If you’ve missed the previous episodes or are new to the channel and have no idea about my firework collection videos, you can catch up on them here: ru-vid.com/group/PL-spxxtjsOdTzTjw3LmTmUj1yhuGpM8Wm&feature=shared
Where can you buy a 2 stage girandola at, and the screaming banshee? Impossible for me to find anything near that in South Carolina. I'm always the guy everyone watches to see what I'm firing off next every holiday. I need some new selection.
@@CodyBPyrotechnics I think RU-vid blocked them or they got automatically deleted because it says my comment (the one about vader shells) has a reply but that reply just doesnt load.
Cody if you ever go to tannerville PA there is a store called Brooklyn fireworks and in addition to a bunch of uniqueness the owner collects vintage fireworks and displays them all over the store. You could spend an entire day in there and not get bored. Definitely worth checking out.
Hey Cody! If you want to find some really interesting and a little bit harder to find fireworks, you should really check out the tiny firework store that they have in Coleman South Dakota. Last time I was there they had 1960s vintage whispering moon traveler's.
Nice collection,years ago I was in a fireworks store and the owner told me someone came in looking for a specific brand for a collection.Thats when I started my collection.Just wish I would have saved some from the 60's
Those bravos are worth a few hundred bucks a pack hold onto those bad boys insanely rare… You seen the collection I had and I didn’t even have one of those. I or dozens of other collectors would gladly pay you 300 bucks for just one of those packs or trade you some amazingly rare stuff… talk about amazing garage sale find… those are some of the rarest class 1 ladyfingers out there. They were made in between world war 1-2 early 1930s close to a century old
Some Advice...? I still may have a bunch of old-ish fireworks around in (safe) storage, which my grandfather/uncles had from (I think) the 60-70s... Stuff like old-school bottle rockets (from 'small' to 'whoo-boy!'), Saturn missle/whistle batteries, classic BIG rolls of black cats and ladyfingers, and so on (HuskerDos, HuskerDonts, etc). I thought the best thing to do, and my inclination is to: soak and throw 'em out- or should I keep the campy, classic, packaging? They are not SO old that i worry that they might go off if I even look at 'em funny, but I'm def not gonna light 'em. (Esp. since I suspect some may be something... well, nothing big, not even a real M-80.). The old packaging IS neat, though... Any collectable value? Anyone want em for postage cost? (Or is that stuff a dime/dozen?) Cheers!
I remember stumbling on some firecrackers I think I had about 47 years ago. There was this fireworks store east of Toledo, OH on the way to Cedar Point we'd always stop at. They were called Sunset Fireworks. I'm sure that place is probably long gone.
Hey I have an idea for these videos going forward: what if you picked up two of each(if possible) so u save one and u set off the other so u can do a dual screen. One screen shows the colletable one and the other screen shows the firework being lit so we can see what they do but not ruin ur collection.
This is a great idea and something I’ve wanted to do, but most of these are pretty expensive so buying two of each of everything in my collection would cost me like thousands of dollars :/
Not sure if its the same one i saw as a kid but that black cat utter chaos looks very similar. Kinda worked like a stickless rocket that was spin-stabilized and had a decent little break about 50 feet up.
Cody, ?? How about I set off a loud sparkly thing in my backyard at midnight, Ya think anyone will notice it????" OF course not , no one would notice it....right??? YIKES!!! Cheers, Rik Spector