1. Screw eye ring into wood. 2. Pull firing pin back and insert safety pin. 3. Insert primer into muzzle end. 4. Screw the muzzle end and the body with firing pin end together, through the eye ring. 5. Pull firing pin back and set cotter pin. 6. Attach trip wire with appropriate tension. 7. Remove safety pin. 8. Wait for coyote, racoon, squirrel, bear, skunk, deer, panther, alligator, bobcat, intruder to trip alarm. 9. Shit pants. 10. Grab fashlight and shine wildly about while yelling, "who the f*ck is there?!?" 11. Grab gun,...and hope you don't kill anything unnecessarily.
i like the smaller one just a simple tube shape, less work to build with no fu-fu on it. but should be easer to set up with ram-set blank .22 cartridges.
i would say NO to being in your hand. might not “blow up” but would most likely not feel good in your hand. bear spry would be better there . but what about if the main body was printed in a machine? think keep cost down so no worry's about always having to find them for reuse. nylon blocks, might even work, but then how about better hard cardboard 1/8 in thick. tubes? just for the main body. not sure about the ends. needs metal there. need to keep costs down low for desaposable units.
I just order a Fith Ops brand 209 primer trip line alarm that looks nearly identical as the one in this video, but it is black. I ordered it on amazon.ca, and it came to around $50 CDN. It should arrive early next week.
I wish they would make a version that uses .22 cal Ramset loads or .27 cal Hilti loads. These are available in countries where you cannot buy or posses primers or reloading components.
@@jeffwazney7657 made my own, no issues at setting off Ramset loads. Choose the spring wisely. One can always change out the spring if you have a good source for them at your hardware store.
@@bruhbruh13968 Yes it is common here,But my actual last name is Ngo not Nguyen,my grandfather changed it back to 1940s as he evacuated from Japanese and grand fermine. Nguyen was an modern era 19th century,There were Ngo,Dinh,Le,Ly,Tran eras hundreds years ago.But we are abundant of other last name such as Vu(Vo),Hoang,Trinh,Mac...etc sometimes Tong,those are similar to Chinese eras and last names. It's not mentioned the other in 54 ethnic groups in our country,they have weird names and cultures.
@@ronpaurys3265 I looked into it more, and you don't need a PAL for anything to do with reloading. You can get primers, powder, casings, and bullets no problem. Sometimes the store will require you to have a PAL to get primers, but this isn't a federal requirement. Doesn't really matter anyway because I can just go get my PAL in a few weeks when I'm 18, I was just curious.
I would imagine that depends on where you live. Each US state has different laws. I don't need any thing to buy them where I am [ other than to be 18 or older]. Places like Massachusetts, New York and California you'll have to jump through hoops.
@Dennis Adrian Is Instapwn safe? This website is a TOTAL scam. Make sure you cancel payments from this website because if you don't they will take money from you EVERYDAY !!! This website isn't legit like they say it is .
Not so. Maybe you misunderstood what I meant by stealth-fully? Ive been playing with it for over 4 years now on my kayak camp excursions and I have made a few adjustments that has increased its force multiplier capabilities. @@darryljones6129
I cant believe you just screwed on a live primer with pressure on it. It comes with 2 pins so you don't do something stupid. After you set the firing pin and after you set the safety pin then you screw in the primer.
As long as you don't pull on it you should be ok man, normal blank rounds here in germany are shipped in plastic boxes 100 cases per box, i think a primer can handle a little metal touching the backside as long as you don't hit that thing on a table what i would suggest you never do to anything with ammo inside ( I know most modern guns are at least drop safe, i still wouldn't like to play squash with a loaded one no matter how many safetys
A much less expensive device would be a "personal alarm" for around $9.00 ($8.43 at Home Depot). When tripped, it will continue to sound until the trip pin is reinserted giving a clear direction of sound. Simply glue the alarm to a piece of 1 X 2 for mounting to a tree, post, etc.
This is the most save way to do... Or would you like the screw on the cap with the primer when the pin already set? When something goes wrong you will hurt your finger. If you set the pin at last and you let it go, it only hurt your ears 😉 But I guess u are a pro 🤣