 Do you ever have these sand art sculptures? You know where they're supposed to make really cool landscapes and scenes and it runs out of water. It doesn't really work anymore. Well, today we're gonna try and fix one, together. Hey there, NJRoot22.com here. We had a video, we filmed of this, fixing this sand art sculpture and we were gonna do it together and I was hoping to do it really fast. So I'm gonna cut to the chase here because it took me like 30 minutes of experimentation and failure to do it. So here's what you're gonna do. Here's what you need to fix your sand art sculpture. First, you're gonna need a 10 milliliter syringe, hypodermic needle, whatever you wanna call it. Because one milliliter that we used was not enough. It was too small and we had to make multiple holes in it, thus creating like a little bit of a leak in the sculpture, the sand art sculpture that I had to end up fixing with caulk and silicone and all that stuff. And the next mistake we made was we used a syringe needle that was too thick. It was a 1.2 milliliter and you wanna use 0.8 milliliter or thinner if you can find them. And it has to be more than 40 millimeters long which is an inch and a half. The longer the better because I ended up having to cut my syringe into 100 different pieces to squeeze it into the, what do you call it, into the frame. So I ended up kind of mucking it up pretty good. And of course you need distilled water and some food coloring. I don't even know if this thing is focused or not. I need a new camera guys. Make the food coloring to your choice and put it in a glass or whatever and suck it up and stick it in. And then you use some sort of glue or seal enter to fill the hole that you made in the frame. So that's it. I mean it was 20 minutes or 30 minutes of mucking around with the frame and it was a little bit of a learning experience. I was hoping I could do it live on the air and make it work really fast but that didn't happen. And it's hard to find these hypodermic nails. Don't ask me how I got them. And that's it. 0.8 millimeters or thinner, 40 millimeters or longer. Distilled water, food coloring and a 10 millimeter syringe. Not the one millimeter. I'm sorry, 10, yeah milliliter syringe. That'll be enough water for you. But we got it working and it looks nice for now. These things cost over $100 a piece so it was worth my $2 investment to fix it and it looks pretty good and it doesn't leak. Have a good day.