Fire By Friction Bow Drill Kit | A step by step guide

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  • čas přidán 3. 02. 2021
  • Making fire by friction in the winter using the bow drill method.
    Focusing on technique and common fault finding.
    How to make fire by friction, How to start fire by friction, How to create fire by friction, How to make a fire by friction set.
    fire, firemaker's curse, royal marines commando, backcountry, wilderness gameplay, survival, tutorial, friction, physics, what is friction, bushcraft, static friction, royal marines, friction physics, frictional force, types of friction, bushcraft skills, friction force physics, solo bushcraft, winter bushcraft, my self reliance, fire by friction, bow drill fire, prepping, bow drill, bow drill uk, bow drill kit, fire friction, spindle.

Komentáře • 42

  • @redhawk449
    @redhawk449 Před 4 měsíci

    Absolutely Awesome! Bow drill is a skill I'm continuing to try to master. 10:05 "And to wrap this up fundamentally, don't leave home without one of these guys"...holds up a lighter. There is no more reliable way to start a fire than with a fire and butane burns at around 2205C/4000F degrees. I've tested Bic lighters thousands of times at over 14,000 feet above see level in Colorado and they produce flame as reliably as anywhere. The spark can be used to light fires even if the lighter is wet and out of gas.

  • @arthurcrook5713
    @arthurcrook5713 Před 3 lety +5

    Great Tips! I love seeing the failures as well as it keeps it real and shows some of the pitfalls that many of us will face. Thanks for sharing

  • @JM-jd7yp
    @JM-jd7yp Před rokem

    Hi Nick. I can only really echo what others have said. It's so important to show the successes and other issues as well. It makes things real and believable. Your style of presentation is informative and engaging. Thank you and I will check out your other videos. I wish you well.

  • @marcusgarner1
    @marcusgarner1 Před rokem

    had a go at this years ago as a child with my uncle, i'll go out and give it a go soon - always worth being prepared :)

  • @brucematys8597
    @brucematys8597 Před 2 lety

    Another excellent video Nick, well explained. Cheers!

  • @Heimo784
    @Heimo784 Před rokem

    what a nice, sympatic and also science-loaded tutorial, thank you so much. loved those side-infos like smoke at ~200°C,.. will do this with kids next birthday party. so also your inspiration ignited ;-)

  • @darrenr205
    @darrenr205 Před 3 lety +2

    Many thanks Nick, I really enjoyed watching this. I'm going to have a go, but really hope I never need to use it for real!

  • @Adam-pt8qm
    @Adam-pt8qm Před 3 lety +1

    It's my birthday today and my brother has bought me a bow drill kit so I will be giving this a try! Thanks for the helpful vid🙂

  • @geordiehenderson2248
    @geordiehenderson2248 Před 3 lety +3

    Brilliant, great explanation. Ive never tried fire by friction before, as i normally keep lots of firesteels in different bags depending if im out walking or Canoe wild camping. But after watching your explanation, i would give it a try next time im out on one of my Canoe trips this year. Thanks for sharing those skills.
    Regards
    Geordie

  • @banksarenotyourfriends

    The main thing I do differently to you, is that I try not to blow on the nest until the last few seconds (I just gently wave the nest back and forth) that way you don't introduce additional moisture from your breath into the equation. I don't know how much difference it makes really, but you definitely don't get as light-headed!

  • @duncys
    @duncys Před 3 lety

    Took me ages to get this to work. My mate Stu from four crows bushcraft talked me through and taking your time saving ALL your powder. It was amazing when I got it!

  • @Stickyicki1
    @Stickyicki1 Před rokem

    I learned about this in Boy scouts... I was young but still never forget

  • @duncys
    @duncys Před 3 lety

    Very good demo Nick. Nice to see all the process clearly with no hocus-pocus bushcraft dark art stuff.

  • @fistsmcnasty
    @fistsmcnasty Před 3 lety +2

    I love it. He gives an amazing, in depth explanation on using a bow drill. Last top tip? Don’t leave your house without a lighter.

  • @stevelobley3588
    @stevelobley3588 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks Nick - once again an outstanding “real” video with step by step and visible pointers on how to do it. Too many times I see a quick bit of furious bowing and then hey presto we’re off... . I collected some dry standing ivy last weekend and followed your set up for the hearth board and drill and will be trying it this weekend. This vid is perfect timing. Cheers.

    • @stevelobley3588
      @stevelobley3588 Před 3 lety

      @@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683 It worked like a dream! “Fail to prepare, prepare to fail” was the main lesson I got from your vid. So I spent the time getting everything right and ready. Particularly useful were: 1. Kindling and nest prep, 2. Keeping everything off the ground - ‘twas pretty damp yesterday! 3. Position of feet and kneeling to ensure good bow movement, 4. “Warming up” the wood to gentle smoking, then a specific push hard down and 20 good strokes, 5. Allowing the ember to settle and get going, and 6. A decent ember catcher, in my case a flat piece of birch bark. It took first time (which is a first!) - don’t know whether it was the use of ivy, which seemed to get v hot v quickly and/or application of the techniques, prob both. I do use a steel bearing block (doubles as a steel for my flint) and that worked well too - it didn’t get hot (spit) or wear the drill point. All in all great work and very satisfying, all down to your excellent tips. Cheers. Pics of the details here if you’re interested. imgur.com/gallery/yRlTeX6

  • @seasoldier3902
    @seasoldier3902 Před 3 lety

    Another excellent lesson. Your channel raises the bar for the other "vlogers" to follow.

