter genarators. 👌
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed the concept-and yeah, those Peltier elements really add a unique twist to the design. Ever experimented with them yourself?
@friskydingo53702 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations yes several times. I remember the first one I ever came across was in a 12 volt cooler. I played with it, and it condensed the water out of the air. After that I went to ebay and bought 10 large ones. I love that you can pull energy from them or supply energy to them. I used a couple in projects. One was as a cold substrate plate in my RfCVD unit. It's also fun to add them to a sterling cycle. Basically, the better the temperature gradient, the more energy you can get from the heat and cold of the environment. They are great for so many reasons. They are used on satellites that use radio isotope telescope to convert the thermal energy from the radioactive source. It's called a telescope because it's really a giant boom to keep the source away from the sensitive equipment. I've layered pyrolitic graphite onto one side with cvd and improved the efficiency 8 percent. If I had used cvd polycrystalline diamond coat, I'm sure it would have been even more impressive. Their nifty little solid state devices and are cheap to make. They could have uses that could generate power in ways that aren't intuitive. 🙂
@friskydingo53702 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations Yes, I have. I pulled one out of a 12v cooler manny years ago and condensed moisture out of the air. After that, I bought 10 of them off eBay. I've used them as a solid state cold plate for CVD work in my vacuum chamber. They are really effective when the temperature gradient is high. They have been around for a long time. The first time I heard of them was from a friend who worked at JPL. They use them on satellites that use a radio isotope telescope. It generates electricity from the heat of the radioactive source and the cold vacuum of space. They are truly wonderful little device's.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
@@friskydingo5370 That’s incredible! It’s amazing to see how versatile Peltier elements can be, especially with applications as advanced as CVD work in a vacuum chamber. Using them in space with a radioisotope power source must be next-level in terms of efficiency. Do you still use them in any of your current projects?
@friskydingo53702 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations yes my cvd unit had electrical feed through, so it's easy to use it as a heater or cooler by flipping the voltage.
@digaming23762 ай бұрын
type: Sniper Level: Legendary damage: 999+ Cooldown time: 10-20 sec no. of bullets: 1 per round special ability: untraceable bullets overall rating: 4.5 / 5 😎
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
😎
@Edward256Ай бұрын
Actually, someone asked how long it takes to freeze the water and it would take up to 15 minutes. So cooldown time would be 12-15 minutes.
@petepanteraman9 күн бұрын
That's a clever idea lightly heating up the ice pellet, good video 😎👍👍
@ZappyOh2 ай бұрын
Very creative. How about, instead of freezing water, you add a gelling-agent, making it a slime-gun :) I wonder if that could keep the water-projectile from splitting up during flight. OR Encapsulate the water-projectile in a miniature water-balloon ... a thin rubber membrane of some sort.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Thanks! And the Mythbusters tried shooting ice bullets a few years ago en actually ended up using slime instead!🤓
@hopefullyhigh2 ай бұрын
Lethal Condom gun 😂
@ROYACC012 ай бұрын
@@hopefullyhigh This was so funny I couldn't hold in the laughter😂😂🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ROYACC012 ай бұрын
@@hopefullyhigh That literally came to my mind and I opened the replies thinking nobody would have typed that! right? but here I am laughing 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Haha, “Lethal Condom Gun” might just be the funniest twist yet! 😂 It’s amazing how one project can spark so many hilarious ideas. Thanks for the laughs, everyone-who knew tech could be this entertaining? 😆
@osterhaiАй бұрын
You could use a teflon layer inside the ice chamber so you dont have to heat it again, or you could let the steel chamber vibrate to make the ice pellet lose.
@BabyMandingoАй бұрын
That is so cool! What a fascinating idea, that thing looks to have almost the same power as a pellet gun which is unreal!
@HakunaMatata-os1ogАй бұрын
I love the design! Gorgeous and clever. How did this attract CIA, or was that a joke? I don't think of it as a water gun, more of an ice pellet gun, and yes, I know, ice is the solid state of water, but water guns (as playful toys to shoot at people safely) use liquid water (at non dangerous temperatures), not steam or ice. As your chat-AI said "6. Safety: unlike firearms, water guns are meant for innocent, playful interactions, making them popular as toys."
