To be quite honest, since doing them with a rasp and decanting into the vial, apart from burning them at the time, they’ve just sat in my pouch and I’ve never used them- just there for ‘in case’. Maybe I should check, the last time I got them out, they still looked shiny but…..I think 'pre-shredded' magnesium flakes would oxidise pretty quickly. My Mg block that I've had for years has a considerable layer of oxidation, and when reactive metals are finely divided they oxidise more easily.
Back to the drawing board then!It might very effectively prevent them from oxidising when that is exactly what you want them to do.
Burning = rapid oxidation - requires oxygen. I think maybe oil would insulated the flakes from the air.
ah yeh, when it said nva i thought was north vietnamese army from the nam conflict, xThis is a link to a picture of one but not a great image. Not at home until Tuesday, but will take a better picture when I’m back. It’s just a perfect size for a couple of hook knives, couple of sloyyds, a Puukko or two, a leather thigh protector pad rolled up, and a mini Casstrom double sided strop, and Fallkniven CC4 stone. It’s just the perfect height for all the cutting tools. Actually, there’s enough room for a basic fire kit as well.
East German NVA 4-Cell Ammo Magazine Pouch | #3896675037
East German NVA 4-Cell Ammo Magazine Pouch.www.worthpoint.com
Yes, I've been reading around the subject and reached the same conclusion myself - I'm surprised places sell these magnesium flakes because they must become fairly useless fairly quick.I think 'pre-shredded' magnesium flakes would oxidise pretty quickly. My Mg block that I've had for years has a considerable layer of oxidation, and when reactive metals are finely divided they oxidise more easily.
It's a bit different to how you're using yours, but I'm thinking of mixing some into a mix of bio-ethanol and paraffin wax.To be quite honest, since doing them with a rasp and decanting into the vial, apart from burning them at the time, they’ve just sat in my pouch and I’ve never used them- just there for ‘in case’. Maybe I should check, the last time I got them out, they still looked shiny but…..
Maybe a drop or two of some mineral oil in with some new shards, and a good agitation might protect them?
Thanks. That's brilliant. I've not seen that chap before - he's quite watchable! I was already thinking along those lines a bit, and that has given me the push to try out something similar.If want a really simple firestarter, grate a bar of cheap soap, put it in a squeezable bottle of some kind and add a flammable liquid and shake.
As demonstrated by Des Cattys.
Around 25 mins in, if link does't take you directly to it.
My emergency firelighting kit is a square of innertube (sliced vertically to open it into a flat square) wrapped around a Clipper lighter. It's all then held together with a small circle of inner tube used as an elastic band - that stuff catches even when it's soaking outdoors.The other thing that's really good is pieces of bicycle inner tube. Quite handy to use rounds like elastic bands around tinder too.