#138474 - 07/02/08 06:38 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: dweste]
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Member
Registered: 02/04/05
Posts: 171
Loc: Georgia, USA
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The Frost Mora would be on my list of quality gear for a bargain price.
In the pocket knife field, I have always considered Victorinox SAKs to be very good knives for the money. The one in my pocket right now has been carried every day for the past 25 years. There are a few nicks and scratches on the scales and the logo has long ago worn off, but if I don't lose it, I expect it to last longer than I do.
It is easy to overlook some of the lowly gear, but when you think about it, a BIC lighter for about $1 is a real bargain. While I carry a fire steel and waterproof matches, I light most of my fires with a BIC.
Someone already mentioned a P-38 can opener. Real cheap, but does the job.
Wendy's Spoons. Free when you eat at Wendy's. Comes wrapped. Great for eating beans out of a can.
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#138475 - 07/02/08 07:08 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: ]
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Paranoid?
Veteran
Registered: 10/30/05
Posts: 1341
Loc: Virginia, US
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Wow, sorry to hear that, Hacksaw. The times I've dealt with Ragnar he's been helpful and very quick to reply.
_________________________
"Learn survival skills when your life doesn't depend on it."
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#138476 - 07/02/08 07:19 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: Nicodemus]
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Hacksaw
Unregistered
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I'm holding to the theory that something went wrong electronically. When the bark handled Aito comes in stock again I'll try again.
For now I'll be able to play with the Puukko/Leuku combo Ben sent me. Should be waiting for me when I get home.
I ordered a bare Frosts blade too. I'm going to try to handle it myself...speaking of bargain.
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#138502 - 07/03/08 01:01 AM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: Dan_McI]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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"...Clean Sole of Boot/Shoe, 26. Pick Teeth, 27..."
Might I suggest that you reverse those???
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OBG
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#138503 - 07/03/08 01:05 AM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: Ron]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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"...Wendy's Spoons..."
Speaking of spoons, MRE spoons last forever!!!
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OBG
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#138526 - 07/03/08 04:23 AM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: OldBaldGuy]
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Old Hand
Registered: 12/10/07
Posts: 844
Loc: NYC
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"...Clean Sole of Boot/Shoe, 26. Pick Teeth, 27..."
Might I suggest that you reverse those??? I simply cut and pasted a list I found elsewhere, but I will accept that suggestion. Picking my teeth with a can opener is a practice I'd like to avoid.
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#138554 - 07/03/08 01:53 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: Dan_McI]
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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'Specially right after cleaning the soles of your boots with it!!!
_________________________
OBG
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#138557 - 07/03/08 02:05 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: OldBaldGuy]
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Hacksaw
Unregistered
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Same rule goes for a SAK tooth pick. Pick your teeth THEN clean your fingernails.
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#138593 - 07/03/08 07:41 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: ]
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Member
Registered: 11/16/06
Posts: 104
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Ziplock freezer bags (one quart and/or one gallon) and heavy-duty plastic trash bags. Their uses are limited only by your imagination.
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#138600 - 07/03/08 09:35 PM
Re: Best bargain gear
[Re: Spiritwalker]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 09/01/07
Posts: 2432
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Mora knives, the P-38, Zip-lock freezer bags, good quality SAKs. Those are all good calls.
The Bics, particularly the mini-Bics, are IMO well on their way to making most match safes and flint bars obsolete. Carry three mini-Bics, one of which is wrapped in a bit of waxed card stock and sealed in foil tape, and the odds are you will never use a match or flint. I learned how to make fire with a fire-bow and a couple of other deep-woods methods but in the end I really think I will never have any practical need of those methods. As boring and unexciting and unheroic as it may seem flipping a Bic works.
Three tiny lighters is a cheap and easy standard to set. Even the youngest untrained survivor can get good results with them.
I will add: Trash bags. Buy the thicker, larger and tougher commercial versions and you get a lot of bang for your buck. They can become sleeping bag, bivy bag over a sleeping bag, shelter, ground sheet, raincoat, emergency warming shelter if you slip in a candle, field expedient backpack, and if all else fails, a body bag.
Triangular bandage. Usually a 30" square piece of cotton muslin. So simple you can economically make your own. It pays to experiment with the size you like most. You can do a lot with a simple piece of good cloth. It is a bandage, tourniquet, hat, emergency footwear. Tie the corners up and you have a bindle, a simple cloth container for your gear. Add a stick and you have the picture of a hobo from the 30s. And you learn that a bindle-stick is indeed an efficient way of carrying a light load.
Pillow case. A simple large discount store, cotton/poly pillow case goes for $2 on sale but it is a nice sack and becomes a workable backpack. A potato, flour or gunny sacks will also do but it has been a while since i have seen any of these. A piece of light cord with the ends tied to the bottom corners completes the deal. The cord allows you to stuff gear in the sack and then loop the middle of the cord using a clove hitch over the open end. You end up with a tightly closed sack with two arm loops and a workable backpack.
Light line is always valuable. A lot of gushing noise about 440 cord gets made but any good nylon or polyester 3/16" or 1/4" line will work for most jobs. At about a third the cost. There is nothing particularly special about 440 parachute cord. Not for what it goes for. It is usually either overkill, overbuilt and overpriced for the job, or sixty years behind the state of the art for critical applications. Even for the narrow job of shroud material on a parachute it is increasingly seen as old-school.
Hardware store tarps. The 6' by 8' and 8' by 10' models are often on sale. I recently got a pack of two 8by10s for $7. And they were the silver/brown type and a step up from the cheaper, but still good, all-blue models. Two tarps, a little light line, a couple of sticks and stakes and you have a whole lot of warmth and shelter for a little money.
Dickies work clothing. For sale, and sometimes on sale, at Wal-mart and Sears are long wearing and inexpensive clothing. The thicker denim wears like iron. The thin cotton/poly blends dry quickly. Bottom line being that they often work about as well as many military and expensive camper high-tech alternatives at a fraction the cost.
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