“True ignorance is not the absence of knowledge, but the refusal to acquire it.” – Karl Popper
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Notes for Tuesday – March 22, 2016
This is the birthday of Louis L’Amour. Some of his novels have survival themes, and one of the most notable ones was Last of the Breed.
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Today, we present another entry for Round 63 of the SurvivalBlog non-fiction writing contest. The nearly $12,000 worth of prizes for this round include:
First Prize:
- A Tactical Self-Contained 2-Series Solar Power Generator system from Always Empowered. This compact starter power system is packaged in a wheeled O.D. green EMP-shielded Pelican hard case (a $1,700 value),
- A Gunsite Academy Three Day Course Certificate that is good for any one, two, or three day course (a $1,195 value),
- A course certificate from onPoint Tactical for the prize winner’s choice of three-day civilian courses, excluding those restricted for military or government teams. Three day onPoint courses normally cost $795,
- DRD Tactical is providing a 5.56 NATO QD Billet upper with a hammer forged, chrome-lined barrel and a hard case to go with your own AR lower. It will allow any standard AR-type rifle to have a quick change barrel, which can be assembled in less than one minute without the use of any tools and a compact carry capability in a hard case or 3-day pack (an $1,100 value),
- Gun Mag Warehouse is providing 20 Magpul PMAG 30-rd Magazines (a value of $300) and a Gun Mag Warehouse T-Shirt; (an equivalent prize will be awarded for residents in states with magazine restrictions),
- Two cases of Mountain House freeze-dried assorted entrees in #10 cans, courtesy of Ready Made Resources (a $350 value),
- The Ark Institute is donating a non-GMO, non-hybrid vegetable seed package (enough for two families of four) plus seed storage materials, a CD-ROM of Geri Guidetti’s book “Build Your Ark! How to Prepare for Self Reliance in Uncertain Times”, and two bottles of Potassium Iodate (a $325 retail value),
- A $250 gift certificate good for any product from Sunflower Ammo,
- KellyKettleUSA.com is donating both an AquaBrick water filtration kit with a retail value of $250, and
- Two cases of meals, Ready to Eat (MREs), courtesy of CampingSurvival.com (a $180 value).
Second Prize:
- A Glock form factor SIRT laser training pistol and a SIRT AR-15/M4 Laser Training Bolt, courtesy of Next Level Training, which have a combined retail value of $589,
- A transferable certificate for a two-day Ultimate Bug Out Course from Florida Firearms Training (a $400 value),
- A Model 175 Series Solar Generator provided by Quantum Harvest LLC (a $439 value),
- A Trekker IV™ Four-Person Emergency Kit from Emergency Essentials (a $250 value),
- A $200 gift certificate good towards any books published by PrepperPress.com,
- A pre-selected assortment of military surplus gear from CJL Enterprize (a $300 value),
- RepackBox is providing a $300 gift certificate to their site, and
- Safecastle is providing a package of 10 LifeStraws (a $200 value)
Third Prize:
- A Royal Berkey water filter, courtesy of Directive 21 (a $275 value),
- A $245 gift certificate from custom knife-maker Jon Kelly Designs, of Eureka, Montana,
- A large handmade clothes drying rack, a washboard, and a Homesteading for Beginners DVD, all courtesy of The Homestead Store, with a combined value of $206,
- Expanded sets of both washable feminine pads and liners, donated by Naturally Cozy (a $185 retail value),
- Two Super Survival Pack seed collections, a $150 value, courtesy of Seed for Security, LLC,
- Mayflower Trading is donating a $200 gift certificate for homesteading appliances,
- Montie Gear is donating a Precision Rest (a $249 value), and
- Two 1,000-foot spools of full mil-spec U.S.-made 750 paracord (in-stock colors only) from www.TOUGHGRID.com (a $240 value).
Round 63 ends on March 31st, so get busy writing and e-mail us your entry. Remember that there is a 1,500-word minimum, and that articles on practical “how to” skills for survival have an advantage in the judging.
