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Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

author:Youth Takutoshi

If you want to get a fire source in the wild.

Although you can use a lighter or match or flint to ignite it, what if the lighter is lost, there is no gas or fuel? What about matches that get wet and flints that are lost?

At this time, other fire methods are required.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Outdoor survival box PSK

The most heard thing should be drilled wood for fire.

Drilling wood for fire: refers to the ignition of flammable materials such as hay through friction heating.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Here are some ways to survive fire in the wild: you can try it when you have time.

1. Original drilling wood fire method: You can use this when you are alone, use wooden soft wood as a drill board, because the wood is soft and the friction force is large, and then find a hard branch as a drill.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Drill wood for fire

Then fix the wood to a tree or ground and rotate the drill hard until Mars ignites the velvet. The primitive drill wood fire method is not so easy to achieve, requiring patience and skill.

2. Double drill wood for fire: This is done by two people, one person uses wood to fix the drill shaft, the other uses a rope to wrap a few turns around the drill shaft, and then quickly pulls back and forth. frictional heating ignites hay ignition; This method saves effort.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Double drill wood for fire

3. Planer fire method: dig a long groove in the soft-point plank, put flammable hay velvet and the like in front of the trough, and use hardwood strips to push forward quickly and repeatedly until Mars ignites the velvet.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Simple planer fire method

4. Iroquois fire method: This device invented by the Iroquois is quite efficient.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Iroquois fire method

5. Bowstring drilling: It's a little simpler to do. Find a branch with good elasticity, tie the rope to both ends, turn the rope twice on the drill shaft, pull the bowstring back and forth and rotate the drill until Mars ignites the velvet;

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Bowstring drilling method

6. Wood friction: Two soft pieces of wood or bamboo can also be used to rub against each other, and the dried matter at the bottom of the palm bark or coconut leaf is padded for fire.

8. Optical ignition, magnifying glass fire and concave mirror ignition:

The magnifying glass can be used with the old man's reading glasses or polished into a lens with thick ice, adjust the angle in the sun, adjust the focus to the fire and light it, and it can be lit long enough.

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Magnifying glass fire method

You can also use TT to fill the water, adjust the angle to light the fire velvet [cover the face];

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

TT ignition

Concave mirror fire method:

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Concave mirror fire method

The above are several feasible methods for survival and fire in the wild, which can be applied according to actual conditions.

If the time has come when these primitive methods are needed to make fire, then you should reflect on why you fell into this situation?

Survivalist First Principle:

Never put yourself in danger!

Latter-day Survival Guide - Field Fire Edition

Outdoor survival kit