Greetings everybody. I'm just going to give a quick review on a piece of gear I tested lately. This wasn't under actual survival circumstances, but given then simplicity of the experiment, it may as well have been. I give you the Bison Design Survival Pod Keyring:



The key fob (which is a better description) is sold at REI and I bought an orange one. I carried it around but thought since it's wrapped in 550 cord, never to be reconstituted if opened, I figured I'd like a little confidence in a piece of survival gear I toted with me pretty much any time I had my keys. So I opened it up and said if it's worth it, I'll drop another $15.00.

Before we unwrap the 550, let me just say that the fob itself is light and doesn't add too much (but some) to a key ring w/ keys. It's woven pretty good and after about 2 months of carry, it didn't fray open. That's not to say it won't ever. It just didn't on me. It is designed to open with only the hands.

And now, the inner contents (lighter not included, for comparison only):



This is how the contents appear directly out of the key fob. The process to open it is not a piece of cake. Unweaving the 550 is easy and produces two lengths (more on that later). The insides are then wrapped, very tightly, in a length (3") of black duct tape. Getting this tape unwound was hard. It's duct tape! Sticky and strong. It also doesn't fare to well wrapping around such a small diameter. You can see the end of it is stuck to itself.



Now, the packaging does give a description as to what's in it so you don't have to open it and find out. I read the contents before I purchased it and concluded that it is nothing more than a fire starter. Yes, I know there are a million uses for duct tape and 550. The 550 is two, 2-foot lengths. The REI website says two 4 ft. lengths. You look at the pic and tell me if it's two 4 ft. lengths (barring gutting the 550). And besides maybe a field bandage, 3 inches of duct tape isn't exactly a lot of duct tape. So for all intents and purposes, I'm calling this a fire starter. Here are the fire starting components minus one 5-inch piece of thin jute twine:



From left to right: ferro rod, "knife sheath", and "knife". The ferro rod produced sparks with the included "knife", so right there, it kinda passed the test. If this were Mythbusters, producing sparks with the included gear would already get this kit a "Plausible". Next I tested it with the included jute twine. Since the twine is not in the picture, you can guess the result. I frayed the super thin piece of jute into about a Quarter sized mess of jute hair. With a couple strikes of the ferro rod, it was ablaze. So does this kit function as a fire starter? Yes, it sure does. But 4 feet TOTAL of 550 and 3 inches of duct tape is better than nothing I suppose.

You probably noticed the black thing between the ferro rod and the knife. That is the knife sheath. It was badly damaged when I was opening the kit. The duct tape was really stuck to that thing and sorta ripped it apart. I'm not sure why there's a knife sheath in this kit. Even in functioning form, it seems like it would simply fall off. At first I thought it was char cloth but was like no, this is vinyl? A question I can answer right now is how sharp the knife is. Sharp enough to cause sparks. It's not sharp enough to shave my arm hair, but with enough pressure, it feels like it could cut. Well, that sums up my review. Hope this helped if you were thinking about getting or not getting this piece of gear.

P.S. Would I buy another one? If I happen to find an extra $15 in my pocket when I'm at REI, I think I would. I rate this a 7/10.