@adriankoch96428 күн бұрын
IIRC in 1970s the CIA had built (or pretended to have built) an ice gun for assassinations'. But instead of a complicated custom gun that froze ice on demand, it would be a more or less regular pistol that shot a projectile of a frozen toxin that would induce a heart attack into its target. So a person would be discretely shot, if at all feel an impact below the intensity of a BB gun and shortly suffer a heart attack. The rest of the projectile would quickly melt, leaving next to no trace. Autopsy would have a high chance to miss a tiny bruise and go for a natural cause instead.
@Broetchen98Ай бұрын
Ok So you didn't make a water gun you made an air pressure gun.
@meanunclebob1819Ай бұрын
It doesn't shoot air pressure. It shoots ice propelled by air pressure just like a super soaker shoots water propelled by air pressure.
@Broetchen98Ай бұрын
@meanunclebob1819 an Air pressure gun shoots projectiles propelled by air pressure.
@meanunclebob1819Ай бұрын
@@Broetchen98 Nope, an air gun shoots projectiles propelled by air pressure. Go to any of the sites that sell them and look for an air pressure gun. Search the internet using the term "air pressure gun". Doesn't really matter that much because your original statement was nonsense because using air pressure to shoot water is pretty much the norm for modern water guns.
@lakraknjeprak2536Ай бұрын
air rifle with compressed air is kinda popular for hunters outside america or countries that ban firearms for civilian use. the rifle used small pellet as a projectile, just half centimeter in size. the only difference is this guy in the video switched the pellet with ice. so his gun is still classified as homemade air rifle. also i want to share important tips that you should know. you can upgrade this further by switching the pvc pipe with brass or steel and put pressure gauge on it. as a barista i worked with highly pressurized espresso machine for years and our machine never exploded because we don't ignore safety precautions unlike this channel owner.
@torgrimhanssen5100Ай бұрын
All water guns are air pressure guns though, you can't compress water for effect. Water bottle rockets are quite simple, ~60% water and 40% air to compress until the seal breaks and the rockets setts off. "Squirt guns" are ofc different and has no practical effect other than children getting tiered from the trigger pump mechanic.
@Avetho6 күн бұрын
One of the things I think that might do great for a design update would be a miniature AC compressor, you can get tiny ones that fit in your hand, that way the battery life would be much higher since you're using a 60-70% or so efficient BLDC-driven compressor rather than a 15% efficient Peltier cell. But this is awesome!
@JoelIvoryJohnsonАй бұрын
10:15 - it's a ballistic. That the bullet is made of ice doesn't alter this.
@alexwang0072 ай бұрын
Please try this with an air gun tank next!! Like the ones with 3000+ psi, also use a high flow valve, they usually need a high voltage capacitor discharge circuit to trigger, but can dump insane amounts of air very fast, used in airguns
@laurahaaima14362 ай бұрын
I bet the bullet will disintegrate .. Would love to see.. But without a sabot it would be impossible I guess.
@alexanderalsen46635 күн бұрын
It's pretty safe to say that this is an ok water gun to bring when your kid invites you to a water gun fight next summer.
@dantyler6907Ай бұрын
Rifle the ice pellet, maybe with rifling along the inner barrel. You might get something really wicked!!!😮
@annelarrybrunelle3570Ай бұрын
Just as info for folk who think PVC is a risk for storing air: Have for over a dozen years been using Schedule 40 1/2" PVC pipe as air delivery in my garage, as suggested by the hardware store guy. My compressor keeps the system at about 140 psi. At this size, Schedule 40 has a rated capacity of 600 psi, printed right on the pipe, which at ~15 psi to the bar, I make to be approximately 40 bar. 3/4" can contain 480 psi, and as the size goes up, the pressure contained goes down. The few times I've had failures, it's been separated or broken joints. A crack/break in a joint is, well, a leak. A separated joint COULD result in a length of pipe becoming a projectile, if it was secured only at that joint. Generally, it's secured at an opposite end, and clamped to a surface. The strength of the pipe itself generally doesn't apply to fittings; solvent ball valves, for instance, are rated to about 150 psi. The solvent adhesive, if you have a good joint, is about as strong as the pipe; to get the best joint, you need a good mechanical fit, clean surfaces, primer solvent, and then the glue solvent, joints fully coated and pushed together with a twist. By color, I'd guess the PVC in the video to be the even stronger Schedule 80, although I can't see to be sure. The itty-bitty air pump, if taken from SOME portable emergency tire pumps, MIGHT have a max (advertsed) pressure of 225 psi. Regardless of what projectile you launch with 150 psi (~10 bar) or more behind it, a) it will NOT travel as fast as a bullet, but b) you will NOT want to be hit by it. If sharp, could penetrate too far to be good for you. Ice, properly formed and frozen hard, would make a wonderful projectile. And, of course, leave no significant ballistic evidence. I suppose dry ice would be similar in those ways.