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Backup Electric Power Design Considerations- Part 3, by Duliskov
Batteries can generate, without damage, several hundred amperes of DC current for short periods of time. In fact, you can arc weld using a battery. There are welders designed to run from battery power alone or able to run either from internal batteries and/or supplementing utility power with internal battery power. Though the Hobart Trek 180 welder, which I recommend, may have been discontinued or currently unavailable, it is useful if you wish to achieve higher amps than is possible via a single 120V household outlet. The higher the battery’s amperage, the easier the battery can start a car engine, but this requires large surface area for chemical reaction to take place. Therefore, these batteries tend to have thinner, less durable plates, leading to faster deterioration of battery over time. Batteries more suitable for power backup are the deep cycle variety, which have more robust architecture and can withstand many hundreds of cycles of deep discharge (below 50% of their full capacity). In the best case, good quality deep-cycle batteries will last about 10 years in a typical daily charge-discharge scenario. Don’t forget to factor in the cost of replacement of your entire battery bank every ten years. You don’t want to regularly deplete your batteries below 50% of their rated capacity, because that shortens their life significantly (2x-3x times), so the useful total capacity is half of nominal amp/hours of your bank. Plan accordingly. The self-discharge rate even for the best lead-acid batteries is 3-5% weekly. Other battery technologies may have lower self-discharge.
When connecting multiple batteries for higher capacity or higher output voltage, wire them such that there is least or at least an equal number of batteries and length of wire in between the last battery terminal and the inverter input. There are multiple configurations possible, each with their own advantages and disadvantages; some are better for running high loads and some better for more equal charging. Always put a DC breaker, at a minimum of one, before the inverter. Size it so it is just a bit larger in terms of amps than your inverter. If you put a breaker on each battery, make them small enough so that their sum just about equals the breaker in front of the inverter. You can use automatic breakers that you can reset after they are tripped or an ANL wafer fuse. None of these types will trip, when you accidentally touch positive to negative, and cause sparks to fly; they are not that sensitive, but they will abort a short that is longer than a second or two, preventing a meltdown in your cabling.
Batteries are heavy and will eventually need to be moved around. After you have connected them, it will be even more difficult to do so. Invest in a heavy duty cart, and prepare for the hefty shipping cost.
You can simultaneously charge batteries and draw current from them. The appliance will be drawing current directly from the charger, and whatever is left– the difference between the charging current and consumption of appliance– will be deposited in the battery. If the appliance uses more current than the charger can supply, then the battery may supplement the difference, depending on your system setup.
I had my NOCO chargers plugged in while individually charging six disconnected Trojan AGM 27 batteries from 50% state of charge to full. I noted that it took eight hours to fully charge the batteries, during which time a total of 4 kWhatt/hour energy was deposited into the batteries. The peak power need was around 560 watts. Considering that I was running a 2kW inverter generator for eight hours, not just two hours, some fuel was wasted, despite the fact that this generator has the ability to adapt to various loads.
There are good online resources where you can look up battery manufacturers.
There are two ways to test a battery’s state of health properly. Let’s call these two methods the old-fashioned DC way and the new AC way. The old way is to load your battery with a resistive load; think of a heater, for example. It is recommended to load the battery to half of its maximum “cold cranking power” for 10-15 seconds; most personal vehicles use something in the range of 400-800 Amps “cold cranking power” or CCA, so you need to load the battery with 200-400 Amps of load to simulate a realistic drain on the battery for 10-15 seconds and measure the voltage drop in the process. 400 Amps by 12 Volts is almost 5,000 Watts that will need to be dissipated by the instrument between measurements. In battery shops, you could typically come by something like a 100 Amp load tester, which is not enough. To properly test a larger battery, you will need a 500 Amp load tester. If the voltage drop is more than what is presumed healthy, corrected for temperature of the battery, then it is time to get a new one. The proper test procedure involves fully charging the battery, waiting at least six hours, applying load, measuring voltage as you apply the load. I suggest you record the video of the voltmeter as you may miss the reading in the 10-15 seconds that the test runs. Alternatively you can also apply any known resistive load (per standard 25 Amps) and simply measure the time it takes to discharge the battery from full charge (give it six hours of rest period after charging it up) to 10.5 Volts (assuming lead acid battery), that will give you the actual reserve capacity at a specific load. A repeat timed discharge measurement down the road will reveal weakening performance; just make sure to use the same load/Amps again.
The newer and more accurate method of assessing your battery state is using of so-called conductance analyzer, which also works on partially discharged batteries (above 60% state of charge), and generates negligible amount of heat, because it uses less than 1 Amp of current. Technically it has only been tested on sealed valve regulated lead acid batteries. Practically, it appears, that low frequency (80-100Hz) conductance correlates directly with battery capacity as measured in a timed discharge test. This correlation is nearly linear allowing for state of health, a.k.a. timed-discharge capacity or reserve capacity, estimation. Keep in mind that increasing the temperature of an electrolyte always increases the conductivity between 1.5 and 5.0% per degree Celsius. To compensate for temperature changes, conductivity analyzers have integral temperature sensors that allow the analyzer to correct the raw conductivity measurement. Let the analyzer sit next to the battery a bit to reach the ambient temperature before measuring or you could get an incorrect assessment result. Measuring of conductance at multiple current frequencies (20Hz to 2kHz) allows for even more accurate assessment. Technically you need a reference value to compare the actual battery to for each temperature, which is either available in a database somewhere or not. Without a set reference value, conductance testing can still be utilized to trend state of health, but it is important to test each time the same way and at the same battery temperature.
