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23 Ways to Start a Fire Without Matches or a Lighter

Fire must have been a bright point of discovery for early man. From cooking and providing warmth, to glowing light and powerful combustion, the uses for fire are too long to list. For survival purposes, fire is needed for warmth, staying dry, purifying water, and cooking.

To start a fire, you need oxygen, fuel, and heat- even if you are starting a fire without matches or a lighter. Below are 23 different methods to provide that heat to an ignition point. As always, be safe if you try any of these methods and have a way to extinguish the fire readily available. 


Creating a Fire With Friction

1. Flint and Steel

Striking the flint against the steel creates sparks that can be used to ignite the fuel source. Basic lighters use flint and steel to create a spark, so this method of fire starting is very common. The sparks are lower temperature than those from a ferro rod.

2. Ferro Rod

A ferrocerium rod is a man-made material that sheds sparks when scraped with a rough surface like ridged steel. The sparks are very hot and are great for igniting tinder quickly.

3. Hand Drill

A hand drill is a hand-held spindle and baseboard, usually made up of softer wood. The wood choice is important, green wood does not perform well even if it is soft, and picking a wood that is too soft could make the spindle crumble under pressure. Spinning the spindle rapidly on the baseboard creates an ember that can be transferred to tinder to create a fire.


4. Bow Drill

A bow drill is similar to a hand drill, but you add a handhold, bow, and string. The handhold can be a concave rock or carved wood to put pressure down on the spindle. The string is drawn on the bow after wrapping it around the spindle. When you push and pull the bow, the string causes the spindle to turn quickly.


5. Pump Drill

A pump drill is similar to a hand drill as well, but a flywheel and crossbar are added. The crossbar has the spindle placed through it and then has the string tied to it and routed above the end of the spindle. This is one of the hardest primitive drills to create, but the easiest to operate since the flywheel gets the spindle going fast using its momentum.


6. Fire Plough

To make a fire plough, you need a hard stick and a soft plank. Push the stick down the plank in a line repetitively, pushing the shavings off of the end onto tinder. Stamina and endurance are key here, just as it is with the drills above. Once enough hot shavings are pushed off the end, a fire should ignite in the tinder. This is one of the earliest and simpler methods of creating fire and is where the saying “rubbing two sticks together to make a fire” comes from.



Creating a Fire With Compression

7. Fire Piston

A quick physics lesson reminds us that pressure and heat are directly related. Compressed air can become very hot very quickly, especially if the compression is repeated. A fire piston is a piston you manually pump to bring the sealed air to a very high temperature, which then lights the tinder placed inside.

Best Fire Piston for Survival Firestarting

Creating a Fire With Chemicals

8. Brake Fluid and Chlorine

Make a small pile of powdered chlorine and carefully pour a small amount of brake fluid on it. The mixture should heat up rapidly and start a small fire. Be aware that it does have explosive potential and may react with other surfaces nearby.

9. Instant Cold Pack and Zinc Powder, Salt, and Water

Cold packs are made with ammonium nitrate, so combine that with zinc, salt, and water for chemical combustion.

10. Potassium Permanganate and Glycerin

PP (Potassium permanganate) has a ton of survival uses, and it will react with glycerine to ignite.

11. Potassium Permanganate and Battery Acid

PP also ignites with battery acid.

12. Sulfuric Acid with Potassium Chlorate and Sugar

Although it uses plenty of chemicals you don't have sitting around, they can be synthesized from battery acid and bleach.


Creating a Fire With Optics

13. Magnifying Lens

A magnifying glass of any type can start a fire with permitting weather conditions. Eyeglasses, old TV screens, and glass can all be used to focus sunlight into a small point to ignite tinder. You can find credit card-sized fresnel lenses and specific lenses made for fire starting, and we've reviewed them all.

14. Water

Put some water into a ziplock bag, a balloon, saran wrap, or even a condom, and then shape the container into a sphere. The water in the clear container acts as a lens and has a very short focal length of 1-2 inches. You will need to hold the container close to the tinder for the focal point to be close enough.

15. Ice

Shave the ice into the shape of a lens. Once you have a basic shape, it will need to be polished, and then find the focal length. Focus the sun through the ice lens to heat up some tinder and start a fire. Out of all of the options on this list, this one is likely the hardest to accomplish.

16. Can

Rubbing a chocolate bar or toothpaste on the bottom of a soda or beer can will let you polish it into a reflective surface that is concave. It is so reflective that you can use it to reflect the sun in a focal point on some tinder to get a fire started.

17. Flashlight

Removing the reflective cone of your flashlight and using it as a parabolic firestarter is one of the toughest options to use to start a fire, but it is possible if the sun is out. Using one of the batteries may be a better option, which is covered next.

18. Mirror

Like the parabolic cone from the flashlight and Coke can, you can start a fire even if the mirrored surface is flat if it is reflective enough. Survival mirrors are used for signaling, mostly- but if you need a backup fire starter you can have some luck with the sun overhead. You can see the best-reviewed mirrors we've tried in our signal mirror roundup review.


Creating a Fire With Electricity

19. 9V Battery and Steel Wool

Nine-volt batteries are fairly common, and one place to easily find one is in a smoke detector. Steel wool is a staple in most workshops and garages. Combine the two, as shown in the video below for a portable electrical firestarter.


20. AA Battery and Gum Wrapper

Use a foil gum wrapper to span from the positive terminal on a AA battery to the negative terminal. Hold the wrapper in place on the ends and the wrapper will heat up and ignite and burn quickly from the middle of the gum wrapper.

21. Car Battery and Jumper Cables

A car, even without gas, has many tools in it that can start a fire. One of the easiest is crossing the terminals on the battery using jumper cables to create a spark. If you don’t have a pair of jumper cables in your car, you should consider getting a set for practical emergencies as well as for their survival benefits.

22. Flamethrowers

Although they use chemicals for both fuel and the pilot flame, modern flamethrowers typically use electricity to generate the initial spark.

Best flamethrower drone to light up zombies or wasps
Yep thats a drone mounted flamethrower
Where Flamethrowers Are Illegal in the US
Flamethrowers are not heavily regulated

Fire Carrying

23. Carrying an Ember/Coal

Not very common these days, but it still works. Safely carry fire from one location to the next by bringing some hot coal with you.



The Final Word

If you know of any other clever methods for starting a fire without using matches, feel free to comment below to share your ideas.

Here are some other articles our readers have found helpful:

  • Best Fire Extinguisher for Basic Preparedness
  • How to Start a Campfire: A Basic Survival Skill
  • Bug Out Bag (BOB) Guide, Gear List, and Checklist

Keep exploring, stay prepared, and be safe.

23 Ways to Start a Fire Without Matches or a Lighter

The post 23 Ways to Start a Fire Without Matches or a Lighter appeared first on TruePrepper.

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By: Rusty Collins
Title: 23 Ways to Start a Fire Without Matches or a Lighter
Sourced From: www.trueprepper.com/fire-without-matches-lighter/
Published Date: Sun, 13 Aug 2023 11:07:10 +0000

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