@blackrifle6736Ай бұрын
*Gray PVC pipe in video appears to be Schedule 80. ASTM D1785 pressure spec for 1" Schedule 80 is 630 PSI.*
@EZ-D-FIANTАй бұрын
Great idea, I'm litterely building a new workshop atm and air delivery has been on my mind....👍👌👍
@TehButterflyEffectАй бұрын
I use PVC as well, but have researched a lot after being told that it's dangerous and came to the same conclusion. I will be replacing my PVC airlines with aluminum tubing. PVC tends to splinter when it cracks, turning it into a pipe bomb. All of my air lines are under 5 years old so they aren't old enough to be a problem yet, but I can no longer trust PVC after what I learned.
@squeledog11 күн бұрын
I love how futuristic it seems, like the lights and the model, it's cool!
@saddemon3913Ай бұрын
Welp, at this point its no more a water gun, but more Icicle rifle
@notamouse5630Ай бұрын
4:00 There had better be water in that pipe when testing, tank pressure testing is called hydrostatic testing for a reason. To make a better tank, maybe use tightly wrapped surfboard fiberglass in epoxy around the pipe, especially the ends of the pipe. Then add a spring loaded limit valve to assure a pressure that is low enough.
@Hurricayne92Ай бұрын
It wont be filled with water its just for pressurised air to propel the ice. Although everything you said is correct otherwise.
@notamouse5630Ай бұрын
@@Hurricayne92 When fabricating a pressure vessel, the first time you bring it up to pressure, you do a hydrostatic test with the vessel full of water with air as a source of pressure only at a pressure exceeding the maximum intended pressure substantially. This assures that first test is safe and all fills with air thereafter at the rated pressure are also safe.
@FirstLast-gw5mgАй бұрын
I was thinking a carbon fiber sleeve around it. Handling that PVC under pressure while talking about how it was multiples over its safety factor definitely had me cringing.
@LukeTube007Ай бұрын
Your invention is incredible! I have dreamed about something like this my whole life, only I never advanced the concept as far as you have making the actual projectile manufacturing in the gun. Pure genius! No wonder the CIA was interested in this, there are applications that we can't even think of. Let's just say it's clearly far beyond playtime. Thanks for the video! Luke
@engineer02392 ай бұрын
Thats pretty cool, but knowing the cooling capabilities of such TECs, cycling must take like 15 minutes xD Sadly there is no vapor compression refrigiration on this scale Edit: Hold up! Turns out there is! Rigid HVAC sells some absolutely tiny compressors with brushless motors! You would just need to connect a radiator, an expansion valve and some copper piping and then fill it with refrigirant.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Good catch on the TEC limitations! The cycle time is definitely a challenge. Those Rigid HVAC compressors sound like a next-level solution-imagine the cooling power with a mini vapor compression setup! Might actually cut that cooldown by a huge margin. Ever worked with those tiny compressors before?
@engineer02392 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations Sadly not. Not even with a full sized vapor compression system. I just watch hyperspace Pirate here on KZbin 😂
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
@@engineer0239 Haha, Hyperspace Pirate has some great content! Vapor compression on this scale is definitely a big ask. If only we could scale down those systems to fit in a handheld device-imagine the possibilities! Do you think there’s any chance we’ll see tech like that become more accessible?
@EchoBuildsThings2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations Responding to comments is cool, but not when it’s obviously just chatGPT. Really?