Test your batteries periodically, at least once a year to ensure you don’t have deteriorating ones in your bank. If your bank is approaching end of life – knowing each battery’s performance allows you to regroup them into smaller banks to extend the life a bit. If one of the batteries in your bank is dead and they are connected in a string and you charge them together, then the dead battery will draw all the charge current due to its high internal resistance and your bank will charge very slowly. The solution to the above problem is to disconnect batteries before charging (doable, if you have a manual system and circuit breakers on each of them) and charge with a multiple-port charger or use a battery isolator. This can get expansive with large banks quickly. A good charger can efficiently charge multiple batteries simultaneously and simplifies installation. Charging many batteries with an cheap charger (low output current and only one or two ports) will require using the generator for longer periods of time.
Lead acid batteries must always be stored in a charged state. A topping charge should be applied every six months to prevent the voltage from dropping below 2.05–2.10 Volt/cell. (This equals to about 80-90% state of charge at room temperatures.) A lower charge state would cause sulfation. With AGM, these requirements can be somewhat relaxed.
Partially discharged batteries can freeze in winter cold. I don’t know if this will actually damage them or not, but I am assuming it is not beneficial. Fully charged battery will not freeze in the harshest of winter; however, it will seemingly “lose” part of its capacity, and the colder it is the weaker it will be. Do not keep your battery bank in an outside unheated box if you live in the north. In cold weather the voltage will also drop. At 0 degrees Celsius, for example, a fully charged battery may measure 12 Volt instead of 12.7 Volt. Don’t overcharge them. If your charger supports an external temperature sensor, it makes sense to install those near the batteries to prevent overcharging, which is very damaging to batteries.
There is some good online information for deep cycle batteries on various websites. (Scroll down to the white papers.)
DC to AC
So how can the energy stored in batteries and available in DC form power tools that require AC? It’s done via inverters. The cheaper version of inverter is generating an alternating current that has significantly different waveform from utility power. This may be sufficient to run resistive type appliances and lights, but motors will run less efficiently and heat up quicker and electronics and computers may or may not run at all. If uninterruptable power systems (UPS) is used to protect sensitive electronic from brownouts or voltage fluctuations, they may not like this type of “dirty” input and will switch to internal batteries depleting them despite availability of AC power. These cheaper inverters may also generate radiofrequencies that will interfere with wireless phones, cell phones, Ham radios, satellite communication, WiFi routers, and terrestrial TV signal.
The more expensive (typically three to five times more expensive) type of pure sine wave inverters generate AC that is as good as utility power and will not cause any of the problems discussed above.
Internal inverters may have totally isolated inputs and outputs or they may have one of the leads connected “through” and/or to common ground. The latter can present a problem with some inductive loads, for example isolation transformers, because the DC voltage offset may saturate the windings of the transformer, resulting in full power load on the transformer without anything plugged in it. The transformer may burn out rather quickly, not to mention it will consume maximum power constantly. So, if you need to use an isolation transformer for a medical appliance, like oxygen concentrator, it is best to charge the battery and power it from battery or to use a fully isolated inverter.
An inverter that has common ground and “through” connection between input and output is not suitable for feeding into a transfer switch to distribute the power to an entire house.
Inverters usually generate one phase AC. There are expensive models that can generate split phase having 240 Volts outputs, just like a typical gasoline or propane generator. Also, there are inverters in the few thousand range that can generate two-three phase AC current, too. However running a dryer or a powerful motor requiring 240V or multi-phase also requires a compatible battery bank, which would not be in the price range of an average person.
To measure DC current flowing through a wire you will need a clamp meter and to measure an AC current without splitting the power cord. You will also need a line splitter.
Inverters typically monitor the charge condition of the battery and shut themselves down when the voltage drops significantly. Some inverters can be configured by the end-user to shut at a specific voltage threshold, but most cannot. The voltage at which inverters shut down are between 10.5-11Volts, which essentially corresponds to a totally depleted battery bank, which is no good; see above. A simple voltmeter will allow constant monitoring of the battery status. There are automated tools that can do that for you at a more useful 11.7V threshold, and there is also a battery protector, which is another option.
