Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Gear Forum :: auger vs. chisel?
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MN_Lindsey |
Fast, easy. Literally able to drill through the ice faster than a motorized auger as well! Just pack on the top of your pulk. |
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ArrowheadPaddler |
auger vs. chisel |
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cyclones30 |
Treat the blades like they're made of glass and you'll be good. Abuse the blades and they'll be dull faster than you'd like |
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Jaywalker |
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brulu |
I did get an idea from the Calvin Rutstrum 'Paradice Below Zero' book: melt ice (chipped from the lake with a hatchet or ice chisel) instead of melting snow. Theoretically it would require the same amount of fuel, but there would be some time efficiencies since you could fit a full batch into the pot just once at the beginning and you wouldn't need to keep gathering and adding snow as it melted and freed up space in the pot. I haven't tried it yet but I would expect it to work at least marginally better. Somewhere while browsing a lot of old winter camping posts on this site I stumbled on something called a spoon auger. I had never heard of them, but they were apparently the missing link between ice chisels and spiral-fluted augers back in the 50s and 60s. It seems like they were all made in Sweden (by Mora) and imported here. They aren't as fast as the spiral type, but they're less bulky since they just have the spoon blade at the end, a connecting rod, and the hand crank. No one makes them anymore (as far as I can tell), so you have to look on ebay or Craigslist. Most of them are in rough shape and would need refurbishing. I managed to find a never-used 4 inch replacement blade that was nice and sharp, and adapted it to the hand crank from my Lazer. It cut through a foot of ice on the harbor here in Duluth in a minute or so with no problem. It's a pound and a half lighter than the Lazer, and without the bulky flutes it can nestle into the bottom of my sled rather than strapping on top. Can't wait to try it out on a bwca trip! |
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Savage Voyageur |
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bwcajohn |
Last week I replaced them with a Lazer Strikemaster 6" auger from Gander Outdoors in Lakeville and it cuts like a hot knife through butter. The handle also can be quickly removed to cut the length in half which makes it easier to pack. The blade cover is much better than the stock Mora one as well. I think I spent about $95 plus I paid $12 for the protection plan which will allow me to replace it for any reason in the next two years. You can have a hole drilled in under 30 seconds this way. |
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schweady |
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cyclones30 |
bwcajohn: "I have two Mora augers that I have replaced blades on or had the blades sharpened, and they just do not cut well. I have tried everything including shims and new blades. I have heard that this is common with Moras. Lazer is the best hand auger out there....unless you're gonna spend a couple bejamins on a Nils. And yes, if you're purely going for water get one even smaller than 6". If you're fishing too, stick with 6 or so. Most lazers here in IA new are in the $80 range |
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ForestDuff |
I bring a 6" or 8" Nils depending on whether we are targeting stream or lake trout. The bigger hole is nice for dipping in coffee pots, and doesn't shrink freeze as quickly. But a 4" is super easy to pop new holes when water is needed. We used to bring a 4" hand auger on ice fishing trips outside the BW, just to use for a transducer hole in between our power augered 8" holes in our solo shanty's. So much less effort than using an 8" or even a 6" hand auger. Chisel's take a lot of time, and are probably just as heavy as a 4" hand auger. Many many minutes vs literally seconds with an auger. |
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Lailoken |
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