@KallePihlajasaariАй бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations You could use Joule Thompson or evaporative cooling with Nitrous oxide. You could also use the same gas reservoir as the propellant. You can also use the same pressure to fill your chamber, close the exit port and pressurise your tank to two atmospheres and it will fill the chamber and compress all the trapped air into the overflow port. All you need is a few valves and a reservoir to store one shot of gas (so it can expand faster than boiling when fired).. I don't think you would need to heat the chamber to release the slug. Having a 1% taper would break it free, once moving it will deform to the size of the barrel easily. Nitrous oxide cylinders come in many sizes these days for restaurant cream whippers and drag racing cars.
@jangchief2 ай бұрын
That definition is censored and doesn't talk about riot water cannons or water cutting machines, all of which are water guns but not pc enough for shat gpt
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
You've got a good point! And those are way more powerful than my creation!😯
@inthefadeАй бұрын
Water cutting machines rely on an abrasive powder to cut
@tyrekebonaparteАй бұрын
"shat gpt" too true
@mpirron1Ай бұрын
@@jangchief water cannons are cannons, not guns. Nobody ever, on either side of a water cannon, called it a gun, ever.
@tjf29399 күн бұрын
Such cool engeneering! I also like very much that you can percisely see the progress with the leds
@nalixl2 ай бұрын
Would like to see some more thorough testing. Like shooting at plywood and/or ballistics gel.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
I'd try to get some ballistics gel but couldn't find anyone who sold it here unfortunately🤔
@inthefadeАй бұрын
Puncturing 1-inch plywood is seen as a general stand-in for whether something is lethal or not.
@FirstLast-gw5mgАй бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations DIY ballistic gel is not hard to make, you just need the right proportions of gelatin and water. It's basically an extra-firm jello jiggler. It won't be super clear like the stuff you can buy, but aside from that, it'll work okay.
@JackCollins-u3pАй бұрын
You’re a freaking genius dude, holy crap 🫨
@jaygonzales825825 күн бұрын
dude's chainsmoking ciggies while hes inventing new weapons you earned my sub lol
@Bodan_TakanuvaАй бұрын
We need to make a category of cryo projectile launchers. Because it belongs in that cool category!
@stealtheo2 ай бұрын
Once water is frozen into a solid, it ceases to be a water gun.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Fair point! Frozen water definitely shifts it into a whole different category. Maybe “ice blaster” or “frozen projectile launcher” is more fitting. Got any suggestions for a better name?
The new water delivery system is looking good, solving heat stroke from a distance with this one
@KKJKJH2 ай бұрын
hits hard hits far but has a long cooldown this is actually balanced enough to bring to a water fight
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Haha, true! It’s like the “heavy weapon” of water fights-high impact but with that strategic cooldown. Just imagine everyone’s reaction when they see it in action! Would you actually bring this beast to a water fight?
@ericatkinson5433Ай бұрын
I'd argue otherwise. It isn't going to do anything more than bruise someone... unless it hits them in the eye. It's essentially comparable, at close range at least, to an airsoft replica or paintball marker. It would only be safe as long as everyone was wearing face protection. Speaking of which, I'd love to see it chronoed. It's just a top of my head guess but... I'd say somewhere between 250 and 350 fps? Of course, that's a pretty large range and I could be way off in either direction.
@KKJKJHАй бұрын
@@ericatkinson5433 wimp
@jackindustriesanimates2 ай бұрын
If water guns were used in the military: Jokes aside- this project was amazing, excellent work!
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Haha, imagine the “ice division” in action! Jokes aside, I’m glad you enjoyed the project! It was a blast to make. Got any ideas on what other crazy “water gun” concepts could be fun to try?
@jackindustriesanimates2 ай бұрын
It would be a wacky concept to make a gun that uses water balloons for ammo- don't know how it would work but it would be a good video nonetheless!
@robertsmith2956Ай бұрын
Ice needs water. Where the soldiers are doesn't have water. We lose.
@jackindustriesanimatesАй бұрын
@@robertsmith2956 unless you have large heavily armored water trucks with battleship cannons on top of them with a wide wheelbase that prevents falling over.
