Why a Sparkler Goes Out in Water but Keeps Burning When Taped
A Simple Trick That Breaks Logic
Drop a sparkler into water.
It instantly goes out.
Now wrap the same sparkler with tape, drop it into water again —
and it keeps burning.
No electricity.
No fuel added.
No chemical change.
Just tape.
At first glance, this looks like a trick or a fake video.
But the explanation is pure science — and surprisingly elegant.
This article explains exactly why a sparkler behaves differently in water when taped, using real physics, chemistry, and combustion principles.
What Is a Sparkler Made Of?
A Firework stick is not just a stick with fire.
It is a carefully designed solid fuel system.
Typical sparkler composition includes:
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Metal fuel (iron or aluminum powder)
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Oxidizer (potassium nitrate or similar)
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Binder material
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Steel wire core
The key point:
👉 A sparkler carries its own oxygen source.
That’s why it burns differently than a candle.
Why a Normal Sparkler Goes Out in Water
Let’s start with the basic case.
What Happens When You Put a Sparkler in Water?
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Water rapidly cools the burning tip
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Heat is absorbed faster than it can be produced
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Combustion temperature drops below ignition point
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Reaction stops
This is not because:
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Oxygen disappears
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Fuel disappears
It’s because heat is removed too efficiently.
Water is an extremely effective heat absorber.
The Role of Heat in Combustion
Combustion requires three things:
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Fuel
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Oxidizer
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Heat
This is called the fire triangle.
In water:
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Fuel is still present
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Oxidizer is still present
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Heat is removed
No heat = no fire.
What Changes When You Tape the Sparkler?
Tape changes nothing chemically.
But it changes everything physically.
When you tape a firework stick:
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Water cannot reach the burning core directly
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Heat loss is reduced
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Combustion temperature stays high
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The reaction continues
The tape acts as a temporary thermal barrier.
Why the Sparkler Still Burns Without Air
A common misconception is that fire always needs air.
That’s not true here.
Firework sticks burn because:
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The oxidizer is inside the sparkler
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Oxygen does not need to come from air
This is why:
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Firework sticks can burn underwater (briefly)
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They behave differently than candles or matches
Tape Does NOT Make the Fire Stronger
Important clarification:
The tape:
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Does not add fuel
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Does not add oxygen
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Does not make the fire “stronger”
It simply slows heat loss.
Think of it like insulation, not ignition.
Ratelman Experiment: Sparkler in Water Test

Materials Used
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Standard firework stick
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Electrical tape (or similar)
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Bowl of water
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Fire-safe surface
Experiment Steps
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Light a firework stick
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Place it directly into water
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Observe immediate extinguishing
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Wrap a new sparkler with tape
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Light it and submerge again
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Observe continued burning
Results
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Untaped sparkler goes out instantly
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Taped firework stick continues burning briefly
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Flame follows internal combustion path
No tricks.
Just physics.
Why the Flame Eventually Stops Anyway
Even with tape, the firework stick does not burn forever.
Eventually:
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Heat builds up inside the tape
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Tape degrades or melts
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Water reaches the core
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Combustion stops
The tape only delays heat loss — it doesn’t prevent it permanently.
Why This Is Not a Chemical Reaction With Tape
Some people think the tape reacts with fire.
That is incorrect.
The tape:
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May melt
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May burn slightly
But it is not responsible for the sparkler burning underwater.
The sparkler burns because it is designed to do so.
Comparison: Sparkler vs Candle in Water
Candle
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Needs air oxygen
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Goes out immediately in water
Sparkler
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Carries its own oxidizer
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Can burn briefly underwater
Tape only highlights this difference.

Why This Experiment Goes Viral
This experiment works online because:
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It challenges intuition
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It uses simple materials
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The result is visual and immediate
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The explanation feels counterintuitive
It looks impossible — until you understand it.
Is This Dangerous?
When done properly, risk is low, but caution is essential.
Safety Rules
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Always use water as a safety medium
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Do not hold near face
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Use fire-resistant tape only
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Perform in controlled environment
This is a science demonstration, not a stunt.
Common Myths About Sparklers in Water
Myth 1: Tape feeds oxygen
False. Oxygen is internal.
Myth 2: Water puts out all fires
False. Not all fires behave the same.
Myth 3: This breaks physics
False. It perfectly follows thermodynamics.
Myth 4: It’s fake or edited
False. It’s repeatable and real.
The Real Science Lesson Here
This experiment teaches a powerful concept:
Fire is not just about oxygen — it’s about heat balance.
If heat production exceeds heat loss:
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Fire continues
If heat loss dominates:
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Fire stops
Tape shifts that balance temporarily.
Advanced Variations You Can Try
Different Tape Types
Electrical tape vs fabric tape.
Partial Wrapping
Leave gaps to observe combustion behavior.
Slow-Motion Recording
Watch how sparks escape through tape gaps.
Each variation reveals more about heat transfer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does a taped sparkler burn underwater?
Because heat loss is reduced.
Does tape add oxygen?
No.
Is this safe?
Yes, with proper precautions.
Why does it stop eventually?
Water still absorbs heat over time.
Is this chemistry or physics?
Mostly thermodynamics and combustion physics.
Final Thoughts: Fire Is a Balance, Not a Mystery
A Firework stick doesn’t burn because it’s in air.
It burns because its internal system allows it.
Tape doesn’t create fire.
It protects heat.
This experiment shows that:
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Fire follows rules
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Water doesn’t magically stop combustion
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Understanding heat explains everything
Exactly the kind of insight Ratelman is about.
Watch the Full Sparkler Water Experiment
This article is based on a real Ratelman experiment video demonstrating why a sparkler behaves differently in water when taped.
Watch the full clip to see:
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The side-by-side comparison
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Flame behavior
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Safety handling
More experiments coming soon. Stay curious. Stay Ratelman.