Engineering:Fire plough
A fire plough (or fire plow) is a firelighting tool. In its simplest form, it is two sticks rubbed together.[1] Rubbing produces friction and heat, and eventually an ember.[2] More advanced are "stick-and-groove" forms, which typically uses a V-shaped base piece of wood, and a "friction stick" as the activator.[2][3]
The typical fire plough consists of a stick cut to a dull point, and a long piece of wood with a groove cut down its length. The point of the first piece is rubbed quickly through the groove of the second piece in a "plowing" motion, to produce hot dust that then becomes a coal. A split is often made down the length of the grooved piece, so that oxygen can flow freely to the coal/ember. Once hot enough, the coal is introduced to the tinder, more oxygen is added by blowing and the result is ignition.
References
- ↑ "Fire : Egyptian Bow Drill, Fire Plough, Fire Piston, Fire Saw, Fire Thong". Woodcraftwanderings.org. http://www.woodcraftwanderings.org/fire_3.html.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "The Fire Plow by Bart & Robin Blankenship". Hollowtop.com. http://www.hollowtop.com/spt_html/fireplow.htm.
- ↑ https://archive.org/download/popularsciencemo10newy/popularsciencemo10newy.pdf [bare URL PDF]
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire plough.
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