  • @greetb9330
    @greetb9330 Před 3 lety +1

    I bet many a bow drill has been smashed across a knee in sheer frustation over time! The calorie hunt in days gone by must have been huge, we are so lucky now. Great tips Nick and really satisfying to see, fire seems to be magic when you create it without a lighter or matches, simple pleasures eh? . Thank you for sharing. All best.

    • @greetb9330
      @greetb9330 Před 3 lety

      @@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683 Thank you for sharing your knowledge, really kind of you.

  • @StockyLocky123
    @StockyLocky123 Před 3 lety +2

    Love your transparency Nick 👌🏼

  • @gerryedwards9738
    @gerryedwards9738 Před 3 lety +1

    All that, and you 'ad a bleedin' lighter on you all along?! Only joking. Always need a plan B. Very good tips. Didn't know about the colour of the smoke detail. Good work as ever!

  • @MrWoody135
    @MrWoody135 Před 3 lety

    .......love the lighter !!

  • @rodster3600
    @rodster3600 Před 3 lety

    Hey :) it'd be worth linking this video in your prior bow drill videos description box, just had to scroll through your posted videos to the 6months ago mark. Petty request but making it easier to find your content and self-linking will benefit you aswell! Keep it up love the videos

  • @graemeliddle8889
    @graemeliddle8889 Před 3 lety

    Great lesson. Thanks Nick

  • @brianartillery
    @brianartillery Před 2 lety

    Fascinating stuff. I do remember seeing one of Ray Mears' shows where he visited a Pacific Island where the inhabitants had completely lost the knowledge of creating a fire from scratch. Ray used a fire bow to show them how. Have you ever tried the 'fire plough' method? That always seems to be far harder work than the fire bow, and requires very hard, bone-dry wood, to work.

  • @waypointguy
    @waypointguy Před 3 lety

    Really enjoying the Videos. I'm in Atlantic Canada, we have similar challenges as far as changeable weather goes. As a bonus, fire-starting skills are really well tested and finely honed by camping in the woods during a Canadian Winter.

  • @herbsmith6871
    @herbsmith6871 Před 3 lety

    Good stuff 🤠

  • @allthisuselessbeauty
    @allthisuselessbeauty Před 3 lety

    Nice One Nick .!!

  • @cameronlewington3005
    @cameronlewington3005 Před 3 lety

    Hey Nick, great culmination of bringing friction to fire! Hoping all the kneeling you’ve done hasn’t aggravated the knee pain....best Cam👍🏻

    • @seasoldier3902
      @seasoldier3902 Před 3 lety

      @@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683 Nick, do you suffer from "Kneemoania" then?

  • @phuaphua4301
    @phuaphua4301 Před 3 lety

    Very interesting video, I never seen.

    • @phuaphua4301
      @phuaphua4301 Před 3 lety

      @@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683
      Thanks you, keep smiling 👍😊

  • @summittaedae2323
    @summittaedae2323 Před 2 lety

    Hi mate. I’ve be tried so many times and only achieved the flame once 😂. Fortunately I had my daughter with me and she was mind blown 🤯. I find my embers are quite fibrous almost like charred splinters.

    • @summittaedae2323
      @summittaedae2323 Před 2 lety

      @@hiddenvalleybushcraft5683 I will buy some kiln dry wood to practice on. See if by that eliminates the fibrous dust. Thanks for replying mate I appreciate it 👍🏻

  • @stevo728822
    @stevo728822 Před 3 lety

    I'd love to have a go at doing that, without setting my local woodland alight.

  • @icervantesiii
    @icervantesiii Před 2 lety

    Have you seen Felix Immlers SAK setup? I've never started a bow drill fire faster in my life.

  • @loadapish
    @loadapish Před rokem

    I just cant find a video on finding the right wood for the spindle and board. I dunno how you started the burnhole in the boards, did you carve it a bit or spindle burn it into the wood

  • @Wayneawebb
    @Wayneawebb Před 3 lety

    Challenge for you, Sir? I am a Paraplegic, I have no use wist down. How would I use the bow drill method?

  • @Andyb2379
    @Andyb2379 Před 2 lety

    Still can’t master this after 20 years. 🙄 still I won’t give up

    • @susanp.collins7834
      @susanp.collins7834 Před 6 měsíci

      I've been trying to start a fire by rolling cotton wool and wood ash between two pieces of wood. Can't even get the bloody cotton wool WARM.

  • @Philo68
    @Philo68 Před 3 lety

    Imagine you’re going on Naked and Afraid.
    What is the one item you’d take and what would you hope your partner turned up with?
    Edit... Apart from a cracking set of jugs of course - that’s a given!