(An assignment of his, which is due tomorrow morning)

The sub has to float, sink to the bottom of the tank and resurface.
He was allowed to use a hose attached to the sub, but I talked him out of that because he'd get extra credit if the sub performed it's task untouched and untethered.
We had about five or six failed attemps, but decided to try just one more time...
Here's what we did;
Took a water bottle and cut it in half, then cut a section out to make the bottle about 6" shorter.
Taped 4 quarters to the bottom for ballast.
Drilled 4 equally spaced water inlet holes around the perimeter about 2 1/2" up from the bottom.
Drilled a hole in the cap to loosely hold a toothpick.
On the exterior side of the cap, we placed a foam float onto the toothpick.
On the interior side of the cap we placed another float onto the toothpick, which was to hopefully become a water shut off valve.
We then screwed the cap onto the upper section of the bottle and placed two Alka Seltzer tabs on the lower end of the toothpick.
(He thought it was pretty neat, drilling holes in the seltzer tablets)

Once secured, we the attached the lower half of the bottle to the upper half of the bottle with duct tape.
We filled up the sink, held the sub in the water and waited for the water level to rise close to the level of the four holes, then stood back to see what happened....
It floated, then started to sink and plumeted to the bottom.
The valve poped up an I thought we were home free as the seltzer tablets kicked into high gear.
Problem was, we had a leaky valve... Our sailors were running out of air!!!
After several attemps at trying different materials for valves, we went back to square one, gooped some petroleum jelly to the underside of the bottle cap, hoping that would solve our leaky valve problem.
Sink or swim, this was it ... as it was getting late.
You should have seen the look in my kid's eye when his sub popped back up to the surface!
He was pumped!!!
You should see my kitchen.