Check if the inverter fans are triggered by the load or internal temperature. If they are triggered at a certain load, they will kick in, make noise, and consume your precious energy, even when the inverter is ice cold.
Many inverters are equipped with ground fault protected outlets (GFCI – circuit interrupters). Those are handy if you happen to touch a hot wire, as they will shut the circuit open in less than 30 milliseconds and may save your life. However, they can also keep randomly tripping, if there are other GFCI devices on the same circuit or you have a very small leakage into the ground somewhere. A tester comes in handy, if you want to be sure that your ground fault protection works.
Use cushioned clams to fixate your electrical cables or plastic clams for lighter wires, and use cushioned clams to protect your wires.
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Letter Re: Long-Term Gas Storage
Dear Hugh and Jim,
Here is my anecdotal knowledge relating to long-term storage of gasoline.
I grew up on my family’s dairy farm in northern Wisconsin. My dad had a 300-gallon steel gas tank that sat on a stand about six feet off the ground in the shade of a White Pine tree. He refilled it every year or two, and that gas powered our two Allis Chalmers WD 45 tractors and the other gas-powered engines, lawn mowers, etc., on the farm. So far as I know, he never used any stabilizers and we never had any fuel-related problems. Of course, the gas was rotated frequently enough that one would not expect there to have been problems.
My dad continued to raise a few head of beef and generally had a couple draft horses on the farm in the years after he sold the dairy herd and semi retired. He used much less gas then but still used it out of the 300-gallon tank. He would buy a couple hundred gallons of (non-ethanol) gas every two or three years as he needed it, again without using stabilizers and without any problem, even though the tank was always only partly full. My dad died in 2003. I know that the gas in the tank at the time of his death dated back to at least 2002 and might have been as old as 2000. I continued to use the gas out of that tank for the Allis tractors and for lawn mowers on the farm until 2008, when I emptied the tank and moved to my house. Even without fuel stabilizers, in an above-ground (although constantly shaded), partially empty tank, I experienced no problems with the gas, even in small engines. I have no doubt that the gas steadily degraded over that period of time, but it still performed adequately.
As a result of that experience, I have adopted the following practice for long-term storage of gas. Because I didn’t have a place to put the tank where it would be constantly shaded, as it was by the White Pine on the home place, I put it on the east gable end of my detached garage where it is shaded from noon on, and fashioned a covering of corrugated aluminum roof panels to protect it from direct sunlight. For the first few years I would use the gas and refill the tank with fresh gas every two years. That meant drawing down my supply so that if some calamity occurred at the worst possible moment, as calamities have a habit of doing, I would be left without my emergency fuel supply. Therefore, I have since adopted my current strategy, which seems to work fine. I treat the gas every nine to twelve months with PRI-G and, during the summer months, use gas out of the tank for lawn mowers and tractors. Whenever I have drawn the tank down by ten or fifteen gallons, I top it off with PRI-G-treated, non-ethanol gas. I continue to treat the whole 300 gallons with PRI-G every nine to twelve months. Over the course of a summer I will typically use 40 to 50 gallons of gas. In this way I will never completely rotate the gas, but I am adding the equivalent of a fresh 300-gallon tank full every six years and am depending on the PRI-G to maintain the quality of the fuel over the long run. This system, I think, carries the benefit of keeping my tank within ten or fifteen gallons of full at all times, which should help maintain the quality of the gas, and which means I should never be caught flat-footed in an emergency. Based on my experience using up my dad’s aging, untreated gas after his death, I believe that, especially with the benefit of PRI-G (in which I have much faith), the gas should always be of adequate quality. I know that diesel would be much easier to store long term in bulk, but I’m kind of attached to those old Allis tractors, and I think my system works. I offer my experience, for whatever it might be worth, to your readers. Respectfully, – F.D.
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News From The American Redoubt:
Idaho: House Suspends Rules, Passes Concealed-Carry Bill. JWR’s Comments: While not a perfect bill, this is still great news for the Constitutional Carry movement. The governor is expected to sign the bill into law. The Montana legislature is expected to follow suit, when it comes back into session. (They meet only in alternating years.) Montana’s Democrat governor has twice vetoed permitless carry bills, but the legislatures plans to send him another bill with a veto-proof majority.
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Elias Alias (of The Mental Militia Forums) has produced a new documentary, filmed in northwestern Montana: This Land is Our Land.
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GO MONTANA! County commissioners join people’s anti-Muslim refugee movement – B.B.
