I'm admitting defeat I threw my little set in the bin.
Lol, it looks bloody tricky mind, I'm bad with most little things- let alone mini bow drill sets!
I'm admitting defeat I threw my little set in the bin.
Here's my fancy bow. It's a cow rib with a hardwood handled dowel-pinned on the end and wrapped with rawhide. The stitching is sinew and the string is half-tanned braintan (no softening, just the brains and some smoke)
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And my favorite spindle adapter. The rear lower leg bone of a whitetail deer, the ends reinforced with rawhide and hide glue. A permanent hardwood bearing tip that's smooth as glass. The squarish cross-section really grips the string, and it allows you to use even the shortest drills. I routinely make fires with a drill bit that's less than two inches long.
Apologies for butting in but I use a limpet shell too and can offer my opinion
At the risk of this being modded for gratuitous innuendo, I find that it isn't the size that matters as much as the thickness.
As the top of the drill is cut to a near point it will fit nicely in any shell but if the shell is very thin it will actually wear through it (depends how prolific a bow driller you are!).
To sum up, a thicker shell of about 1 inch across will last you for ages.
Apologies for butting in but I use a limpet shell too and can offer my opinion
This thread is a great read, I had a few goes at this a loooong time ago with various degrees of failure! But after reading I'm feeling another try coming on.... Would willow drill and hearth work ok? And do you think para cord will last on the bow?
Sent from somewhere?
Ta will give this another go. Is it better to let the wood really dry out or can it be done green.?
Sent from somewhere?
Being able to get a coal in your backyard on a sunny day with a proven bow-drill set does not mean that you would be able to get a fire started in an actual survival situation. There are numerous variables that will make getting a coal exponentially more difficult. For example, you must be able to get a coal with a variety of woods, in a variety of conditions. The wood may be damp. You may not have a knife. You may not have any cordage. You may already be tired. For these reasons, it is good to practice dealing with each of these factors, first separately, and then bring them all together. The quest doesn't stop it keeps going and now you have more challenges to overcome...just make sure to carry alternative methods of fire starting.
For me success with the bow drill made me realize there are better and easier fire making methods and that I can make fire primitively if need be. It's a good skill to achieve, but not always reliable...
Thanx for looking!
DomC