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Sniper-T
03-17-2016, 06:01 PM
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10 Non-Power Tools You Need for Survival


Have you thought about how you would make repairs to your home if the grid went down, or how about cutting that tree down without being able to use a chainsaw. Gas and electricity might not always be available, so having hand tools that our grandfathers used is a must.

I know what you’re thinking, why not just use battery operated tools and a solar charger. Those are fine but we all know batteries won’t last for ever, eventually they will stop taking a charge and then what. That's why it’s always a good idea to have a backup plan. So check out this excellent list from survivalcache.com of 10 non-power tools to have handy when the grid goes down.

survivalcache.com/10-non-power-tools-you-need_for_survival/


10 Non-Power Tools You Need for Survival

I knew we were in trouble the moment I saw the Black and Decker battery-powered adjustable wrench. I’d encountered screwdrivers with dead batteries, saws without extension cords, and drills with easily over-heated motors, but an electric wrench?

By Doc Montana, a contributing author of SurvivalCache.com

Frankentools

Even the Craftsman electric hammer wasn’t as frightening as a AAA-powered wrench. What was the world coming to? Since that time I have considered what essential but simple tools have crawled their way out of the primordial tool box and evolved into electric-powered, motor-driven, battery-dependent versions that grind, drill and saw through anything in seconds as long as their copper circulatory system has a steady flow of electrons. If the Grid goes down, the these highly advanced tools are collectively no more useful than a bright yellow bag filled with boat anchors.

Most people have experienced the failure of an electric screwdriver and have quickly remedied that situation, so manual screwdrivers were too obvious to make this list. But how about the other essential non-power tools necessary to rebuild society, or at least repair your domicile after a hurricane or civil war? Here’s a list of 10 non-power tools to have handy when the grid hits a speed bump.


What You Need

1. Cross-cut saw:

Very few people today have tried to cut through a large tree with a handsaw, and with good reason. Doomsday PreppersBranches, yes, but trunks, never. Now imagine a SHTF situation where you can’t use or don’t want to use a noisy, smelly chainsaw. Not hard to imagine actually, but as you look at the tree blocking the road, laying across your roof, or soon to be turned into your bug out cabin, you’ve got a lot of sawdust-making ahead of you. This country was built with cross-cut saws, and while not as efficient as their internal combustion descendants, a pair of muscles and a sharp cross-cut will make short order of any tree outside our national parks.

Cross-cut saws come in one and two person versions that differ by length and handles. If you live in a place where you know you will need to cut trees, the two-man version is best. For some strange twist of physics, twice the manpower is more than twice as fast. But if space is an issue, the one-man version is smaller and a makeshift second handle can be bolted onto the end of the blade if needed.


2. Hacksaw:

Most of us are quick to grab our reciprocating saw like a Milwaukee Sawzall (the Kleenex of such things) for just Doomsday Preppersabout every non-precise cutting task whether pipes, plywood, or plastic. Even fire/rescue folks have their trusty lithium-powered Sawzall on board to cut future hospital patients out of their current predicament.

Useful hand hacksaws come in two classic sizes, 10 inch blades and 12 inch. The standard looking solid-frame hacksaw uses a 12 inch blade while the mini saw uses the 10 inch. For the price, I recommend at least one of each, and you can use 12 inch blades on the mini versions, but it’s easy to break the non-supported portion of the blade if you’re not careful. And even if you do snap it in half, just keep using whatever piece fits in the saw.


3. Standard Hand Saw:

This is the traditional looking saw with a wood handle attached to a slightly triangular blade Forge Survival Supplytapering as it goes from grip to tip. They come in various lengths and tooth sizes, and of course, price points. The useful length of a hand saw tops out at about 30 inches, but a 26 or 20 inch blade works very well for most tasks. I have a handful of 15 inch saws floating around and they work as good or better than most camp saws when you don’t need to carry the saw in your pack.

As the teeth get smaller, it is easier to cut because less material is removed with each stroke. So the there is a tradeoff between cutting speed and necessary muscle. If you are in a region with harder woods, go for a tooth count above 10. If your world is more of softer woods like the pine forests of the west, then fewer than 10 teeth per inch will serve most needs just fine. Either way, the high-carbon steel will rust and pit if left alone outside.


4. Large Hand Drill:

Hand-powered drills seem to be something that has fallen off the radar of most folks due to their doomsday preppersproliferation in antique stores. Oddly, the same “antique” hand drill can be found in larger hardware stores for less money. Hobby shops often have a few on hand as well, but either way, there are plenty of options still in production.