@robertsmith2956Ай бұрын
@@jackindustriesanimates Your forgetting the eco nuts want electric tanks. water and electricity don't play well together.
@QwijeboАй бұрын
You don't need to use pressure. You can(in theory) use a percussion cap to propel a very thin plate that is frozen to an ice bullet, the ice bullet can be pre-made in a cryo-chamber. It might just blow the entire thing apart but if the ice bullet is solid enough it might work.
@thestalkinghead2 ай бұрын
maybe it would count as an air soft gun, but seems like a fun gadget, get a camel back and a power bank in your back pack and you could have a whole lot of ammo
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
I guess air soft would be the closest thing to it indeed! And what about free ammo when it rains?😋
@elonwhite66282 ай бұрын
Really nice work, looks like it’s straight out of overwatch, it’s got that retro future feel
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Thanks! And i kind of went for that future look so i guess it worked out😎
@elonwhite66282 ай бұрын
if that’s what you went for, then I would say yeah, you did manage it
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
💪
@Endless_Jaguar23 күн бұрын
Legally speaking, in the USA it is "not a firearm", and in Australia it is a firearm. I think its just a very cool watergun.
@confused_horse2 ай бұрын
Only 241 moneys! Like that's peanuts lol
@Shapshapper2 ай бұрын
Clearly makes a lot of money from KZbin😂
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
You're absolutely right about that! A better comparison might be the quote I got here locally for the same parts and to my surprise it was almost $200 more expensive there😯
@confused_horse2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations I am not saying PCB Way isn't offering compelling price models. And you're probably bound to sell it properly, but objectively 200+ is a huge amount of money for presumably most of your viewers. So putting it in context would've been more approachable for most of them.
@confused_horse2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations I didn't mean to criticise in any way, nor do I want you to answer in a way detrimental to your sponsors. I was merely making a joke.
@mysticmarble942 ай бұрын
For machined aluminium parts, I don't think it's too expensive.
@padi-instructorАй бұрын
Good job. In the UK, if it has the energy of more than one joule - looks like it does - that's classed as a firearm. Go directly to Jail, do not pass Go, do not collect £200 (Monopoly joke) :-)
@swahler34Ай бұрын
Wow. That's pathetic.
@padi-instructorАй бұрын
@@swahler34 yes and there’s a 5 year prison sentence for anyone that has an illegal firearm. However it does reduce gun crime here.
@swahler34Ай бұрын
@@padi-instructor At the cost of increased knife & acid attacks. Even pepper spray is illegal. Leaving leaving law abiding citizens defenseless. From what I understand, you can be jailed for having an opinion that could be offensive. Is that the UK you grew up in? I can sympathize. I've had the same "equipment" for 20 years. Purchased legally in NY. Now NY says I'm a criminal for owning it.
@padi-instructorАй бұрын
@@swahler34 All true.
@davros0007Ай бұрын
Can’t you have an air gun with 12ft lbs or less energy without FAC in UK?
@shareurtubeАй бұрын
What a great project. You did a great job. Keep up the good work.
@wrongusernameАй бұрын
5:15 my guess of 40€ was a tad small
@the_susp3ct12 күн бұрын
Thought it would be 70€
@amosnimos2 ай бұрын
The cop are still searching for the bullet
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Haha, they'll be looking for a while! This "ice bullet" leaves no trace-just melts away. Perfect stealth mode! Ever thought of other creative uses for something like this?
@sereneruby12Ай бұрын
There's an episode in the "bones" police TV show where someone uses a blood bullet to try to kill someone, and they barely were able to find the criminal that did so
@LuoJun229 күн бұрын
I applaud your craftsmanship and am awestruck by just how t how far out of the box you think. This is genius level tinkering. Personally, I would call this the first conceptually practical ice pellet gun. You can shoot at your friends with a water gun, because that’s playful and nobody gets injured. I wouldn’t point this thing at anything I didn’t intend to hurt.
@Nightspyz12 ай бұрын
why not use the hot side of the peltier module to superheat water into steam to push the ice using a piston at super high velocity
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
That’s an awesome idea! Using the hot side to create steam pressure could turn this into a steam-powered ice blaster with insane force. A piston-driven mechanism would definitely launch the ice at high speeds. Have you seen this concept used in other projects?
