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Making a Pop Pop boat - Fizzics Education

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Make a pop pop boat

Make a pop pop boat

Follow FizzicsEd 150 Science Experiments:

You will need:

  • One 600 mL plastic soft drink bottle, cut in half lengthways using scissors.
  • One tea-light candle.
  • Matches or cigarette lighter.
  • 25 cm of 6 mm copper tubing.
  • BBQ Firelighter. We’ve found this to be far more reliable than the candle powered versions.
  • One tub of water.
  • Hacksaw to cut the tubing to size
  • A bench vice-to hold the tubing safely.
  • A drill press with 3.5 mm drill bit-to clean out the holes.
  • Two hand pliers to bend the copper tube into shape.
  • Safety goggles
  • Adult supervision!

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How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - materials needed
1 How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - cutting the plastic bottle lengthways

Cut your soft drink bottle in half lengthways.

2 How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - cutting the pipe withe a hacksaw

Fit your copper tube in the bench vice and use a hacksaw to cut a length of 6mm copper tubing to a 25cm length. The ends of the copper will need a small drill bit to clean out the metal burrs that can cover the opening of the tubing (we used a drill press for safety).

Use the pliers to bend the copper pipe into the shape as shown below.

3 How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - ready to launch!

Separate the tea-light candle from its metal holder and arrange the materials in the boat as shown below. The candle acts as a counterweight for the copper tubing at the back of the boat.

4 How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - back of the pop pop boat

Cut notches in the bottle so that the tubing can rest in the back of the boat.

5 How to make a pop pop boat science experiment - using the candle as ballast for the boat bow

Add the firelighter the metal container and you’ve set the boat up!

Now put in in some water, light the firelighter and watch it go! You may need to pre-fill the tubing with water to speed the process up. Try filling the tube and then pouring most of the water out so the inside of the tube is damp.

If there are balance issues you can sort this out with additional weights (use metal nuts if needed). Make sure that the tubing is bent so that it can reach the surface of the water. You may need to make slight adjustments to this design but in essence, this is a robust science experiment that kids will love to build. Enjoy!

6 A man holding a blow torch onto a white tile whilst wearing safety glasses

Get the Unit of Work on Heat Energy here!

  • What actually is heat?
  • How does heat move through different materials?
  • How does heat change the properties of materials and more!

Includes cross-curricular teaching ideas, student quizzes, a sample marking rubric, scope & sequences & more

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8 Teacher showing how to do an experiment outside to a group of kids.

Online courses for teachers & parents

– Help students learn how science really works

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Why Does This Happen?

Heat expands water. The firelighter flame heats the water inside the tubing which then pushes out of the tubes as a tiny bit of steam and heated water, producing a small amount of force to send the boat forwards. This shows the idea that objects will move in the opposite direction to a pushing force, think of Newton’s 3rd Law of Motion which states that “for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction.”

The expelled water out of the tubing creates a temporary low-pressure area within the tubing coil. Any remaining steam inside the coiled tube condenses back into liquid water, further reducing the pressure. The water from the tub is pushed into the copper tubing by the surrounding air pressure, which is then heated and the cycle repeats!

Variables to test

  • Does it matter how many coils you do for the copper tubing?
  • Try different angles of the tubing into the water
  • Vary the weight in the boat
  • Vary the shape of the boat

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