#69089 - 07/14/06 06:47 PM
I used the Spark-Lite
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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I just went on "test" survival camping trip (2 day, 1 night). I had the bare equipment. Major stuff included:
REI Lookout Pack Doug Ritter/Adventure Medical Survival Kit Plexiglas Fire Piston Brigade Quartermaster IMPS net (hammock) North Face Rock 22 tent
The main point of this trip was fire starting, I had about 5 different methods available that I brought along to try out and test.
I'll start with the hardest method and finish up with the easiest.
First, I tried a magnesium fire starter. You know, the type where you shave the magnesium and then use the spark insert to light the pile of shavings. This was really the hardest and most time consuming. Mind you, the weather was great, however hot but no wind or rain. I couldn't imagine trying to use this method with wind or freezing cold hands. I had ideal conditions and it was still hard. The hardest part was making the shaving pile. I first just started shaving them onto a foliage-clear dirt area I made. The shavings went everywhere into nooks and crannies into the dirt. Then the magnesium block just stopped producing shavings lol. I had a nice sharp Kershaw knife. I tried using my buddies knife with serrations but that didnt do as well either. Finally after about 30-45 mins of try to shave, collect, and pile up the shavings i had enough to light. This is also taking place in North Carolina woods. I sparked it a few times in the air to make sure i could get a decent spark. Then aimed it at the magnesium shavings and sparked it. Two things happened: the spark insert decided to not spark as well and the shavings went everywhere because I shaved too hard and my knife hit the pile. You can't shave with a lesser stroke than I gave to get good sparks. So I sighed, got the shavings back together with my tender by it. I shot sparks all over the shavings but they didnt light...I tried this for about 10 more mins before they flared up. My tender caught by the grace of God. (I didn't see this happening if there was wind or dampness). And after an hour+, I had a fire. This was very time and energy consuming, also with luck involved. I don't recommend this method at all. But the magnesium starter is better than nothing at all.
Next, the fire piston. It's a device that uses air compression to heat up a small bit of tender in the device enough to form a small coal. The trick is getting the coal into something that will burn. I made a bird's nest of pine needles and bits of leaves to dump the coal in. It's a tiny coal this thing produces. The plus side with the fire piston is as long as you have tender around you, you can use it. The fire piston never runs out. Again, I suggest you google the term to learn all about it. This wasn't a bad method but still hard. It takes a while ( plus blowing ) to get a flame but it'll work. Calming down, and using patience will get you a fire. Prepare what you'll dump the coal in before you start slamming the fire piston. It will 99% of the time produce a coal on the first attempt. After that, it's up to you. I give it a 6.5 out of 10 for ease. A 9.5 for reliability.
Next I tried the Spark-Lite. I have never even attempted to use this method before. Other than flicking the spark wheel a few times to make sure it sparked, I've never used this before. I followed the instructions supplied with the Doug Ritter kit. It suggested fraying the cotton peice a bit then flicking the sparks into the fray. So I make a A-Frame fire (I dont know how many people are familier with this setup). A nice, dry dead tree was right near by to supply the wood I used in all my experiments. It was perfect for a fire. Anyway, I mushed up the wood into sawdust, Added a few small dry "snappy" sticks to the sawdust pile and built an A shape around the pile. The triangle of the A is where the kindling goes for those not familier. The open end of the A goes downhill or towards the wind. The "cross" stick of the A sits on the two that form the upside-down V to allow air to pass underneath. There is your A-Frame fire description. Anyway, I had this setup all ready to go. I have my frayed wax-impregnated cotton ready to go and my spark-lite in hand. I hold the cotton near the spark-lite and give it a flick. It ignites on the first flash. The cotton doesn't all go up at once. Instead it has a nice, hot glow. It's slow burning too, so it allows me to place the cotton where I want to. It goes under the "cross" stick and into the tender. That catches easily like I predicted and from there on it just gets better.
I was VERY impressed with the spark-lite system. So easy. I could see this working in wind and rain. The only downside is the cotton tabs. There's not an endless supply of them in the woods. So camping, go with a lighter. Survival, go with the spark-lite.
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#69091 - 07/14/06 11:40 PM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Old Hand
Registered: 04/05/05
Posts: 715
Loc: Phoenix, AZ
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Caleb,
Some of us pyromaniacs like to take a large ferro rod, like the the MagFire Pro, and look for natural tinder that we can light with it. It is the sparker rod part, not the Magnesium. My favorite is a pile of thin wood curls from whittling a piece of pine.
