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2 straight walled, 2 liter bottles with caps
5 minute epoxy (about $4.00 at craft stores)
Electrical tape
Small paper cup
Toothpick
Drill
½ drill bit
Candle
Matches
Pliers
Large nail
Sand paper, medium grit
Food coloring (your choice of color)

















































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when I went to Brasil I was dumb enough not to have checked which side water turned when emptying from a tub in Europe, so when I got there I never really found out !!!…
childish, isn't it ?… (I'm 63 !!!!…)
Thanks
Brian
You can go faster with a fluid of lower viscosity or if the bottle is larger diameter.
Angular momentum is speed times distance from the axis, and the distance has gone down, so conservation means it must have speeded up!
It's like tornadoes, that's how they get such incredibly high wind speeds.
so, how do you keep the water from all running out of the top bottle while you are swirling it up? and what effect does changing the hole size have?
Using the PVC pipe makes the joint very strong so little kids can go nuts on it with no issues of breaking the joint, etc.
Side note - I used to work in a HS science lab, and used distilled water to prep most of the chemistry. Flipping a 5 gallon water jug's spout into the 20 gallon large bottle - the water would take a while to flow from the 5 on top down into the 20 below. Glub --- glub --- g l u b -- g l u b .....
To speed up the transfer process, I used to give the full 5 gallon on top a quick swirl, which set up a vortex and allowed the entrained air in the lower jug to move up through the restriction while the water in the top jug flowed down and filled the main one. Every so often the kids would glance into my prep lab and see the tornado, and their eyes would go wide.
Later I worked in a store that sold all sorts of items, and one was a Tornado Tube - you attached the two bottles to the threaded tube.
Sunshiine