Larger hand drills come in two popular designs. One looks like a bigger version of the standard small hand drill which is little more than a vertical shaft with a geared-crank wheel attached to the center, a handle above it, and a chuck below it. The other design called a brace drill looks like a bowed shaft of metal with a chuck on one end, a spin-able knob on the other and a rotating grip in the middle. Either design will allow you to place a considerable portion of your body weight on the shaft while drilling, but the cost of the more complex geared version increases exponentially as it goes up in size.

Brace drills are much less expensive and often have a ratchet mechanism like a socket that allows drilling in confined spaces where a complete revolution of the offset handle is not possible. Most brace drills have chucks that take up to half-inch bit shafts, but reduced-shaft wood bits give your brace drill up to a two inch diameter drilling capacity assuming you have a bit that size, let alone a need for a hole that big and the time to drill it.


5. Small Hand Drill:

Most household drilling jobs will settle for a hole one-quarter inch in diameter or less which just so Get Out of Dodge Bug Out Baghappens to be the capacity of smaller hand drills. It is very easy to snap off small drill bits when using a larger drill so small hand drills are essential if your drilling needs require holes pin to pencil-sized. Small hand drills do not generate as much torque as the larger versions, so both small and larger hand drills are necessary since one size won’t drill all.

Most of us, myself included, have many powered options when it comes to drilling holes and driving screws. But charging a 28v advanced lithium power cell is not the same as charging a cell phone battery with a crank-powered emergency radio. Without a gas-powered generator or a roof covered in solar panels, power tools are not really tools at all.


6. Battery-free Battery Tester:

These days, batteries can sit on a shelf for a decade and still have some useful juice left in TEOTWAWKI Survival Gearthem. Even the Sanyo Eneloop rechargeables are good after a year in the drawer. But how will you know if the cache of batteries you just discovered is any good. And as you know, one dud in the device kills all the others.

A battery tester that does not itself use a battery won’t give as reliable a reading as a powered tester, but still it is a helpful reading for most situations. The powered versions can test the battery under load, but most folks use a tester to give the thumbs up or down to any given battery. Just make sure the particular tester you have can test all the batteries you use including 12v CR123 and 3v button cells.


7. Battery-free Circuit Tester:

Why would you need an old-school Survival Blogcircuit tester if there is no electricity? Simple, how do you know there is no electricity? As one of the cheapest tools on this list, it is also one that could save your life. Since the indicator light won’t kick in until the volts approach three figures, its not going to work for car batteries. But that’s what a screwdriver is for right? You know, shorting the battery to check for a spark.

If you plan on building an off-grid solar panel array, you will need a multimeter with decimal-level voltage and amperage capabilities, but for encountering the errant wire or circuit box the old design works fine. In fact, you can go years on traditional battery-powered voltage detector, so toss one of those in your 72-month bag as well.


8. Hand-powered Grinding Wheel:

From plow blades to hatchet Apocalypse 101 heads, nothing makes sharpening large metal easier than moving the stone instead of the blade. Even at just a few hundred RPMs, the spinning stone will spit enough sparks to set your shop on fire if you’re not careful.

The spinning inertia of a hand-powered grinding wheel is only enough to do very small tasks. For any job of substance, the cranking must accompany the grinding so for those times, which happens to be all the time, an additional hand or two is helpful. And spinning the grinding wheel might be the most post-apocalyptic fun a kid can have.

Due to the extremely high chance that a speck of stone or metal will fly into your eye, your kid’s eye, or your dog’s eye, exercise caution by putting a transparent barrier between any living cornea and any remotely conceivable missile trajectory launched from the other side. If you need to use a hand-cranked grinding wheel then I sincerely doubt a hospital is just around the corner.


9. Hand-powered Air Pump:

In case you didn’t know it, you can use a bicycle air pump to inflate a car tire. It will take you survivalist bloga long time, but nothing is preventing it except maybe the wrong valve connector-which is an easy fix. Motorized vehicles use relatively low pressure tires with cars, trucks and motorcycle tire manufacturers suggesting something in the 25-45 psi range. But vehicle tires are also incredibly high volume spaces to fill compared to bicycle tires. Most bike pumps are designed for lower volume but much higher pressures, some over 200 psi. Either way, you’re SOL if all you’ve got is one air compressor and zero electricity. No matter how many hours of pumping it takes, a bike pump will get the job done. Raft pumps, on the other hand, are designed very high volume but extremely low pressures like 2 psi, so don’t bother going there except for air mattresses, and rafts of course.


10. Scythe:

In addition to being an authentic Halloween prop, the scythe Survivalist Blogis an indispensable tool when you need to mow down weeds so you can reclaim a gardening plot, or turn over a field after harvest. At it’s simplest, a scythe is little more than a wooden shaft with a pair of handles, one in the center and one at at an end. On the opposite end is a long narrow blade attached perpendicular to the shaft. From there it can get complex with numerous variations in shaft shape, handle design, and replaceable job-specific blades. No matter how modern a scythe’s design becomes, it is still quite recognizable as such since its function and use have never changed, only its comfort and efficiency.

