Mirror for making fire using sunlight
by tonytran2015 (Melbourne, Australia).
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#magnifying glass, #fire, #make fire, #making fire #mirror, #sunlight
Figures: Reverse sequences of lighting a cigarette by the system at 5 seconds and 1 second.
This post shows how to set up a mirror and use it for quickly starting fire using moderate sunlight or for heating tiny dark components very cleanly using strong sunlight. The aim is to set up a low cost, robust, reliable system from common household items. The system serves as a useful fire lighting device composed of only two useful common devices (a mirror and a magnifying glass) in any prolonged emergency such as after a disaster.
The tiltable mirror allows alignment of its axis towards the Sun and its flat mirror combines with the magnifying glass to produce a tiny image of the Sun with all energy going through the magnifying glass converging on that tiny image.
The radiative heat flux from the Sun is concentrated by a factor C given by
C = Pi*d*d/(Pi*f*a*f*a) = (d/f)*(d/f)*(1/a)*(1/a)
where d and f are respectively the diameter and focal length of the lenses and a is the angular diameter of the Sun (a = 0.5*3.14/180radian = 0.0087 radian).
The geometric concentration of factor of this system is
C = (1/1.5)*(1/1.5)*(125)*(125) = 5800.
Allowing for some transmission loss, the concentration is downgraded but is still quite high and the heated area is a not too small 2mm diameter circle. So fire making should be easy with it.
The mirror and the magnifying glass cost 3USD and 3USD respectively. Do NOT use the concave sides of common make up mirrors as they are not accurately made and cannot focus sunlight into sharp pictures.
WARNING: The system is very potent and should be locked away from sunlight or dismantled after use to avoid house fire caused by its misplacement.
1. Required materials.
Figure 1: A tiltable flat mirror.
Figure 2: A magnifying glass of 10cm diameter.
Figure 3: A roll of sticky tape.
1. A tiltable make-up mirror,
2. A quality, 100mm diameter glass magnifying.
3. Some 2m of clear sticky tape.
The magnifying glass used here has a focal length of 300mm.
2. Assembling the mirror.
1. Tape the sharp metal edge of the metal frame of the glass magnifying glass to prevent scratching the make-up mirror.
2. Use sticky tape to tape the magnifier handle onto the FLAT side of the tiltable mirror.
3. Use sticky tape to tape the diametrically opposite metallic side of the magnifying glass to the mirror.
4. Use more sticky tape to keep the magnifier strongly attached to the mirror.
Note that the concave side of most make-up mirrors is not precise enough for this type of set up.
3. Aligning the mirror and finding the hot spot.
1. Let the mirror axis points towards the Sun.
2. Move a thin, narrow strip of paper across and along the axis of the magnifier to find the focal point where sunlight converges to a smallest size circle with extreme brightness.
4. Making a fire.
Use a dry, fresh cigarette as tinder/fuel.
Place the tip of the cigarette at the focal point (where concentrated sunlight is brightest) and let it point towards the mirror. Depending on its brand, the cigarette may light up more easily at its inside filling or at its paper enveloping side.
In the experiment in the pictures, smouldering began in less than 1 second and after 5 seconds the tip of the cigarette was already burning with a red glow. The test was carried out in winter (2016 Jan 5th, 14:30hr) in Saigon (latitude 10 degrees N) and the Sun elevation was about 35 degrees, just breaking out of the clouds in a cloudy day. The cigarette in use was from a freshly opened package of (Vietnamese) Craven brand.
see also
https://www.outdoorlife.com/blogs/survivalist/2012/02/survival-skills-how-build-hand-drill-fire/
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Reblogged this on disturbeddeputy and commented:
Always learn new tricks.
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