well we performed a fairly good one. What you need is a 10mL and 2 mL pipette(i think thats the one, its the one with a tap you use in titration.)
What you then do is get two measuring cylinders, fill one to 100mL, leave the other one empty. Then you turn the 10mL upside down, put it in the full cylinder place your thumb over the open tap and transfer this water to the other test tube. Then use the 2 mL one to transfer some of this water back to cylinder A. What will hapeen is that the water level in cylinder A will slowly lower, decreasing the amount of water being transferred to cylinder B, but at the same time the level in cylinder B will gradually rise, causeing slightly more water being transferred BACK. This will lead to fwd reaction = rev. reaction, meaning equilibrium. This works fairly well, but it is only a model.
The second part to the experiment involves pouring about 10mL water into cylinder A, then continuing with the above process, modelling an equilibrium that has to shift. Hope this all helps, good luck in your exams
--jetfan--