Long after the lawn mower engine has seized and the push mower’s blades are too dull and chipped to cut anything, the scythe will keep going since using only the tools listed above, you could easily build yourself a new scythe from little more than a solid branch and a leaf spring.

AlphaTea
03-17-2016, 07:49 PM
All good to have items!
What about a hammer or axe? Shovel? Bolt cutter? Crow Bar?

Sniper-T
03-17-2016, 10:01 PM
those are numbers 11, 12, 13 and 14 respectively.

I got all 10/10 of these. How does everyone else fare?

Fidel MD
03-17-2016, 11:59 PM
I'd add tools to make tools....a large set of hand files, chisels, punches, an anvil (you can always knock together some kind of forge), etc....
Woodworking tools - wood chisels, hand planes, draw knives, spoke shaves etc.

Domeguy
03-18-2016, 02:32 AM
I have 6/10, but I agree with Alpha. I think they are more important...unless you just happen to live in a different country...like Canada..this test is rigged.

bacpacker
03-18-2016, 01:31 PM
Out of everything on the list and all others mentioned, I have all but a grinding wheel and air pump.
Good list

Sniper-T
03-18-2016, 01:46 PM
Keep in mind, that even if you have an electric bench grinder, if SHTF, you can take the outside guard off and put a wrench on the nut and spin it by hand, or take one wheel off and toss on a sheave and you can run it off a belt to a bicycle rim.

Kesephist
03-18-2016, 04:11 PM
Keep in mind, that even if you have an electric bench grinder, if SHTF, you can take the outside guard off and put a wrench on the nut and spin it by hand, or take one wheel off and toss on a sheave and you can run it off a belt to a bicycle rim.

Two man job, that, one providing power and one doing the actual grinding. Rigging it for footpedal operation like the above mentioned grinding wheels is another alternative.

Sniper-T
03-18-2016, 04:32 PM
some high end stuff here that you don't want to be without...

http://www.contractortalk.com/attachments/f40/104309d1386401287-humor-tool-sale-coupon-image001.jpg

http://www.contractortalk.com/attachments/f40/104310d1386401287-humor-tool-sale-coupon-image002.jpg

http://www.contractortalk.com/attachments/f40/104311d1386401287-humor-tool-sale-coupon-image003.jpg

http://www.contractortalk.com/attachments/f40/104312d1386401432-humor-tool-sale-coupon-image004.jpg

realist
03-19-2016, 01:23 PM
The one thing I have been looking for is a good grinding wheel. i want one that is foot powered, most I have seen have been antiques and the price was outrageous.

bacpacker
03-19-2016, 03:14 PM
I found a bench with a grinding wheel mounted that was foot powered at an antique store. It was $125. I passed on it but it's been there for a year or so cause I've seen it twice.

My stepdaughter has a grinder that is pulley driven. Right now he has it belted to a motor, but wouldn't be hard to swap to something manual.

jamesneuen
03-19-2016, 10:38 PM
I kind of want to look into some form of inertia driven system once I move into a permanent house. Think of a one ton stone wheel driving an overhead shaft that's started with a bicycle system (low geared). I saw a similar system in one of the old machining workshops that was run off of a tractor engine outside the building. It used big wide belts to power whatever pieces they needed at the time and then could be shut off when not needed.

There are tons of ways our elders lived without the convenience of electricity.

On the other hand, I only have about half of the tools listed. I really want to get all of them but I want to spend the money on getting really nice ones.

bacpacker
03-19-2016, 11:46 PM
James, I was at Lehmans last Saturday and they had a static display of a pulley and belt system that most likely was powered by a water wheel. There was enough pulleys, you could have powered a full shop at the same time. I would love to have that in a shop with a good year round location to power it.
They also had a good deal on hand tools. A couple I would love to have was a two man cross cut saw, with or without handles. And a one man rip saw for sawing trees into lumber. All brand new with German metal. Very nice.

realist
03-21-2016, 02:06 PM
I once went on a call where the grandfather had died years prior and the family had just closed it up. When we went in it was like a time machine. It had a pulley system with belts which were about four to six inches wide and ran several pieces of equipment. I was told they were promised to on of the family members. He had originally run by one of those large steam engines. The newspapers on the work bench were about 20 years old so I do not know if all of it was a hobby or a profession.

