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20 Shot, Festival Ball, Fiberglass Mortar Rack
The Mighty Fourth is closing on us and you haven't even begun designing your fireworks display, right? "I've got plenty of time," you say. And every year, you think to yourself, "Man! I need to buy more mortar racks." And every year you wait 'til the eleventh hour, and end up either reloading your mortars during the show, or worse, using the cheap cardboard mortar tubes that come with your reloadable shells! Well, why not invest an hour or two right now to get ready? Here's a nice little "do it yourself project" that you can finish in about an hour if you have everything ready to go. This year you can get started early and paint the sky with festival balls the night of the Mighty Fourth of July!
20 shot, festival ball, fiberglass mortar rack
Materials needed:
- Baseboard: 1 pc. 1 x 5 plank, 23 inches long.
- End boards: 2 pcs. 1 x 5 planks, 11 inches long
- Center rails: 2 pcs. 1 x 2 furring strips, 21-1/2 inches long
- Side rails: 4 pcs. 3/8 inch thick plywood, cut
2-1/2 x 32 inches
- 20 fiberglass festival ball mortar tubes (#PL3182)
- 46 pcs. 1-1/2 inch drywall screws
Tools Needed:
- Wood saw (table-saw or chop saw if you cut your own wood pieces)
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Assembly:
Safety: The mortar rack you just finished may feel stable on a perfectly level, flat surface. But it will need to be supported when it is in use. This can be done by adding support legs or braces to the ends of the mortar rack, or staking the mortar rack in place, or screwing several mortar racks together to form a larger footprint. It's not important how you secure your mortar racks, just that you do secure them.
The orientation of your mortar rack to the audience is critical to their safety. If a shell explodes inside a mortar tube, it will tend to blow out the weakest part of the mortar rack. The weakest part of this rack are the plywood side rails. And if the side rails are blown out, this could mortar tubes to fall over. So, it is important to orient your mortar rack so that any falling tubes would be aimed away from your audience. This prevents mortar shells from being fired directly into the audience, which can be very dangerous. Therefore, when you set up your display, orient your mortar rack so one end board is facing the crowd. See figure F below.
 Figure F: Safest mortar rack orientation toward audience--perpendicular to them. In the event of a failure the mortar tubes will fall parallel to your audience. Note stabilizers on each end and stakes holding the mortar rack in place. |
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