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Bullet casings disappear from LaVoy Finicum shooting scene, sources say – B.B.
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Documents: OSP moved fatal traffic stop to avoid Grant County sheriff – RBS
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Economics and Investing:
DOW JONES vs SILVER: Trading Volume Says It All
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Central banks are already doing the unthinkable – you just don’t know it – G.G.
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Items from Professor Preponomics:
US News
Including the Ocean Floor, the Feds Own Much More Land than You Think (Mises) Excerpt: “Is US land ownership heavily socialized? Let’s begin answering this question by considering the states with the largest percentages of government-owned lands.” The next post is a commentary from Judge Andrew Napolitano from 2014. It’s an older post, but it’s well worth reading in the context of the broad question about whether or not the federal government can constitutionally own land… Napolitano: Washington Lacks Constitutional Right to Own Land in Western States (PunditFact)
The Great Inflationary Lie: How You’ve Been Lied to About Inflation and the Cost of Living Since 2000 (My Budget 360) Excerpt: “Is inflation real? Absolutely and it is understated.”
University of Washington Wastes Science Grant (Government Waste Fraud and Abuse) Excerpt: “The University of Washington, a public university used federal funding for scientific research as its own personal piggy bank, spending hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars on personalized Snuggies, pottery, and a trip to Hawaii, according to a new audit report.”
Auditor: CMS Was “Passive” in Preventing Fraud in Administering Obamacare (The Washington Free Beacon) Excerpt: “…the agency did not resolve about one-third of applications with inconsistencies, which involved $1.7 billion in associated subsidies.”
How USA Today ID’d Water with High Lead Levels (USA Today) Commentary: From a financial standpoint, the clean-up of lead contamination in nearly 2,000 water systems will be orders of magnitude greater than the disaster in Flint, Michigan. This is, of course, in addition to the costs in terms of human health, which may be immeasurable. …and an additional story on the same also from USA Today: Beyond Flint: Excessive Lead Levels Found in Almost 2,000 Water Systems Across All 50 States
Life and Times During the Great Depression (Visual Capitalist) Excerpt: “The economy of the United States was destroyed almost overnight. More than 5,000 banks collapsed, and there were 12 million people out of work in America as factories, banks, and other shops closed.” …and a follow up in photos. The Pain of the Great Depression in Color: The Resilient Families Hit Hard by Economic Crisis Brought to Life in Striking Pictures (Daily Mail)
International News
Negative Interest Rates are Having an Unintended Consequence in Switzerland (Business Insider) Excerpt: “In response, it seems, Swiss banks have pushed up the cost of mortgages, particularly long-dated ones, with spreads more than doubling on average….”
Personal Economics and Household Finance
14 Ways to Save Money at the Grocery Store (Clark Howard)
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SurvivalBlog and its editors are not paid investment counselors or advisers. Please see our Provisos page for details.
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Odds ‘n Sods:
SurvivalBlog reader B.B. sent in this TED talk on software that can take an ordinary video and magnify nearly invisible motion and sound. If you don’t have time to watch the entire 12-minute video, at least fast forward to the 10-minute mark and observe them recover usable audio through soundproof glass by merely videotaping an empty potato chip bag. Michael Rubinstein: See invisible motion, hear silent sound
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The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that electric stun guns are Constitutionally protected.
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Reader T.P. sent this in: Nevada Assemblywoman: If You Were at Bundy Ranch and Had a Gun, Nevada Prosecutors are Looking to Arrest You within the Next Few Days. I haven’t yet heard of any of these arrests taking place yet though.
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Why Did The IRS Give The Dept. of Justice Twenty One CD-ROM’s? Illegal information sharing? – J.H.
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It’s time to stock up on ammunition– Personal Liberty – Sent in by D.S. (HJL Adds: …and standard capacity magazines.)
Hugh’s Quote of the Day:
‘”Forewarned, forearmed; to be prepared is half the victory.’” Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra (1547 – 1616) in Don Quixote, Book III Chapter 10
Notes for Monday – March 21, 2016
Just three days after Hessian mercenary forces assaulted the local New Jersey militia at Quinton’s Bridge in 1778, the same contingent surprised the colonial militia at Hancock’s Bridge five miles from Salem. In what became known as the Massacre at Hancock’s Bridge, at least 20 members of the militia lost their lives, some after attempting to surrender. The Loyalists reputedly exclaimed, “Spare no one! Give no quarter!” as they stormed the occupied house. Judge Hancock and his brother (both Loyalists) were bayoneted in the melee by the attackers, even though they were both staunch supporters of the crown and were themselves non-violent Quakers.
