Fire kit, am I missing something.

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BigMonster

Full Member
Sep 6, 2011
1,357
225
Manchester
Recently reviewed my fire kit, piled up everything fire related and kept what I was actually using, barely a handful of stuff. Nothing if you compare this to what people are showing on the internet: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=fire+kit


Some of those kits must weight 2-3lbs. Are they crazy or am I missing something with my lighter/matches/few pieces of tinder kit paired with ferrorod on my knife for redundancy? I can also use my stove with piezeo igniter, 18650 battery from my torch or attempt friction fire if I get desperate.


Even less for my EDC:


Not trying to start an argument which method is better as they all have pros and cons. Just got baffled with the choice and how much other people carry.
 
Ferro rod
Lighter
Birch bark
Knife

S'nuff for me

I should add I've always got some form of cordage about my person if I have to bowdrill.
The chances, in the UK, of actually being in a survival situation in which several forms of ignition are needed are very very slim.

As they say: "The more you know, the less you carry".

So I have 8 ferro rods, 12 lighters, 3.5kg of birch bark and 23 knives, on my person, at all times. :lmao::naughty:
 
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i'd say carry whatever makes you happy and works for you, but the question isn't how much you carry, but what you can do with it... (=no amount of gear is going to help you if you don't know how to start a fire -- i've seen folks grab soaking wet 3" pieces of oak, holding an evil magic to it and expecting instant success, one woman even trying to light soiled diapers (from her grandson) and asbestos tiles :banghead::banghead: )

since a few days i carry a pocketboy again :) but that's not a specific part of my fire kit, which consists of:
- small waterproof tin containing a steel striker, rope lighter(30-06/.45 shell), some tinder
- char tin with charcloth/ charred punkwood + some flint (or whatever it is but it's giving sparks :) )
- leather pouch with a small homemade match container (matches are in there since longer than i dare to remember and only meant as a back-up), another tin containing some fatwood sticks and jute twine (both in there since i left Japan six years ago) and a magnifying glass; also a piece of lawnmower starter cord (=for bowdrill )
some of it is luxury so i could go more compact if needed


the whole kit lives in my shoulder bag; i don't even own a ferro rod (as i dislike them) and haven't used anything but magnifying glass, flint and steel or friction in over ten years (despite half of my left hand bandaged 7years ago and a broken collar bone 3years ago while cooking on wood fire during both times
 
That's mostly a ready made fire kit in that picture. (Yes, I too have watched too many YT videos.)

Added more lighters and ferro rods by the looks.

Just have a zip lock bag with a lighter, ferro rod, SAK Walker, matches and cotton tinder.
Pack does have duct tape & small jar of vaseline too.
 
That's mostly a ready made fire kit in that picture. (Yes, I too have watched too many YT videos.)

Added more lighters and ferro rods by the looks.

Just have a zip lock bag with a lighter, ferro rod, SAK Walker, matches and cotton tinder.
Pack does have duct tape & small jar of vaseline t
That's mostly a ready made fire kit in that picture. (Yes, I too have watched too many YT videos.)

Added more lighters and ferro rods by the looks.

Just have a zip lock bag with a lighter, ferro rod, SAK Walker, matches and cotton tinder.
Pack does have duct tape & small jar of vaseline too.

From what I have seen on YT this is one of the more reasonable kits. Couple of solid sources of fire, but I don't like the fragmentation in the tinder department. But it would be a great starter kit so experiment with various tinders and when you are done you will be left with few solid components to make your own kit.
 
From what I have seen on YT this is one of the more reasonable kits. Couple of solid sources of fire, but I don't like the fragmentation in the tinder department. But it would be a great starter kit so experiment with various tinders and when you are done you will be left with few solid components to make your own kit.
Yeah, for sure. Just wouldn't put it all in a nylon pouch and add duplicates.

On legal note, they are probably violating US postal regulations by shipping the lighter.
 
You are right, BigMonster. This doesn't need to be over-thought. Carry a few bits of inner tube and some matches in a block of wax. Plus a lighter for convenience. :)

Ferro rods? Pffft!! :lol:
 
Mines pretty basic I thinks.I’ve always managed to light a fire in any weather.
In the metal tin(which I use for making char cloth) is bengal matches, cotton wool soaked in vasaline, bick lighter, charcloth.
5CBF87B1-9C50-4969-8DD7-B1B3CE303995.jpeg
 
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Bigmonster; I watched this because I used Coghlans matches...They worked in a cold, slightly damp static where the regular ones were not happy.

Obviously this is slightly milder conditions than in the vid.

I am lame at firelighting, largely because I am like that guy; too little preparation and too much in a hurry.
 
I was going to say saw too.

Its a very comprehensive kit and I suspect the person who designed it went fireless because they simply couldnt decide what to use.
 
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I'm wondering more if a Fire kit ( state side ) is just somewhere to keep all the various different methods one may experiment with in relationship to Fire making as a craft.
 
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Unfortunately no. They actually take it on trips, often as a part of even bigger "Survival kit". Honestly, I'm all for gadgets and bling. But some YT videos boggle the mind. Just search "survival kit", "EDC kit" or "fire kit".
 

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