h a l f b a k e r y"More like a cross between an onion, a golf ball, and a roman multi-tiered arched aquaduct."
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Rocket ice cubes
Drop 'em in, a few minutes later they fly out of the drink under rocket power, making you the most popular guy in the bar. | |
This is ripped off from the exploding and evacuated ice cube ideas as another way to get a pointless task done in a manner requiring a lot more work.
A special two sided ice cube tray that has forms for two sides of a hollow ice cube shaped like a rocket. Fill with water and freeze. Fold it over
putting the two sides together and close the tray, which is air tight and pump it with compressed air. Re-freeze it so the two sides of the rocket shaped ice cubes freeze together and seal the compressed air inside the resultant chambers within.
Drop them into drinks and as they melt, a thinner section of ice at the bottom melts first, breaching the compressed air chamber. The compressed air escapes such that the ice flys out of the drink, thus delighting the easily delighted and pissing everybody else off. "Hey! Them ice cubes's be all flyin out ma drink n such!"
What better way to say: "Hey everybody! Look at me! I'm an asshole!" A quantum leap beyond the fly in the ice cube trick.
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True, but that could be said for all noble human endeavors, from writing poetry to ballet dancing to juggling chainsaws. :) |
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Pure genius. Someone's gotta try this to see if it works...and it's not gonna be me. Next thing we need is a rim around the glass to catch all the liquid flying out. |
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Integrate colorful little paper parachutes for a safe landing. |
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The air chamber would need to be at the top of the rocket, but the opening at the bottom, to get the right orientation (unless you want the rocket to take the bottom of the glass out). |
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Correct. I figure the flight orientation fins would make the ice rocket bottom heavy for the correct orientation. You could also make them aerodynamically (hydrodynamically at first?) unstable so they would zing around all over the place unpredictably. |
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You could also have the air release "nozzle" off center so they just spin around wildly but stay in the drink. Put them in coctails with an "atomic" theme or something. Or just have one big one that spins like a pinweel and mixes the drink after being dropped in. Call the drink the cyclone or tornado or whatever. |
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Who would have thought that getting drunk could be made any more fun? |
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Cool. (sorry) You could have a non-compressed air bubble near the nose of the rocket to keep it vertical until launch. |
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The whole ice rocket is pretty heavy and wants some PSI to perform properly, maybe too much for the ice to hold. What if you make the 'melty' part at the top of a vertically-floating stout cylinder of ice, so that when the hatch at the top melted any manner of semi-solid or fluid could be launched from the 'barrel' under pressure? A "Rocket Shot" for a Margarita could be more alcohol (Grand Marnier)? Or a 'prize' for the obnoxious customer (something staining or just noxious)?
I'd like to make a Black Russian with 1/2 & 1/2 as the encapsulated Rocket Shot and turn it into a White Russian. Tequila Sunrise turns into Tequila Sunset? Great Idea! |
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//What better way to say: "Hey everybody! Look at me! I'm an asshole!" // |
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//I figure the flight orientation fins would make the ice rocket bottom heavy// |
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At that size/weight ratio I don't think aerodynamics gets into it enough to matter. |
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Probably right. These things would just fly every
which way explody style. |
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This brings back memories, it was this idea that
led me to come up with the self stirring sugar
cubes that Max thought I should have brought to
market. Still could, but can't patent it now. |
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As far as these, rather than having rockets I could
just have them spin like self stirring sugar cubes,
only because the compressed air escapes when the
thinner part melts. Kind of like those contra-
rotating fireworks. Less eye damage and you'd
have a drink that would just turn into a maelstrom
every few minutes. |
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Have then staggered with progressively thicker
plug portions so one goes off every minute or so. It
would be like having a small live animal in your
drink. |
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Why? Leave that to the guys in marketing. |
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What about a lump of dry ice inside instead? Once the "thin
bit" (of water ice) melts, the dry ice sublimes. Even if you
can't get enough thrust to launch the iceblock, it would at
least look cool, adding heaps of extra bubbliness. |
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Hey, I like that. Lots easier to do as well. |
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Although might not be a good thing to put in
cocktails. Pretty sure dry ice isn't something you
want to put in your mouth. |
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But just to do the spinning thing could work. |
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Hey Neut? I think you've got something there.
Okay, it's not exactly something you'd want people
to put in their mouth but for a science class just to
show the properties of dry ice vs ice? This would
be very entertaining. |
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The science teacher puts "very special ice cubes" in
the water and suddenly they all start shooting
around? Maybe attach them like a pinwheel sort of
deal so they all spin in the same direction. |
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Maybe it's okay to do something just because it
looks cool and gets students interested? |
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Dry ice is denser than water & water ice is LESS dense, so
the
buoyancy of the rocket-block will vary in interesting ways
as
both parts heat up. Dry ice is -80 deg, so it would be:
1: Carve dry ice into required shape (I don't think a mold
would work)
2: Suspend inside water mold
3: Fill mold with water, put back in -80 freezer
Might need to be a 2-step water molding procedure, to get
the
dry ice fully enclosed.
(I don't have easy access to dry ice, or a -80 freezer...) |
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Also, once perfected: throw them into the local swimming
pool... |
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I kind of want to actually try this. |
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It's all fun and games until you put someone's eye out. |
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//It's all fun and games until you put someone's eye out.// |
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I don't see why the fun and games has to stop at that point. |
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//It's all fun and games until someone loses an eye// |
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Then it's just a game. Find the eye. |
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Has somebody come out with a kid's game called
"You'll Put An Eye Out!" yet? |
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Maybe a sodium pellet embedded in the ice cube? |
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Well we're definitely getting away from novelty
cocktail ice cubes now. |
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Will they make a farting sound as they fly around the room? |
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