Pat Cascio’s Product Review: Survival, Escape & Evasion
Back in November of 1969, during my infantry school at Ft. Lewis, WA, we were afforded a one-day Survival, Escape & Evasion training course. The entire day was spent learning how to forage food and cook it, along with learning to read the sun during the day and the stars at night, for navigation purposes. We were also taught how to escape and evade capture by enemy troops, who were played by soldiers from other military units.
During our training, we were shown a map of where we were. It also showed some of the terrain we had to cover to get to “freedom”, once we were lucky enough to escape our captors, played by drill instructors. To this day, I can still picture in the very center of the map, a swampy area that we were instructed to stay out of, for obvious reasons. There were also boundaries that we were instructed to stay within. At the end of the course, we were told we would see lights (from buses), and that was our ticket back to the barracks.
When chaos broke out, we were instructed to make a break for it, which most of us did, while others were captured right at the start and taken to the “prison” camp, where they were tortured and interrogated. One method of torture was to put you in a coffin-like box with holes in it, through which they dropped garter snakes. Of course, we didn’t know for a fact what was crawling around our body inside that box.
Myself and two other soldiers made our escape and headed for freedom, as best we could. Now, it occurred to me that playing by the rules set out to us simply wasn’t going to suffice. Who plays by the rules, when you are attempting to escape capture by the enemy? So, during the course of the night, we traveled through the swampy area as well as going outside the boundary lines, one of which were some railroad tracks. I still remember watching “enemy” soldiers walking along the railroad tracks, always looking in the direction of the area where escaping soldiers would be, never once looking in the opposite direction, where my three companions and I were often skirting the area.
At one point, we heard the sound of engines running and saw lights. We thought it was the buses running with their headlights on. Nope! It was the “prison” camp, and we almost walked right in the front gate. Needless to say, we ran off in the opposite direction with the enemy hot on our heels. We did manage to survive, escape, and evade during that 24-hour time period, but not by playing within the rules!
This brings us to a new DVD I recently had the opportunity to review for SurvivalBlog.com readers called Survival, Escape & Evasion, produced by www.TheSurvivalSummit.com with a running time of 1 hour and 37 minutes. There is a lot of material covered in this DVD. According to the DVD, in 2014 alone there were an average of 700 abductions, 8,000 home invasions, and 40 murders per day in the USA alone. If you put pencil to paper, that comes out to a violent crime every 25.3 seconds, and this is during a “safe” time. Just imagine what it will be like in a SHTF scenario?
The instructor on this video is Jack Richland, a U.S. Marine Corp veteran and the CEO of Black Scout Survival. He has attended just about every escape, evasion and survival course that has been offered. Now, this is the only negative comment I can give on the DVD; when Richland is static, just standing there, giving the viewer instructions at the start of the DVD, his delivery is a bit dry, not boring but dry, and you will need to focus on the outstanding material he is presenting. Once you get past this at the start of the video and Richland is out of this portion of the studio, things pick up. Once again, the material he presents is outstanding, second to none. I watched this DVD several times with my wife at my side. She also commented on the presentation being a little dry, and she is a teacher. Now, with that out of the way, let’s take a look at the material covered in this video.
Richland covers escape from all types of restraints, including handcuffs, duct tape, zip ties, flex cuffs, ropes, and locks. You will also learn how to escape from the trunk of a car while handcuffed. I love this part of the DVD; you will learn how to use everyday items carried on your person to help you escape. I especially enjoyed his section on lock-picking. I took a locksmithing course many years ago, just out of curiosity, and learned how to pick all kinds of locks. Many, everyday common locks are easy to pick with very little training, while other types of locks are more difficult to pick open. Richland spent a lot of time demonstrating lock picking, and I enjoyed it.
There is also a section on how to lose someone you believe might be following you with some simple and effective methods. There are some anti-kidnapping methods also taught in the video. Then there are everyday, very simple disguises that you can use to change your appearance.
Without a doubt, there is a lot of material covered in this DVD, and you won’t be able to take it in during one viewing, so you’ll need to watch this DVD several times and practice what is presented to you. The DVD is well done, professionally done, not with a cheap camera and some no-talent actors. Jack Richland obviously knows what he’s talking about and teaches this material all over the country.
Today, we all feel safe when we leave our homes; however, with each passing day, it does get more dangerous out there. In a scenario where the grid might go down, or a serious SHTF scenario takes place, things can and probably will go very bad for us, and there are a lot of bad people out there who want to do us harm. If we learn to fight back, especially if we are captured, it can make the difference between life and death. If you escape, you will live to fight another day.
