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is there any way to ignite fireworks wirelesly? would a remote control power transistor work in any way or is that just for lights?

2006-10-01 20:08:27 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

is there a way to detonate them from a further distance?

2006-10-01 20:12:54 · update #1

o those are two n's not an m ... my mistake Dunny lol

2006-10-01 20:18:37 · update #2

3 answers

The cheapest way is to do buy the following:
-Cheap remote control car.
-Graphite one inch long. (You can get it from any pencil core, the best will be the wide pencils used for construction).
-Relay (3V input, 18 -24V Current) (You can buy it from any electronic shop).
-Two 9 volts batteries.
-4 Feet of wires.

Open the car, disconnect the motor wires from the motor, and connect both wires with the relay input, you will have three connectors points left from the relay, you will only use two of them that closes the circuit.

Now get the two nine volts batteries and connect the negative side from battery A with the positive side of battery B, then connect the positive side of battery A with one side of the Relay. Connect one side of a two feet wire with the other side of the Relay, and then connect the other side of the wire with one side of the Graphite, now connect another two feet wire from the negative side of battery B to the other side of the Graphite.

Now when drive the car forward or backwards, the graphite will ignite, now it is your turn to think how to attach your fire works with it.’ Good Luck…

You can ask for any more explanations.

2006-10-01 20:36:55 · answer #1 · answered by junaidi71 6 · 1 0

Wireless ignition really needs to be encoded to prevent anyone other than yourself igniting the fireworks. I found the attached patent on this.
It seems most people are using wires still, see atatched link to firework supplier. However they provide remote handheld igniters you will still need to wire the firework to the control box.

Electrical Firing System, Remote Control, 12 Cue

New for 2005. This is the lowest-priced remote control firing system we know of. This Chinese import compares favorably to American systems selling for 3-4 times as much.

It is 12-cue (or channel) system. Remote control firing systems do not need a long cable between the firing buttons and the field modulet. Use it to remotely fire one or more electric matches per cue/channel. Each cue/channel can fire multiple electric matches wired in series (daisy-chained). Each system consists of two parts, a field module and a hand-held remote control.

Field Module. The field module is used to connect all electric matches to your system. It is housed in a 5 inch x 7 inch x 2.5 inch thick plastic case and uses 12 1.5 volt (18 volts total) AA batteries (not included) or 110 volt AC power (note that batteries must stay in this particular device for AC power to work). On the top panel is a key-lock switch to turn power on and off. A rocker switch lets you switch between Test and Fire modes, with red indicator lights for each. There are 12 pairs of clips for each electric match or cue on top, and 12 red indicator lights to test circuit continuity on each channel. A fold-down, extendable antenna is located on the top edge.

Remote Control. A handheld Remote Contol lets you fire your fireworks devices from up to 500 feet away. Each handheld has an extendable antenna to communicate with the Field Module, 12 numbered push-buttons corresponding to the 12 channels on the Field Module, and a black sliding on-off switch so the remote can be disabled for safety. The Remote Control uses a 12 volt battery (supplied). It communicates with the Field Module at 315Mhz, and each set uses discrete codes. This means that you can use as many of these sets as you want in one display, without having one Remote Control unintentionally firing fireworks devices on other Field Modules.

2006-10-02 03:10:40 · answer #2 · answered by Chris C 2 · 0 0

yes set them on fire and roll them at the fireworks or make them touch the string it would work

2006-10-02 03:16:50 · answer #3 · answered by Dunny! 2 · 0 0

Yes, ask Osama, he'll show you.

2006-10-02 04:38:51 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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