A Crazy 1882 Rodent Trap Design. "The World's Luckiest Rat" - YouTube

Channel: Shawn Woods

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Today for Mousetrap Monday
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We're going to take a look at one of the craziest rodent traps that was ever patented in the United States.
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This was patented by James a Williams of Texas, in 1882, and he called it an animal trap.
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It doesn't look like much,
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it's a baseboard three vertical posts, we have a metal spring and back connected to a lever that goes up and down
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This lever has a rod that goes all the way to back and then there's a trigger in front, you push that down, you put
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bait under this trigger, when it's removed the spring goes up
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and this rod goes back. Now this doesn't look much like an animal trap until you add the second component of this,
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which is a pistol revolver, here I have my Smith & Wesson .22 6 shooter.
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It's unloaded, you always want to be safe when handling firearms. This slides into the grooves like this,
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It's pointed right in front of the trigger, and the way it works is this rod
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fits behind the trigger of the gun, and you set it,
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and it will go off.. when the rodent trips the front.
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Now in the Patent Application,
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William describes this trap, as an invention to provide a means by which an animal
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burrowing in the ground can be destroyed, and which gives an alarm every time it goes off so it can be reset.
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So the idea is you put this in a burrow,
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when the animal disturbs the front it will kill it, you'll hear the shot
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and you can go reset it, it will work for rats, gophers, moles.
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Now I'm sure you're curious to see how this is set ?
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I want to be very careful, but what you do is you push this front lever down, it's under the spring back here
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so it has some tension, and then we have the little trigger in front holding it in place
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Then you pull back the hammer on the gun, locks it into place, and you put that trigger right there.
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Then when the animal comes and releases the front trigger, it goes off, and it works pretty much every time.
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Now I'm going to show you how this works
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We're gonna go set it up in the field, maybe shoot an orange or a piece of fruit.
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Before I show you how this trap works. I want to give a word of caution, This trap is not safe with live rounds.
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I'm not gonna use a live round
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I don't want to let bullet ricocheting and potentially hurting someone, so I'm gonna use a blank cartridge.
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I got this at the hardware store
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they're designed for driving nails into concrete, so they provide quite a shock blast. If you saw my recent trap video
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they use blanks and it's pretty devastating on rodents, so I'm only gonna use blanks
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No projectiles, but it's more than enough to kill a rat.
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And what we're gonna do is shoot this into an orange and see how much damage it does. It's not safe
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I don't recommend it, so don't do this with live rounds.
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But we're gonna go set this up and use it, and just so you know, the language in the patent was pretty interesting
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They weren't as concerned about safety
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They said that an added benefit of this invention
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would be to use in conjunction with the door or window, to kill any person or thing opening that window or door, so..
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originally it was designed to kill rodents, but possibly even people breaking into your house.
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But we're just gonna use blanks and demonstrate how it works on fruit.
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Okay, the traps all set and ready to go, pretend the orange is a rodent, coming to nibble on the pretzel, holding that trigger, the
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guns ready to shoot, all it needs to do is have that pretzel move just a little bit, once you disturb it,
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Bang! and look at right there..
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That's going to do more than enough damage to kill a rodent.
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I've been giving a lot of thought into how I want to finish this YouTube video
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Normally when we test out a new trap, we go set it up in the barn with motion cameras and see how it works with
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real rats and mice.
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But this is a different kind of trap than any that I've tested before, because it involved a real gun, as a gun owner
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I consider that a huge
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responsibility to always operate your firearms in a safe manner, and leaving it unattended
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where it could go off, is not a good idea. It's not safe,
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It's not a good example to set, and it's probably not legal.
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I don't know the laws, against basically leaving a booby trap out, but I'm sure there's some strict penalties,
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and I just don't want to deal with that, so I do want to test this out,
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we're gonna set it up in the barn,
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but it's gonna be unloaded, if you're one of those people who are gonna complain, you want to see a rodent getting shot,
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I recently posted a video featuring the mole cat trap, above-ground with a rat.
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It fires a blank cartridge, but it was pretty devastating, I couldn't show that on my regular youtube channel,
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Its only available on my website, and i'll put the link in the description below.
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(Loud Bang)
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It would basically do the same thing as this gun trap if it was loaded, but what we're gonna
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do is we're gonna go set it up in the barn, a rat's gonna come
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trip it, and it's gonna be the luckiest rat in the world cuz all it's gonna hear is a
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'Click' instead of a boom, so hopefully you enjoy seeing this rodent trap designed from 1882 in action, even though
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it's going to be unloaded. That's just the safe thing to do let's go test it out.
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' CLICK '