_________________________
Thermo-regulate, hydrate and communicate.
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#69092 - 07/15/06 12:33 AM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Old Hand
Registered: 03/19/05
Posts: 1185
Loc: Channeled Scablands
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It sounds like the fire tabs where the real winner here. Did you try the other sparkers with the tabs?
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#69093 - 07/15/06 01:22 AM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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I've been emailing with Oak Norton of SPARKLITE. There was a short production batch that got into the supply and are defective. If anone recently bought a SPARKLITE and encounters poor performance please contact him. The design has been recently tweaked, with the sparking wheel turning with more resistance. This will increase the dependability and spark. I will be receiving some and post a review.
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#69094 - 07/15/06 02:35 AM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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And for sparking on the magnesium block's ferrocerium, the back of a saw blade, be it the woodsaw in a multitool (Leatherman is very good, Gerber is good, can't saw first hand or observation for SOGs or Vics) or a SAK (the Vics are good, Wengers are OK), is better than trying a knife blade. All you are doing is beating on the edge while getting a minimum number of sparks.
Best bet, in my experince, is a bit of hacksaw blade. Snap a piece off, add a hole if needed so you can't loose it. And practice. People try to wittle on the mag block, and that isn't what you want to do. You want to scrape, like it was a hide or an arrow shaft- no sharp edges or points needed or wanted. Just a nice, crisp edge. I recommend getting a second one to practice with. And don't get a cheap one, buy the Doans ones, they are the best.
I case you couldn't tell, I like my magnesium blocks, but I was given my first one when I was 9. I've been playing with them for a while. :P But given my druthers, I'd rather use a sparklite, they are faster.
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#69095 - 07/15/06 03:35 AM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Registered: 04/24/06
Posts: 398
Loc: Tennessee
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I tied a tiny needle file to my magnesium blocks. I took a regular small flat needle file and cut its length in half to about the same length as the magnesium block. I then sharpened one edge with a grinder, and burned a hole in the plastic orange handle for a lanyard connecting it to the magnesium block. I used the file to get shavings off of the block and the sharp edge I had ground onto it was used to produce sparks. Worked for me at least.
_________________________
Me, a vegetarian? My set of teeth came with canines.
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#69096 - 07/15/06 04:46 AM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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Oh, I like. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> A good file is always nice to have.
How long does it take to get a good pile with a needle file? I've seen pictures of similiar with a cut down bastard file, which I think might work better just becuase there is more to hang onto.
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#69097 - 07/15/06 12:40 PM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Veteran
Registered: 12/12/04
Posts: 1204
Loc: Nottingham, UK
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I have a fire piston, although I've not used it much. Mine needs to be lubricated with vasaline or similar. I can imagine running out of vasaline when I still had tinder. Also, I think the device has a minimum size in order to work; anyway, mine is physically large and too big to carry.
I like the Sparklite, especially as it is so small. I believe anything which makes sparks is good because it can be used with improvised tinder.
Similarly the Sparklite tinder is good because it can be used with anything that makes a spark or flame. In fact for a while I was using them with a ciggy lighter for lighting hex fuel, because I found that worked easier than the lighter on its own. (Nowadays I use tinder card for that because it is cheaper, but QuickTabs are better because they are more waterproof.)
Currently I reckon the best bet is a flint-ignition lighter. When it has fuel it's the easiest thing to use, anyone can understand it and it works one-handed. Liquid fuel ones have the drawback that the fuel evaporates, but the advantage that it is easier to replace the fuel eg with meths or petrol which is likely to be available in my urban environment. Imco models seem less prone to evaporation than Zippo. When the fuel runs out, you can hope to improvise tinder for the spark.
_________________________
Quality is addictive.
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#69098 - 07/15/06 03:38 PM
Re: I used the Spark-Lite
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Registered: 04/24/06
Posts: 398
Loc: Tennessee
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It did just take some patience, but when I used it, I had oodles of time. The shavings were so fine I took great care to find the perfect leaf to hold them in to keep from losing them -- I used huge sycamore leaves.
Following Ray Mear's "holly leaf" method seems wise. If I recall right (so don't quote me), didn't he use two holly leafs stacked? The top one was "skeletonized" through natural decomposition. The shavings would be sandwiched between the leaves, using it to shower with sparks?
_________________________
Me, a vegetarian? My set of teeth came with canines.
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