I have had a few goes at the fire plough. No success yet. One of the difficulties I find is not knowing how close I have been to success. It is like bow and hand drills in terms of you want to get it as hot as possible before a final all out effort. What I don't know is how much more I need to do - was I a whisker away or was I only half way? Was my technique good enough or have I missed some crucial trick? Whenever I try it, as my arm muscles start to burn, I rapidly get to thinking "why am I doing this since drilling is so much easier".
The science of actually how it works intrigues me. The method does not seem to allow for a collection of hot dust right up against the tip as the air movement from the rubbing, and the vibration of the board, scatters it. Descriptions talk of catching a coal at a little distance from the main action. If you are talking dust then that does not make sense. Now, when I try this I get at the very tip of my rubbing stick a little curl of charred wood. My working idea is that this curl is what ignites and then breaks off. But until I succeed it is all just idea.
I am sure that one of the tricks is to as much as possible use your trunk muscles and not your small arm and hand muscles until the last moments. The following picture is what I have found gets me the closest to success.
If you lock your arms still and bounce your body up and down then you can get smoke without exhausting your arms. Then you try and finish off with a final set of rapid strokes from the arms before you dissolve in a pool of lactic acid.
Then there is the technique of every few strokes making a longer stroke to sweep the groove clear.
My favourite wood for the stick is pyracantha - because it is a great name! and also because it will produce char with rubbing easier than any other wood I have come across.
But as I have not succeeded yet you had best not listen too much to my ramblings.
The guys who have succeeded in this seem mostly to be the more full time bushcrafters who, I suspect, have remarkably strong arm muscles. The other group who find this method possible are the 20 stone Maoris - their body weight gives them an advantage I think.