All,
Thank you for your help thus far.
ATMyller, Diesel sounds interesting. However it doesn't have to be suitable for a camping stove. I'd be using it more as an accelerant, dumping it on wet tinder and spark with the ferro rod to make fire starting in wet conditions easier. As long as I don't get cancer from breathing it and it won't explode in my pocket, I'm all ears.
Do you happen to know the burn time per gram for diesel? I would think energy density and burn time would be related but I'm unsure. My chemistry knowledge is limited to a high school level course. Whatever level of heat produced is likely enough to start fires in any scenario I can think of, burn time is more important due to the dampness of fire starting materials. Additionally ignition of the accelerant isn't the difficult part as ferro rods make sparks in excess of 2000 degrees F.
As for mass vs volume weight is more important in this scenario. I'm more likely to carry too much heavy stuff than I am too bulky stuff.
Borek, believe me I see the merit in matches. I intend to bring both and have done so previously. in terms of most efficient to carry (i.e. which one starts more fires for less weight) ferro rod wins! I've started fires with everything from a bow drill kit to a lighter and aerosol can (fun times at scout camp...). Partially due to scouting's "be prepared" mindset, I've always found good wisdom in bringing multiple fire starting implements as a contingency for the failure of one or the other. (i.e. it's too cold so the butane lighter won't work, your matches are soggy and won't burn, etc.). In most cases, I agree it's not necessary, however, I intend to do some backpacking in tough terrain (think Canada/Alaska) in the future and refuse to be caught without a "multi layer" fire starting kit.
Enthalpy, The fuel is not so much a problem as the tinder. Of course bringing along cotton balls makes life easy, but I much prefer to carry less and use natural tinder or process my own in the field. Often times this method is made more difficult by weather, thus the need for fire starting aids like I'm proposing here.
Hexamine is good, and I've used it before, however as a solid fuel the best I've found is a product called "livefire" it comes in a little tin and is orangish-yellowish in color and burns far longer than hexamine partially due to the tin. I use this as a "last resort" in a situation where everything has gone completely bad, I keep a pack of this in my pocket and use it when I can't get a fire started any other way or I need one NOW for fear of hypothermia or other issues.
It occurs to me while writing this that mayhaps it would be better to simply carry more livefire? A solid is more dense than a liquid by nature... Each tin weighs .9 oz total, so 25.5 g. with a burn time of 30 minutes the burn time per gram figures to be ~1.18 min/g. I wonder how Kerosene and Diesel compare...
Thank you all for your help