
More great tips here:
http://siriuslymeg.tumblr.com/post/3373 ... ife-easier
Scottyk wrote:Small pieces of bicycle inner tube say 50mm x 50mm. These are the ultimate fire lighter. They light when wet, burn for ages. Best of all they have zero chance of leaking all through your pack and making everything smell like kero.
I always carry one or two in the first aid kit, never notice they are there but they can be life savers.
Moondog55 wrote:Been experimenting.
In an emergency ( which is why we carry firelighters ) the hardest thing I find is getting it started. I got some Potassium Nitrate for my tomatoes a while back. An old toilet roll with a little paper left on it and rolled up tightly and tied with jute string; soaked in a nitrate solution and dried in the sun, then saturated with ordinary candle wax at a low temperature. When I tied the string on I made sure I left some loose strands to catch the flame easily. Lights very easily and burns quite hot. A bit easier to light than the old standby of "Little Lucifers"
Moondog55 wrote:... especially when mixed with
Rob A wrote:Moondog55 wrote:... especially when mixed with
And your other job is welding rail and tram lines together?
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corvus wrote:ILUVSWTAS wrote:If your car camping, I find petrol to work well. If not Pandani's or Huon pine burns quite well.
Are you trying to make some sort of point
madmacca wrote:(Need to melt it in the microwave)
Moondog55 wrote:They talk about this a LOT in regions where falling through the ice is always a possibility, to the point where some Canadian winter trekkers carry a tin with a pre-prepared fire in it; rip off the tape and use the enclosed Fuzee to light the wick
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