“Survival, Escape & Evasion” is a DVD that can save your life, if you train and practice the techniques that are presented in it. This DVD from thesurvivalsummit.com is only $29.95 and is well worth the asking price. It is not only entertaining, but you will learn some valuable skills that will save your life one day. Pick up a copy and have your entire family sit down and watch it with you.
– Senior Product Review Editor, Pat Cascio
The Long and Short of Bolt Action Rifle Magazines
I often hear from consulting clients and other SurvivalBlog readers with bolt action rifles who are looking for a magazine with more than the standard 3 or 4 round capacity. (“Just in case”, they say.) Thankfully, there are now several aftermarket extended detachable magazine systems available. Here are some examples:
Remington M700
Most Model 700 Remington rifle owners are probably already familiar with the Accuracy International Chassis System (AICS) detachable magazine bottom metal and magazines, available from Brownells and several other vendors. (Note: The steel magazines are fairly expensive, but the great news is that MagPul now makes both long action and short action polymer PMAGs in the AICS pattern that are quite affordable. You can order those through GunMag Warehouse for less than $40 each.) The AICS system installation is reversible and requires no gunsmithing.
If you own a M700 chambered in .223 Remington, Pacific Tool and Gauge makes nifty trigger housing groups that accept standard alloy AR-15 magazines. (Note: The bottom of the receiver must be slightly milled out, to provide clearance for the magazines. Hence this particular conversion is non-reversible.)
Winchester Model 70
AICS magazine conversions are also available for Model 70 Winchesters, both short and long action. The M5 Stealth DM (Detachable Magazine) System for M70 is available from Brownells or Stocky’s.
Savage Bolt Action
Savage bolt action rifle owners should check out Darkeagle Custom. They make very nice 10-round magazines for several Savage variants that already have center feed detachable magazines. Be advised that these will only fit certain detachable box magazine (“DBM”) Savage rifles, so double check before you order. By the way, they also make extended magazine release buttons and oversize bolt knobs.
Mosin Nagant
Pro-Mag–a company with mixed reviews on their quality control–makes a 10-round magazine for Mosin-Nagant rifles available for less than $19, but… caveat emptor.
Mauser M1898 (And Some Clones)
For many years, International Military Antiques (IMA) made a quasi-replica of the German WWI semi-detachable M1898 Mauser “Trench magazine” with 25-round capacity. These won’t pass muster with the exacting eye of button-counting historical re-enactors, but at least they function quite well. A much more authentic Trench magazine replica is available from Keep Shooting (a loyal SurvivalBlog advertiser).
I’ve also heard of a conversion available for Israeli K98s chambered in 7.62mm NATO that use HKG3 or CETME magazines, but in a recent web search I wasn’t able to track them down.
A few replica Springfield Model 1903 trench magazines were also produced back in the 1970s, but finding one those on the secondary market might turn into a Grail Quest.
Other Bolt Actions
Absent a big gunsmithing budget, the owners of other brands of bolt action rifles are probably out of luck, beyond the factory offerings. Tikka, for example, makes quite expensive spare “extended” magazines that only add a couple cartridges. Ditto for some Weatherby rifles. But given enough time and money, most skilled gunsmiths can probably fabricate you an extended magazine, although it probably won’t be quickly detachable, unless you are starting out with a rifle that already has DBM bottom metal. Long action Mauser-pattern rifles can sometimes be converted to accept military surplus MG13 magazines, which are surprisingly inexpensive and plentiful. (The same magazine has been adapted for Hakim and Ljungman rifles.) With some “cutting and pasting”, BAR magazines have also been converted for use in some bolt actions.
At one time I owned a Winchester Model 70 chambered in .308 Winchester that had been converted to accept standard M14 magazines. But the company that did that conversion–Moe’s Competitor’s Supplies (MCS)–no longer does this work.
Conclusion
If you want to give your bolt action greater capacity, then first do plenty of research on the Internet and proceed with caution. My general advice is to make fully reversible conversions, especially if your rifle has any collector’s value, such as pre-’64 Winchesters. Don’t grind or whittle on one of those, or your grandchildren might never forgive you. The same advice applies to camouflage paint jobs. Now that we live in the era of removable Gun Skins camouflage wraps, you have no excuse. You should probably keep any rifle that has any collector’s value original.)
