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  2. Fire striker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_striker

    The steel must be hardened but softer than the flint-like material striking off the spark. [12] Old files, leaf and coil springs, and rusty gardening tools are often repurposed as strikers. Besides flint, other hard, non-porous rocks that can take a sharp edge can be used, such as chert, quartz, agate, jasper or chalcedony. [2]

  3. Ferrocerium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferrocerium

    Ferrocerium is used in fire lighting in conjunction with a striker, similarly to natural flint-and-steel, though ferrocerium takes on the opposite role to the traditional system; instead of a natural flint rock striking tiny iron particles from a firesteel, a striker (which may be in the form of hardened steel wheel) strikes particles of ...

  4. Flint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flint

    This "Ohio Flint" was traded across the eastern United States, and has been found as far west as the Rocky Mountains and south around the Gulf of Mexico. [5] When struck against steel, flint will produce enough sparks to ignite a fire with the correct tinder, or gunpowder used in weapons, namely the flintlock firing mechanism.

  5. Chuckmuck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuckmuck

    Chuckmucks form a well-marked group within flint-and-steel types of fire-lighting kit, still used as jewellery amongst Tibetans (mechag) and Mongolians (kete). This large distinctive style of a worldwide daily utensil was noted in Victorian British India and the 1880s Anglo-Indian word chuckmuck (derived from chakmak ) was adopted into ...

  6. Tinderbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tinderbox

    Sheet Iron tinderboxes. English, 18th and early 19th C. Pocket tinderbox with firesteel and flint. This type was used during the Boer War due to a scarcity of matches. A tinderbox, or patch box, is a container made of wood or metal containing flint, firesteel, and tinder (typically charcloth, but possibly a small quantity of dry, finely divided fibrous matter such as hemp), used together to ...

  7. Fire making - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_making

    Firesteel and flint used in Dalarna, Sweden in 1916. A fire striker or firesteel when hit by a hard, glassy stone such as quartz, jasper, agate or flint cleaves small, hot, oxidizing metal particles that can ignite tinder. The steel should be high carbon, non-alloyed, and hardened.

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  9. Char cloth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Char_cloth

    'The hard flint edge shaves off a particle of the steel that exposes iron, which reacts with oxygen from the atmosphere and can ignite the proper tinder'. [3] With this flint and steel technique the char cloth will ignite and an "ember will flash through it" allowing for a flame to be built around the ember. [4]