Any suggestions please in how to correctly and indeed imaginatively deploy this confusing but must-have piece of bushcrafting kit?
A good U-Tube link would be cool.
Cheers
K
A good U-Tube link would be cool.
Cheers
K
I guess it won't do too much harm to the blade if I restrict the 'strike' to the spine?
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K
And by coincidence this offering from McQbushcraft, listed just today
[video=youtube;x19onD1azfg]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x19onD1azfg[/video]
The worst you would get is a brown mark, which wipes off.
I use this, bought from one of the members here.
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Are you going you make any more Steve? I'd take another.![]()
I recognise that set!
And this is how they are best used or "deployed":
[video=youtube;_BQ0-fAruzo]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_BQ0-fAruzo[/video]
I haven't used a knife in conjunction with a firesteel for over 4 years now, not since I watched a bloke sever two tendons in his left hand,(never properly repaired either) fannying about using a knife to scrape up tinder. That's when I started making first the scrapers and then the sets.
It's good to get some feedback on the sets I sold
Injury apart, in my experience, people tend to damage knives with firesteels when they mistakenly use the cutting edge to scrape sparks. This is something too often seen on "celebrity survival" or "reality" TV shows.
The firesteel is a simple tool. So is a carving knife, a spoon gouge, an axe or an artists paint brush. If you don't know how a simple tool works in the first place, you're going to struggle to make the most of it and probably never develop your skill levels to the point that you can make it look easy to use.
Get cracking, then practice
But ideally, avoid using a knife, at least till you've already mastered the spark and tinder production
best wishes
Steve