@Nightspyz12 ай бұрын
@ConceptCraftedCreations no never seen it done but i thought since you already have waste heat it might be possible to use it somehow if you already have water, steam canons do exist but they fire long rods grapple hooks at around 280 m/s
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Interesting thought! Repurposing the waste heat for steam propulsion would be a clever way to increase efficiency. And 280 m/s for grapple hooks is seriously impressive-imagine the speed we could reach with a lightweight ice projectile! Think it’s worth a test run?
@final_catalyst2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations as well if you use "water" with the right mineral mix it will freeze from the outside first and create a "shell"
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
@final_catalyst Fascinating idea! Creating an “ice shell” by using the right mineral mix sounds like an intriguing way to boost the projectile’s stability. Do you think this could help maximize the impact or even increase the range?
@shadowwolf225Ай бұрын
I love the idea. But you get an F- on execution. You would have a solid A+ but you used PVC as a pressure vessel and showed all the kids that its ok to stand next to a pressure vessel that you're intentionally exceeding the rated max pressure of with ZERO ppe (at least that we could see). I want to like you but this video could legitimately get someone killed. You showed how to create a pressure bomb (against youtube TOS, and possible ITAR regulated so possibly decades in prison) and acted like it was nothing to worry about. Cmon dude. I had a cowoker years ago that had a pvc pipe explode next to him. Lost his left eye and was still having pvc fragments poking up through his skin every couple months even five years later. Did you know the doctors can't help you remove the pvc because it doesn't show on xrays? You currently have 446k views on this. If only one percent try to do this and only one percent of those have a catastrophic failure from intentionally exceeding the rating of a pressure vessel, that's still 44 people that will be put in the hospital with serious injuries. Please heed this warning. I'm all for people making their own things that go boom but at least show safe practices.
@The_Man_in_the_Black_HatАй бұрын
Very innovative with existing technology! Well done!
@aL3891_2 ай бұрын
Awesome project but please be careful when pressure testing like that, at least put it it like a box or stand a bit further away 😅
@daviniusb67982 ай бұрын
I didn't understand that part of the project, but if he is compressing air, please pressure test it with water.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
I got my safety glasses on🤓 Does that count?😋
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
@daviniusb6798 I know.. but the portable compressor doesn't work with water🤓
@daviniusb67982 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations No no you fill your reservoir with water and let the compressor pump in his air. If it explodes you only get wet insteat of having to pull out PVC from your chest (and the test is quicker this way). I guess it's irrelevant for this project, but if you like look up how to pressure test a miniature steam boiler or a waterrocket!
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Great tip! Using water as a safer way to pressure test makes total sense-definitely less risk of flying PVC pieces if something goes wrong. I’ll look into those methods for future projects. Appreciate the safety advice!
@Mwwwwwwwwe2 ай бұрын
Pvc shrapnel doesn't show up on xrays😅
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
😄
@Chris-oj7ro2 ай бұрын
@@ConceptCraftedCreations Ya seriously though, it would have been very easy to stand further away, or behind some barrier. Even though it's compressed air, it can still go boom and ruin your day.
@matyaspatlevic35252 ай бұрын
@@Chris-oj7ro and then he puts it next to his eyes in that gun. Would be so easy to make it with propper pressure rating. Steel pipes come to mind, he wouldnt even needed those fancy machined caps. But very cool project otherwise.
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
Good points! Safety is definitely a priority with compressed air and PVC. Steel pipes would be a much safer choice with the higher pressure rating-probably the way to go if I revisit the design. Appreciate the feedback, and glad you enjoyed the project overall!
@lupin2502 күн бұрын
Projectile velocity increase by barrel length is only worth concern in normal combustion weapons. All the pressure is released immediately with an air gun, so all traveling down the barrel does is allow for rotation of the round to occur, improving accuracy.
@SubjektDelta2 ай бұрын
I would use the "stuck" ice pellet as a pressure check thing for those vaccum guns. Where you would create a vacuum and then pop the membrane in the front to shoot out the projectile. But this time make it the other way around, create a shit ton of pressure until the pellet breaks free and shoots out!
