Start a Fire Using Steel Wool and a 9V Battery
A bizarre and potentially useful way to light a fire:
You'll need:
-
a small amount of steel wool (about a golf ball, when packed up)
- a 9-volt battery
- kindling and wood for your fire, as usual
What to do:
-
build a pyramid of your small kindling (twigs, dry grasses, etc.)
-
stretch the steel wool out into a long, thin ribbon (about as thick as a not-very-thick dreadlock, or a very thick strand of knitting wool)
-
touch both poles (positive and negative) of the battery to the steel wool, near the end of the steel wool
- the current will cause the steel wool to catch fire in multiple places
-
immediately light your kindling with the steel wool. Blow on the steel wool to keep it going long enough to light the kindling; touch the battery back to some un-burned places if necessary
-
continue building your fire like you learned in Girl Guides or Boy Scouts
Other notes:
-
the finer the grade of steel wool, the better.
- it doesn't have to be a 9V battery. A 9V is easier because you just have to touuch one side of the battery (the end with the poles) to the wool. You can use another battery as long as you find a way to touch both poles to the steel wool. Usually that means touching one end of your steel-wool strand to the positive pole and the other end to the negative pole.



Comments & discussion from Outdoor People:
Be the first to comment on “Start a Fire Using Steel Wool and a 9V Battery”