Stormfeather
03-22-2016, 04:10 AM
Ive got 10/10 and more. BUT... I am seriously in the market for a economical Hit & Miss engine antique style or a steam engine (Not a HUGE one) ... If anyone has any leads, I would love to hear about them!

bacpacker
03-22-2016, 12:46 PM
We see those every now and then around here. Mostly at antique or pioneer day type events. They will have them on display and sale one from time to time.

AlphaTea
03-22-2016, 02:45 PM
Ive got 10/10 and more. BUT... I am seriously in the market for a economical Hit & Miss engine antique style or a steam engine (Not a HUGE one) ... If anyone has any leads, I would love to hear about them!

That is on my list of things I want to get someday.

Illini Warrior
03-22-2016, 05:30 PM
Ive got 10/10 and more. BUT... I am seriously in the market for a economical Hit & Miss engine antique style or a steam engine (Not a HUGE one) ... If anyone has any leads, I would love to hear about them!


had a couple of h & m engnes on a local farm auction last fall - they sell well and don't come cheap $$$$$ ....

Vodin
03-22-2016, 06:24 PM
Got 8/10 mising the Scythe and the Bike Pump. Making a foot powered grind stone would not be that tough. I remember my Oma's sewing machine. It would take some time but I would be able to create it.

realist
03-22-2016, 11:03 PM
Regarding the steam engines, there are groups out there which rebuild and show those things. YOu might check to see if there is one in your area. I would imagine if you were to make a couple of meetings that someone would come up with one. By then you would probably find out what the going price would be and have a bunch of people you could use as a resources.

Sniper-T
03-23-2016, 01:24 AM
Just thinking about it... I'd like to pick up a spare handle for my scythe... anyone know where to get one?

eagle326
03-23-2016, 01:55 AM
Lehmans Hardware; Kidron Ohio.

bacpacker
03-23-2016, 02:05 AM
What Eagle said.

realist
03-23-2016, 02:17 AM
Harmony farm supply

Sniper-T
03-23-2016, 11:46 AM
Cutting by hand is something I did at the cabin as a kid, because that was the only way. back then it was fun, but this video reminds me of how much work it was:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lygbTKzu47Y#t=62

And in hindsight, I remember the sore muscles after. lol

Sniper-T
03-23-2016, 12:05 PM
Although that was an almost straight handle... mine is more like this one:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G07Mx59-KuI#t=14

The same blade should fit on either though, no? Or will the angle of attachment be different?

bacpacker
03-23-2016, 02:07 PM
Mine is the American style with bent handle. It is a lot of work. I planted a small plot of wheat just to see what I would need to do to have a liveable harvest if needed. It wore my ass out. One tip, be sure your blade is good and sharp and have a hone with you to touch it up at the first sign of dulling?

Sniper-T
03-23-2016, 02:23 PM
Yeh, sharp is the key. I think my dad used to drag a rock down the blade to dull it to keep us kids busy longer.
lol

Sniper-T
03-23-2016, 04:41 PM
Harmony farm supply

Don't see them on their website...

Stormfeather
03-25-2016, 02:48 AM
Lehmans Hardware; Kidron Ohio.

Beat me to it, cant wait to make another trip back home to Ohio, going to hit up Lehmans and fill up a damn uhaul worth of stuff!

eagle326
03-25-2016, 12:57 PM
Beat me to it, cant wait to make another trip back home to Ohio, going to hit up Lehmans and fill up a damn uhaul worth of stuff!

Would like to be there and watch that country boy go through Lehman's like a storm.

Imagine the Tasmanian Devil from our t.v. days. :eek:

ak474u
03-28-2016, 02:50 AM
Got a bunch of tools from my dad last week. One hand drill probably 1970s manufacture, already have a nice one that is probably 1930s, a couple of nice chisels, and a TON of assorted size c-clamps. Some are very old, and have "mouse ears" on the screw rather than a bar that I'm accustomed to. Don't know who the really old ones belonged to, I spent my entire childhood in my dad's studio full of tools, and I've never seen them in my life.

T70
03-28-2016, 05:40 AM
Got everything except the battery and circuit testers. Never even thought of those.

realist
03-28-2016, 11:19 PM
Sniper sorry I could not find one either on their website. However they have some hanging on the wall in back. At least a couple of weeks ago. Lehmans is probably closer to you.

Socalman
04-12-2016, 02:25 PM
I have 8 of the 10 tools described in the article. I do not have a manual grinder, nor do I have a scythe. I guess that is pretty good for a guy raised in the middle of suburbia. I suppose that I can use hand files for sharpening instead of the grinder.

jamesneuen
04-16-2016, 06:02 PM
hand files take so long to sharpen something when you have to put a completely new edge or bevel on it. I just reshaped my double bit axe head and I still have more I want to do on the cheeks of it but my arms were too tired even after doing just one side.