LOL!
I had all three. But my air blaster was the pistol version. It was good for blowing out candles and annoying the dog. The OMA gun was way too complex for fun playing "Army." It was in pieces pretty quick. The cap pistol and plastic bullets lasted the longest and provided days of fun finding things to hunt.
Nobody's said it yet, so I will. What I remember and miss, is advertising that encouraged kids to take chances and risks. We had to be responsible for our actions. And, clean the blood up or we got in trouble for messing up our clothes. Everything today is too safe, if there's a problem folks want to blame someone else instead of being proud of pushing things beyond their intended use.
My two cents and thanks for the memory!
Nick
Think Any of These Would Air Today?
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 364
- Joined: Wed Sep 03, 2008 8:08 am
- Location: Fort Worth
Re: Think Any of These Would Air Today?
Nick Stone
Have Truck, Will Travel
NRA Life Member
Have Truck, Will Travel
NRA Life Member
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 1
- Posts: 4899
- Joined: Thu Dec 23, 2004 6:10 pm
- Location: Vidor, Tx
- Contact:
Re: Think Any of These Would Air Today?
Y'all sound like the kids in my neighborhood growing up. One stunt my brother and I used to do was to put .22 shells in the mud and shoot them with a BB gun to make them pop then recovering the bullet. All went well until one of the cases hit me next to my eye. It left a mark so we never did that again. I wonder how kids grew to adulthood in the 40s, 50s and 60s. It was a lot more fun back then.
"To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them."
George Mason
Texas and Louisiana CHL Instructor, NRA Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, Personal Protection and Refuse To Be A Victim Instructor
George Mason
Texas and Louisiana CHL Instructor, NRA Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun, Personal Protection and Refuse To Be A Victim Instructor
Re: Think Any of These Would Air Today?
We were stationed in Oberammergau four years, leaving when I was 12. I remember several guys having a military style rifle that would shoot something similar to those fanner bullets. There was some plant that had red pods on it we called "itch pods." The interior was filled with white stuff that looked like coton and powder that itched when somebody would bust one on your skin. Somebody got the bright idea of using those for the bullets. Bright idea, but didn't work. The few that actually exited the muzzle were moving way to slow to break on contact. They were too light. Most of the ones that didn't get stuck would roll out the end of the barrel. None of them ever had any range.
-
- Senior Member
- Posts in topic: 2
- Posts: 1662
- Joined: Wed Jul 29, 2009 3:54 pm
- Location: Houston
Re: Think Any of These Would Air Today?
I remember building an Estes model rocket that had a payload module. My dad had given me several model rockets and I had the launch pad equipment. A few of us saved one summer and bought one of the rockets with a payload compartment. Well we decided it would be neat if we filled that with gasoline and we removed the parachute part and used a first stage engine that didnt have the parachute deployment part of the engine it had a burn through top on it so that it would ignite a second stage engine. We figured that it would take off and fly up and explode in the sky and provide some nice fireworks! We pulled a part a couple of .22s and packed the gunpowder between the engine and the base of the payload compartment filled with said gasoline...MoJo wrote:Y'all sound like the kids in my neighborhood growing up. One stunt my brother and I used to do was to put .22 shells in the mud and shoot them with a BB gun to make them pop then recovering the bullet. All went well until one of the cases hit me next to my eye. It left a mark so we never did that again. I wonder how kids grew to adulthood in the 40s, 50s and 60s. It was a lot more fun back then.
Well we thought we were a bunch of brilliant "rocket engineers" but we forgot about things like weight and center of gravity and aerodynamics and flight stability you know all of that useless math stuff...
We figured we were in the desert nothing to burn so we would have some fun...
We were pretty excited when we hit the end of the countdown and launched that baby. Well back to the aforementioned "weight" issue... the rocket only made it about 4 inches up the launch rod before it started tipping over. can you say RUN! Well the launched tipped over and when it did the rocket had less gravity to overcome so it started picking up some speed, now mind you all of this happened in about two seconds The rocket made it about 2 feet from the launcher before it hit the ground, dang it stupid center of gravity! The rocket then proceed to break apart spilling gasoline all over the place. Then the engine burned through and lit everything up in a nice conflagration! Burned up the rocket, my launching pad, one of our backpacks and a nearby cactus!
It was then that we all decided we should scale back our adventures and go back to things like launching rockets against the back of our brick garage. It just crushed the rockets and the engine would flip around. We considered that less dangerous than our previous activities...
Syntyr
"Wherever you go... There you are." - Buckaroo Banzai
"Inconceivable!" - Fizzinni
"Wherever you go... There you are." - Buckaroo Banzai
"Inconceivable!" - Fizzinni