In a perfect world, the makers of all bolt action rifles would have long ago standardized with just a couple of types of detachable magazines–preferably inexpensive military surplus magazines. But, of course, we don’t live in a perfect world. So get creative, and you may be surprised at what you can accomplish. – JWR
Letter Re: The Fallacy of Hunting as a Survival Technique
HJL,
In the article he omits two important points:
- Are you willing to leave your safety, family, and supplies to wander out into an “anything goes” environment? You can bet there will be no one wearing fluorescent orange.
- You are not the only one “hunting”. You are also “game”.
When you are dragging home your equipment, weapon, and your kill as well as possibly a few bits of yourself, who is going to stay home and guard your door? When it goes up, all bets are off. All the “rules” are no more. Better to store than go out in the war (zone). On black Friday now, people will stomp each other to get a Tickle Me Elmo doll. Think what it will be like when they want FOOD! – Kenny in Pa
Recipe of the Week: Pumpkin Nut Bread
Ingredients:
- 1½ cups flour
- 1¼ tsp soda
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- ½ tsp ground nutmeg
- 1 cup canned pumpkin
- 1 cup sugar
- ½ cup buttermilk
- 1 egg
- 2 tbs soft butter
- 1 cup chopped pecans
Directions:
- Sift flour, soda, salt, and spices.
- Combine pumpkin, sugar, buttermilk, and egg in a mixing bowl.
- Add dry ingredients and butter; beat until well blended.
- Stir in nuts.
- Spread in a well-greased and floured 4 to 5 cup mold or a 1-lb coffee can; cover with foil.
- Place your rack in your slow-cooking pot.
- Pour 2 cups of hot water in the pot.
- Place covered bread container on the rack.
- Cover pot and cook on high 3 to 4 hours.
- Turn out on a cooling rack.
You can serve this warm or cool.
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Useful Recipe and Cooking Links:
Do you have a favorite recipe that would be of interest to SurvivalBlog readers? Please send it via e-mail. Thanks!
Economics and Investing:
Social Security Administration Beneficiaries Top 60,000,000 – B.B.
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Subprime Auto Delinquencies Soar Past Crisis Levels, Now Highest In 20 Years – G.G.
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Items from Professor Preponomics:
US News
We Need the Pain that Comes with More Saving (Mises)
Jacques: When Will the Sky Fall for Detroit Public Schools? (Detroit News) Excerpt: “The district’s latest emergency manager, former bankruptcy Judge Steven Rhodes, is trying to strike fear into lawmakers this week about the impending cash flow woes, in the hopes that the April 8 deadline will force the Legislature to pass bills to send an infusion of cash to DPS.”
Here’s Where the $110 Billion in Wall Street Fines Went (Fortune)
Banks Got Bailed Out, Homeowners Got Sold Out – and the Feds Made a Killing (The Fiscal Times) Excerpt: “But a news investigation into the aftermath of the crisis shows that the U.S. government did turn a profit on after-the-fact enforcement of these interlocking frauds, without distributing those profits to the homeowner victims.”
Peabody Energy Warns It May File for Bankruptcy Protection (AP The Big Story) Excerpt: “A slowing global economy and toughening environmental standards have slammed the coal industry, which is already beset by bankruptcies, shuttered mines and layoffs.”
International News
Norway Cuts Interest Rates and Warns They Could Go Negative (The Telegraph) Excerpt: “Norway’s counterparts in Sweden and Denmark have already plunged their interest rates below zero in a bid to prevent the appreciation of their currencies and stoke inflation.”
IMF Backs Unconventional Monetary Policies Despite Warnings from Emerging Economies (Reuters)
Personal Economics and Household Finance
50 Ways to Save $500 this Month (Huffington Post)
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SurvivalBlog and its editors are not paid investment counselors or advisers. Please see our Provisos page for details.
Odds ‘n Sods:
Clinton says Supreme Court ‘wrong on the Second Amendment’ – She also criticized the NRA during this fundraiser: “I’m going to speak out, I’m going to do everything I can to rally people against this pernicious, corrupting influence of the NRA,” she said. “And we’re going to do whatever we can.” – T.P.
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For those who don’t want to spend hundreds of dollars to upgrade their old computer hardware, or perhaps are looking for an inexpensive alternative for a 2nd computer: Endless Mini – $79 computer. It’s not blazingly fast, but it does the job. – P.S.
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Navy Dad Goes on Hunger Strike in Kansas Until State-Kidnapped Children are Returned or He Starves to Death. While all parties involved have some issues, the abuses of the state are way overboard here. – D.S.
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Will America’s way of life survive? – S.L.
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