Blaster
Active member
- Joined
- Jul 2019
- Messages
- 43
For some time now I've been converting away from Wooden Racks to Aluminum "Pods" and with the coming, looking like an abbreviated, season I want to suggest some of you might consider investing some of the extra time we all have, to making the change (I had a thread like this at PyroU).
Wood is Dangerous because of it's weight and the potential shrapnel it creates, taxes you and your crews time & effort, and takes up too much room to store and transport. Wood's cheap and ole' school but, if you're in this for the Long Run, it's No Bargain...
A brief history of me and my equipment progression. Started in the 80's with Steel pipe and Wood/Cardboard finale racks, manually fired with road flares (the tech of the times). Set-up was sorting shells by both size and quality (boxes came mixed) and we'd put the best shells in the ready boxes first so they got fired towards the end of the show (that was kind of the extent of it).
In the 90's it became clear that Electric Firing was the future but, if every shell now needed a separate tube, the equipment requirements seemed overwhelming (not to mention set-up & tear-down). First time I saw a Firing Trailer, I Knew that this was the Only way to go (started to build mine in '97).
First time I saw an Aluminum Pod I, Knew that this was the future of Firing for me and my, now Aging, crew (started to build mine in '14). Pods are like portable Trailer Pieces.
It went like this, since I had a trailer (@350 tubes in 4-5-6") I was making Finale Pods first. I made 6 - 3", 2 - 2 1/2", and 2 - 4". The 3" were 60 tubes, the 2 1/2 90 tubes, the 4" 30 (same as the case quantities for efficiency). It still surprises me how much time it takes to make each pod, I spent months making them, most of the Winter. Because I needed mostly 3 & 2 1/2", and they had the most welds, I made fixtures to hold everything in alignment (Aluminum welds "warp" structure much more than steel). The next Winter, 2 more of each of those sizes, and each year I added, at least, one more pod until today I have 8-3", 4-2.5", 5-4", 4-5", 3-6". So this has expanded past Finale and now allows the body of the show to come from more than just the trailers location (plus pairs/sets look like they should).
Now for the "stumbling block" for some of you. Money,,, each pod costs over $300 in materials Alone (without tubes) and, takes me at least, a week to make. Plus,,, you Have to weld them yourself. The level of skill it takes, times the Hours of Welding, makes it too expensive to Pay someone to do for you. The good news is that Welders have become much cheaper and easier to use and there's a Tremendous amount of help on the net for learning.
Again, if you're in this for the Long Haul, amortized over say the next 10yrs, you'll save enough on Labor Alone to have all this Money & Effort pay-off (you still have to Load it all, but laying-out the field and putting it all back in the truck happens So Quickly it will Amaze you
)







Wood is Dangerous because of it's weight and the potential shrapnel it creates, taxes you and your crews time & effort, and takes up too much room to store and transport. Wood's cheap and ole' school but, if you're in this for the Long Run, it's No Bargain...
A brief history of me and my equipment progression. Started in the 80's with Steel pipe and Wood/Cardboard finale racks, manually fired with road flares (the tech of the times). Set-up was sorting shells by both size and quality (boxes came mixed) and we'd put the best shells in the ready boxes first so they got fired towards the end of the show (that was kind of the extent of it).
In the 90's it became clear that Electric Firing was the future but, if every shell now needed a separate tube, the equipment requirements seemed overwhelming (not to mention set-up & tear-down). First time I saw a Firing Trailer, I Knew that this was the Only way to go (started to build mine in '97).
First time I saw an Aluminum Pod I, Knew that this was the future of Firing for me and my, now Aging, crew (started to build mine in '14). Pods are like portable Trailer Pieces.
It went like this, since I had a trailer (@350 tubes in 4-5-6") I was making Finale Pods first. I made 6 - 3", 2 - 2 1/2", and 2 - 4". The 3" were 60 tubes, the 2 1/2 90 tubes, the 4" 30 (same as the case quantities for efficiency). It still surprises me how much time it takes to make each pod, I spent months making them, most of the Winter. Because I needed mostly 3 & 2 1/2", and they had the most welds, I made fixtures to hold everything in alignment (Aluminum welds "warp" structure much more than steel). The next Winter, 2 more of each of those sizes, and each year I added, at least, one more pod until today I have 8-3", 4-2.5", 5-4", 4-5", 3-6". So this has expanded past Finale and now allows the body of the show to come from more than just the trailers location (plus pairs/sets look like they should).
Now for the "stumbling block" for some of you. Money,,, each pod costs over $300 in materials Alone (without tubes) and, takes me at least, a week to make. Plus,,, you Have to weld them yourself. The level of skill it takes, times the Hours of Welding, makes it too expensive to Pay someone to do for you. The good news is that Welders have become much cheaper and easier to use and there's a Tremendous amount of help on the net for learning.
Again, if you're in this for the Long Haul, amortized over say the next 10yrs, you'll save enough on Labor Alone to have all this Money & Effort pay-off (you still have to Load it all, but laying-out the field and putting it all back in the truck happens So Quickly it will Amaze you







