:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The kit is made before you need it. Making it under pressure teaches you nothing. :INFO What Makes a Good Bow Drill Set The bow drill is a friction fire system where a spindle is rotated rapidly against a fireboard by a bow. The friction generates temperatures above 400°F at the interface, producing hot black dust that forms a self-sustaining coal. Every component must be correctly matched for the system to work: wood species, moisture content, spindle shape, socket friction, and bow string tension all interact. :COUNTER.half Bone Dry | :COUNTER.half Cedar / Willow :PATH Select and Process the Fireboard Flat, dry, finger-width thick softwood with straight grain. | :INFO Select and Process the Fireboard Cut the fireboard from the same species as the spindle, or from a compatible pairing. Ideal: dry, dead, standing cedar, willow, cottonwood, or mullein. Thickness: 1/2 to 3/4 inch — thin enough for heat to build, thick enough not to crack. Grain must run the length of the board — short grain cracks under foot pressure. Plane or whittle one face flat for stable footing. :PATH Select and Shape the Spindle Straight, round, 3/4 inch diameter, dry softwood — no bark. | :INFO Select and Shape the Spindle Choose a dry, straight-grained branch about 12 inches long and 3/4 inch in diameter. Remove bark completely with a knife. Taper the bottom end to a gentle blunt point — not sharp. The friction end must be blunt enough to generate debris dust, not drill. The top end should be rounded to minimize friction in the handhold socket — handhold friction steals energy from the spindle rotation. :PATH Build the Bow and String It A curved stick with paracord or natural cordage — not too much tension. | :INFO Build the Bow and String It Select a dry, springy branch 20 to 24 inches long with a natural slight curve. Notch both ends with your knife for the bowstring. String with paracord, bank line, or braided plant cordage. String tension: when pressed to the side, the string should deflect 1 to 2 inches. Too tight and the spindle binds, sapping rotation. Too loose and the string slips off the spindle. :PATH Make the Handhold A hardwood piece with a smooth, lubricated socket for the spindle top. | :INFO Make the Handhold The handhold must be hardwood (harder than the spindle) with minimal socket friction — all the friction goes to the fireboard. Use a knot, a stone with a natural cup, or carved hardwood. Lubricate the handhold socket with earwax, sap, or any waxy plant material — this dramatically reduces heat loss at the top end. Green wood contains enough moisture to work as a lubricant in the handhold. :CHECKLIST Kit Material Summary [ ] Spindle: 12-inch dry softwood (cedar, willow, or mullein), 3/4-inch diameter [ ] Fireboard: same species, 1/2-inch thick, flat on one face [ ] Bow: curved springy branch, 20 to 24 inches [ ] Bowstring: paracord or twisted plant cordage [ ] Handhold: hardwood or dense knot with smooth socket [ ] Coal catcher: dry leaf or piece of bark under the notch :NOTE Species Pairing Is Not Guesswork Not all wood combinations produce usable friction. The most reliable pairings: cedar-cedar, willow-willow, cottonwood-willow, mullein-cottonwood. Hard/soft mismatches (maple spindle, willow board) either produce no heat or wear unevenly. Test a pairing on scrap before committing the full notch and drilling position. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Your hands will know the difference between a set that works and one that does not. Make the set first. :LINK https://www.primitiveways.com/bow_drill.html Primitive Ways — Bow Drill Fire Method and Materials Guide