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101 Ways to MAKE FIRE - #3 Billycan

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Uploaded by on Jul 24, 2009

How to get your lady HOT. Without matches, lighters or firesteels. Just common sense and some late afternoon sunlight. Filmed on the winter solstice, just to make it a bit more challenging. This video is part of a series of 101 videos, showing different ways to make fire. It started out as a challenge to myself, to understand the physics and chemistry associated with combustion. Enormous resources go into firefighting and firefighters put their lives on the line every day to save lives and property from destructive fire. Obviously it is easier and cheaper to prevent fire in the first place. Hopefully I can teach people how easy it is for fires to start as a result of ignorance or negligence. Many of these techniques are very old and it is just a question of re-learning ancient skills. There is something very primal and satisfying about being able to start a fire the way our forefathers did. People nowadays seldom even think about fire, without realising that many of the things we take for granted every day have come about as a result of the understanding and control of combustion. An obvious example is the internal combustion engine. However, not many people are aware that the concept of generating heat through compression, as found in the Diesel engine, was understood and applied long before the invention of the diesel engine. The indigenous people of South-East Asia were using fire pistons as a fire starting technique long before the arrival of Europeans.. Electricity, too, is taken for granted, without necessarily associating it with the thermal power stations which generate the bullk of electricity worldwide. Another aspect of this project is the pursuit of sustainable energy. Lighting fire is all about concentrating energy, and doing it as efficiently as possible. By understanding how to do this, I will hopefully give myself and others maybe - a better insight into the various sources of energy that are available. You will probably have seen some of these before. I'm not pretending to have invented fire. The coke can thing has definitely been done before. I think I first heard about it after an episode of Mythbusters brought it to popular attention. I have still to see a decent video of it, though. It is actually surprisingly easy to ignite something using the parabolic surface on the underside of a soft-drink can. The trick is to get the surface as reflective as possible. Reminds me of that quote which is usually ascribed to Abraham Lincoln: If I had ten hours to chop down a tree, I would spend nine of them sharpening my ace. With primitive fire skills, it is usually more important and difficult to master the skills of sustaining and transferring an ember and nurturing it to form a fire, than it is to get an ember in the first place. So I will cover some of that as well whilst adhering to the discipline of showing one new way per video to actually ignite the fire. Some of the things I will use to start fires are: air, water, rock, the infamous coca-cola can, ice, condoms, a garbage can, pots, light fittings, stationery, a few different things you can find in your first-aid cabinet, toiletries, a torch, string, a cellphone, a typewriter, light bulb, various bits and pieces of your car or truck, culery, crockery, batteries, fuses, steel wool and a whole lot more. Quite a few of them I have succeeded in using, some of the videos might be made live and might fail. Most of these things require some practice. The idea behind all of this is not to suggest that all of these would be suitable for a survival situation although I have certainly used some of them in extreme outdoor situations. The truth is that one is always going to go for the easiest solutions when your life is at risk. The simplest solution may not be pure primitive skills. In real life, one often has access to a vehicle or downed aircraft in a survival situation. The world being what it is today, there is often man-made material to be found, even in the wilderness. Garbage can be very useful sometimes.

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Uploader Comments (ROBwithaB)

  • were can you get char cloth?

  • @berkleyboy000

    You can make your own pretty easily.

    See reply to comment below.

    Be sure to use a cotton fabric. Old jeans work well.

  • my back hurts when im laughing :( but I just can't stop, this is to damn funny xD

  • @CharliesName

    I hope you subscribed, somewhere along the way.

    There are more episodes in this series. New video posted yesterday.

  • youre amazing mate

  • @Rainelfy

    Thanks. (Yup, it took me 8 months to say that.)

    I hope you're still watching these. #13 in the series just posted.....

Top Comments

  • you are like the Bas Rutten of wilderness survival.

Video Responses

This video is a response to How to make fire without matches or a lighter
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All Comments (98)

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  • Man, I wanted to see Roberta hot bosom again, lol.

  • Im so happy he didnt show "her" again.

  • tastes a bit like stale vomit... -_-" don't ask me how I know that...

  • NICE!!!!!

  • @ROBwithaB lol lookm up

  • @ROBwithaBmade me laugh ... reminds me of the bit in a film called: Finding Nemo; the fish tank fish saying "my bubbles "..

    just my silly mind :)

    wise move...camerawomen are oft more useful than a tripod, though at times a little trickier than said tripod to pack up after a long day n go the pub....

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