@ConceptCraftedCreations2 ай бұрын
That’s a solid idea! Using the ice pellet as a sort of “pressure release” would definitely add some extra punch to the shot. Reversing the vacuum gun concept to build up pressure and then release it all at once sounds intense! Ever thought about building something like this yourself?
@vincentrobinette1507Ай бұрын
I don't see that creating consistent muzzle velocity, and, you wouldn't get an immediate discharge upon pulling the trigger.
@davidstewart5811Ай бұрын
Pure genius. A clear breakthrough in technology. Lots of uses, peaceful and military. As an example, bigger versions for drone warfare. Obviously this is only the beginning, We will see more sophisticated versions, larger, longer, more powerful propulsion systems, etc. I see this as a more conventional version of the rail guns the Navy has been working for so long. I don't know if practical for long range; but, ammo cost is minimal, nuclear engines could provide whatever electricity needed, and ammo storage means a water tank. How would you defend against a projectile with no magnetic signature, virtually no radar cross section. Amazing.
@bravotwozero535Ай бұрын
Nice design and fabrication. The tools and services to build custom devices really makes iterative design feasible.
@davidjohn3533Ай бұрын
Humble suggestion: Just slightly freeze the outside so that it holds together and helps prevent air resistance acting on such a large surface area, but melts from friction of air resistance after 10feet - that way it can be a fun toy again - shooting water.
@marty21292 күн бұрын
So this is basically the water-firing Atlantean gun from Aquaman... Awesome design :)
@sadgearmy20 сағат бұрын
Best water gun of all times. I bet you could make a mini water catapult that could show where its going to land
@crazidirtbikerАй бұрын
This is the most futuristic weapon iv ever seen. Super impressive and yes it’s definitely a water gun. Thinking outside the box and pushing boundaries are how the best inventions are created
@kriskoshy98535 күн бұрын
This just came into my feed for some reason. Great work. There's a book by Dan Brown called Digital Fortress and guns that shot ice bullets were featured in them (at least in the beginning). Since the bullets were ice, they left nothing behind. No fingerprints or shrapnel that could be traced. It's the first thing I thought of when I saw the thumbnail. Interested in how you update the design.
@WastedPot29 күн бұрын
The explosion followed by the immediate cigarette pick up got me good.
@ChristopherWanha5 күн бұрын
To reduce wait time, perhaps your water source could be ice water stored in an insulated container like a thermus. To make it more of a water gun, it'd be cool if the ice was only thin enough to coat a pocket of water, but by the time it reaches it target it melts.
@Earlybeggar4 күн бұрын
Nah, ice gun better
@leandroandrade531220 күн бұрын
A practical way to maintain your ice-based concept without unwanted blockages is to exploit the fact that water’s freezing point decreases under higher pressure. By keeping the water in a pressurized, chilled environment, it can remain liquid even at temperatures below its normal freezing point. The moment it exits into lower pressure and warmer conditions, it quickly freezes and delivers the intended icy impact. This tactic solves two opposing needs-liquid flow internally and solid formation upon discharge-without compromise. It’s all about balancing the forces at play: pressure, temperature, and flow work together to ensure fluidity inside the device, followed by a swift transition to ice when released.
@nidodson20 күн бұрын
I would consider looking into heavy water, and other options that might make ice with higher compression tolerance, and also have an additional heater around the front of the ice cylinder, with a wedge ring shaped conductor to make the tip smaller and tapered, to focus the power of the initial impact. Those two things should drastically improve the performance and range.
@rainbowcrash6990Ай бұрын
I have long loved the idea of sci fi weapons or systems that could "microprocess" projectiles in the field. The flash freezing a liquid is a great solution. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Immediately subbed when i realized what was going on
@Verrisin26 күн бұрын
I have a feeling Jörg Sprave would enjoy this! :D - Very cool features indeed!
@Jules-iw9dk11 күн бұрын
Reminds me of a Mythbuster episode where they trie to make an ice gun with gunpowder... but you've nailed it ! still a water gun to me, or an ice dispenser as su wish
@genesis_trix729520 күн бұрын
The gun looks like a weapon out of Destiny, I love it! Can't wait to see how it does against ballistic gel