Things You'll Need:
- Magnesium
- Flint
- 6 Volt battery
- A rifle or handgun with ammo
- Camping knife
- Magnifying Glasses
- Very Fine Steel Wool
- Tinder
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Step 1
Gather a variety of tinder - wood shavings, dried grass, lint, and even small twigs - before you start. No matter what method you choose for making a fire, you will always need to start with tinder. Ball the tinder up loosely to allow plenty of air flow, and shape it into a birds nest. Have plenty of bigger sticks to add once the fire starts.
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Step 2
Use a little magnesium and flint block: Scrape a pile of magnesium shavings on your tinder and strike a spark off the flint. The magnesium will ignite and hopefully start flame in your tinder. Once it begins to smoke, hold the tinder in your hands to allow oxygen in through the bottom and blow gently from underneath.
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Step 3
Use a magnifying glass on a sunny day: Angle the magnifying glass in the sun over the tinder so that the focal point is directly on the pile. Once it begins to smoke you can encourage the flame by blowing gently on the tinder from the bottom. Broken glass, bottles or eyeglasses can also work, if their focal point is bright enough.
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Step 4
Use a 6-volt battery and steel wool: Tear the wool into a loose mass and touch it to both charges on the battery. Doing so will connect the circuit and cause a spark, and cause the steel wool to glow. Once it's hot enough, you can place it on the tinder until it catches.
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Step 5
Use bullets: Remove a bullet from its cartridge and pour half the powder on your tinder. Put the half-empty cartridge back in the gun (without a bullet), and fire it at the tinder. Be certain that your tinder is at the base of a tree or in an enclosed area because the gunfire will likely blow the tinder away and might put out the same flame it creates.
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Step 6
Use Friction: Place the point of a straight stick into a groove in a piece of bark or flat wood. Ideally, both of these pieces contain no sap or moisture. Rub the stick vigorously between your hands, while the point creates friction against the other piece of wood. Eventually the wood will heat until it creates a small ember which you can drop in the tinder nest.









Comments
someonegetmygun said
on 2/9/2009 A decent article. Would be nice to see more photos or even better, corresponding videos. Some of the methods you site can take quite a long time to have success with. If you posted a video for each method the would be learner would have a more accurate idea of what they can expect when trying each method.
benpressley said
on 12/3/2008 Comments on other's comments:
Good point meHow! Carry a good StrikeForce magnesium firestarter is helpful if you are going to carry survival items.
Said, most places you get in a survival situation don't have cell phone service.
benpressley said
on 12/3/2008 Your explanation on friction fire is vague. I know of no bark first of all that will work. Most bark is too brittle. You don't mention what types of wood are used. If you are describing a hand drill then you need a notch cut a certain way in the board to form the ember and something underneath to catch and transfer ember. If you are speaking of fireplow method then you do not 'rub stick between palms' you vigorously rub in up anbd down in groove with a split (Did you see movie 'Castaway' with Tom Hanks? My main teacher was the technical consultant for that movie.) I know. I have been teaching survival skills since 1986.
Christa981 said
on 9/12/2008 Thanks for this helpful information.
-Christa
meHow said
on 7/5/2008 Misleading title. Should be called, "How to Start a Fire With a Bunch of Stuff You Likely Won't Have Around Either--But If You Do, Why Don't You Just Have Matches?"