#60216 - 02/10/06 03:56 PM
Re: Homemade Fire Starters, water & wind resistent.
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Scott: All of these take spark and start to burn very quickly.... I think it's a function of the spark hitting the fiber, and the fuel feeds after the flame is established. A cotton ball without fuel will flame quickly too, it just doesn't keep a strong flame because there is no fuel.
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#60217 - 02/10/06 05:35 PM
Re: Homemade Fire Starters, water & wind resistent
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Veteran
Registered: 12/10/01
Posts: 1272
Loc: Upper Mississippi River Valley...
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Good point.
New HW heaters, too. The better HW heaters have one or two magnesium alloy anodes. Average and cheap HW heaters have a single aluminum anode. The magnesium ones work much better and will be pretty used up in an old HW heater. Lawnboy mower decks are a magnesium alloy, but have never filed / burned one so don't know if there is enough magnesium to make it worthwhile. Pure magnesium is soft as heck and burns far better than the alloys.
HTH,
Tom
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#60219 - 02/10/06 08:08 PM
Re: Homemade Fire Starters, water & wind resistent.
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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Yes, I know you're pushing these Coghlan tinders....and I'll bet they work great BUT, try to make a bunch of these while your stuck in the middle of knowhere.
Can you blow one out? Will they burn in water? BOF's are a much better fire starter.... (I need a jingle)
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#60220 - 02/10/06 09:23 PM
Re: Homemade Fire Starters, water & wind resistent.
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Member
Registered: 02/03/06
Posts: 170
Loc: TEXAS (where else?)
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I've been making my own in a pretty similar way. I use a 50-50 mix of parafin (any old candle) and the wax used to seal toilet bowls to the flange in the floor (yes I used a new wax ring). That ring wax is sticky soft and will never harden. That combination gives you a wax that is still soft, not sticky, and you can pull the starter apart to fluff the fiber even when its frozen. Candle wax by itself can get pretty hard.
If you look closely at a cotton ball, it's not really shaped like a ball but a cylinder. Make sure it's oriented up and down when you do this. I dip the cotton ball bottom in the wax for about a nickle sized spot (that was a good description of how much), and set it on a piece of parchment or wax paper that's on a cookie sheet (and forbid, do not just put it on the cookie sheet, the wife will flip). Then with a plastic spatula I squash it straight down. Hold it for a few seconds, and while keeping the pressure down, slide the spatula off. After you do a couple of them you get the hang of it and they look like little cookies. Do a bunch of them and let them cool before popping them off the paper.
They're fairly compact like that, but even better is using your vacuum food saver\sealer and make up some small bags. When you vacuum seal them, they really squash down into little biscuits. Kinda cool because you can make some little 2 or 3 paks that take up very little room in your PSK. When you use them, just peel them apart like a flaky biscuit to fluff the fibers for lighting. They burn great and are hard to blow out.
This is a fun and CHEAP project for the kids or boy or girl scout troop. They'll have fun making them, and then practice using them.
BTW The wax rings for sealing toilet flanges can be found in any hardware store (Home Depot) for about a $1.25. Just get the cheapest one, the more expensive ones have a urethane foam core and\or plastic funnel shaped flange that make them more foolproof for setting the toilet, but waste your money cause you'll just throw that stuff away anyway. It's enough wax to do a couple hundred starters when mixed 50-50. This stuff is really kinda sticky soft, so use a plastic throw away spoon to handle it.
The magnesium chips sound like a great idea.
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#60221 - 02/11/06 05:24 AM
Re: Homemade Fire Starters, water & wind resistent.
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Old Hand
Registered: 04/05/05
Posts: 715
Loc: Phoenix, AZ
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Great tinder experiments! <img src="/images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
I took a Coghlan's and pulled it all apart and soaked it in water. It will not stay lit. Even with a lighter it will catch but not stay lit.
Then I took a whole Coghlan's and soaked it in the water for about 30 seconds. I shook it off, pulled it in half and put it back together with the fuzzys sticking up. It lit easily and burned with a flame about 4" tall for about 5 minutes. It was hard to blow out.
I took another one and lit it and put it in a pan of water. It will not stay lit floating in the water.
Then I took a magnesium block and drilled out about a teaspoon of fine shavings. Then I took a Coghlan's and got the magnesium all embedded in it. I once again soaked it in water and pulled it apart. It burned nicely and flared from time-to-time. I was able to blow it out.
I think the Coghlan's work fine just the way it comes. You can get them wet and they work in the wind. They do not burn in water or if pulled apart and soaked. They do work better than PJ cotton balls. They are also not messy.
My favorite trick is to wrap half of one on the end of a stick and put the other half in the fire lay. I then light the Coghlan's on the stick and use it like a match to light the fire.
It costs three dollars for ten Coghlan's Emergency Tinder. Each burns for at least five minutes. That gives you a 4+ inch flame for about an hour.
What a deal! <img src="/images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" />
_________________________
Thermo-regulate, hydrate and communicate.
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#60222 - 02/15/06 05:25 AM
Petroleum jelly and cotton balls are TERRIBLE!
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Member
Registered: 02/03/06
Posts: 170
Loc: TEXAS (where else?)
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A couple of years ago I needed to burn some brush that I'd cleared on a property. I had some PJ and CB firestarters in my trucks bug out bag. It was towards the end of summer (around here, 100+ is common) and when I pulled them out the high heat had basically turned the PJ into WD-40 which had leaked out of zip lock bag and gotten all over everything. The petroleum had also reacted with some plastic stuff that got goey and ruined more stuff, including most of the first aid kit and waterproof matches. In all, had to throw out probably half the stuff and couldn't start the fire the easy way. It was a real eye opener. Would have been completely SOL if I didn't have a sparking mag bar. Was also difficult to get a good spark, had to scrape some gunk off first. Might have been on the way to ruining the flint too.
Just read about using chapstick as an expedient coating for cotton balls. I would rather not have to use the chapstick for that. Spent a recent weekend doing roof repair to rental in a hard, all-day wind. Didn't have any chapstick and was just miserable. Got very windburned. Got to thinking about how that would have added another bad layer to an already bad survival situation. Just like being cold and wet, that kind of stuff can really add up and sap your will to survive.
Moral here is to try the recipes\ideas on this thread. They won't leak and ruin stuff, and you won't be using up a resource that can be used on lips, face, and hands in a survival situation.
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#60223 - 02/15/06 11:06 AM
Re: Petroleum jelly and cotton balls are TERRIBLE!
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Enthusiast
Registered: 02/27/05
Posts: 232
Loc: Wild Wonderful WV
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Too much PJ in mix! A little dab will do ya! Less is more!!
_________________________
When the wolf attacks he will find that some who run with the flock are not sheep!
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#60224 - 02/17/06 09:12 PM
Re: Petroleum jelly and cotton balls are TERRIBLE!
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Newbie
Registered: 12/24/05
Posts: 28
Loc: Canada
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I just tried the recipe with the toilet flange wax addition, and it works quite well, burning for 2-3 mins. . Now I just wish I could find an easier way to grind the magnesium flakes.
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#60225 - 02/18/06 03:58 AM
Re: Petroleum jelly and cotton balls are TERRIBLE!
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Old Hand
Registered: 04/05/05
Posts: 715
Loc: Phoenix, AZ
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Now I just wish I could find an easier way to grind the magnesium flakes. Use your electric drill.
_________________________
Thermo-regulate, hydrate and communicate.
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