Backpacking stove recommendations?

The place for general talk about gun, shooting, loading, camping, survival, and preparedness related tools and gear, as well as gear technology discussion, gear reviews, and gear specific "range reports" (all other types of gear should be on the back porch).
User avatar
Weetabix
Posts: 6113
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 11:04 pm

Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by Weetabix »

I think I'm about ready for a new backpacking stove. I've been using a soda can alcohol stove for quite some time. It's light; it will boil a pot of water; fuel's cheap. But it won't simmer, and it runs out of fuel pretty shortly after the boil (I know - increase the reservoir size). I think I'm ready for more control.

I'm looking at:
Mfr / Model / Weight / Simmer / Fuel / Price
MSR / SimmerLite / 8.5 / Y / WG / 99.95
MSR / DragonFly / 14 / Y / Multi / 129.95
Optimus / Nova / 15.3 / Y / Multi / 140
Brunton / Vapor AF / 16 / Y / Multi / 149.95
Optimus / SVEA / 18 / Y? / Multi / 89.97

Similar boil times except the SVEA is 7 minutes vs 3.5 for the rest. I like the multifuel option because... you never know. I kind of don't like the jetboil option because of the fuel restrictions.

So. Does anyone have experience with any of these? Recommendations?
Note to self: start reading sig lines. They're actually quite amusing. :D
User avatar
SeekHer
Posts: 2286
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 9:27 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by SeekHer »

I use the Firefly a lot and it replaced the Optimus Crux old style which is sitting in the cupboard ready to use if needed...

Some others to consider:
Brasslite
Kovea
Kunzi -- An old version sits in the trunk of every vehicle
Mini Bull
Primus
Sierra
Trangia -- Amazing stove
Zen
ZZ Stove -- Turbo driv

And a few others of the Survival Nature
Bush Buddy
Esbit -- One sits in the glove box of every vehicle, no control just heat but better then a candle!
QVist
Sol Huma -- Neat design
Stratus
Trail Designs -- Caldera Cone System works great, like the Jetboil but smaller...

Your Choices
Brunton -- Vapor is quite nice
M S R
Optimus
Last edited by SeekHer on Sun Oct 18, 2009 12:49 am, edited 1 time in total.
There is a certain type of mentality that thinks if you make certain inanimate objects illegal their criminal misuse will disappear!

Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
Dedicated_Dad
Posts: 2810
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 11:46 pm
Location: Behind Enemy Lines

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by Dedicated_Dad »

I've been fiddling with a homemade "twig" stove made from bean and tuna cans, and one made from soda-cans that burns alcohol. The "twig" stove actually works quite well with a triox bar as well.

I have an idea in my head for a "wood gas" stove - a hybrid of the "twig" and "alcohol" design that should - if I could make it work - burn hotter than either and consume fewer twigs...

DD
workinwifdakids wrote:MV Gun Counter: "We're like Blackwater, except without the impulse control."
Random Internet Moron wrote: "High Caliber Magazine Clips are only useful for random slaughter of innocent civilians, so they should only be used by the police."
User avatar
Jered
Posts: 7859
Joined: Wed Aug 20, 2008 1:30 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by Jered »

Can't go wrong with an MSR.
The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote.
User avatar
JAG2955
Posts: 3044
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 9:21 pm

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by JAG2955 »

No one suggested a JetBoil yet?
User avatar
Windy Wilson
Posts: 4875
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 5:32 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by Windy Wilson »

I'm a fan of the Svea 123. It's not dual fuel, and it's not the best at simmer, but it is the VW or Model T of stoves. Tough and reliable to a fault. There are some in my old Boy Scout troop that are 36 years old and still going strong.
The use of the word "but" usually indicates that everything preceding it in a sentence is a lie.
E.g.:
"I believe in Freedom of Speech, but". . .
"I support the Second Amendment, but". . .
--Randy
Johnnyreb
Posts: 472
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 2:02 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by Johnnyreb »

There's this one I came across a few weeks ago. I've been looking for something I can use to heat up canned food during extended power outages, such as huge tornados (07) or huge ice storms (08). Since I have a plentiful fuel supply for it out in the yard I figure having one of these in the supply closet of my all electric house is a better idea than a small charcoal grill and a few sacks of charcoal, which is what I have right now.


http://www.kellykettle.com/
User avatar
SeekHer
Posts: 2286
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2008 9:27 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by SeekHer »

Johnnyreb wrote:There's this one I came across a few weeks ago. I've been looking for something I can use to heat up canned food during extended power outages, such as huge tornados (07) or huge ice storms (08). Since I have a plentiful fuel supply for it out in the yard I figure having one of these in the supply closet of my all electric house is a better idea than a small charcoal grill and a few sacks of charcoal, which is what I have right now.


http://www.kellykettle.com/
I had one of those for years and years back when they were called Coal Miner's or Irish (Paddy) Cookers...Went were all things go, up in smoke!

It went geese and upland hunting with us all the time...Great to "Billy a cuppa" after the morning's goose hunt and before heading into the coverts for Grouse (to tease us) shoots...

They work amazingly well and you'll get a roiling boil on in no time--dependent on the fuel used of course...In the instruction manual it said not to use charcoal (something IIRC too intense heat or too long burning) so over the years we had it, it never burnt briquettes but it does not say so on the web site so either it's in the manual or they've improved upon it…We’ve had water boiling using nothing but junk mail…

The store that sold them, long defunct now, always carried only two sizes—2.5 and 1 pint--but the company’s website shows four…We only ever had the largest one available and the new larger three pint one would be the one I’d get now…

There is also a French Cooker along the same principles but designed differently--more peasant haute couture and a Nordic Fisherman’s Stove with also a slightly different design...

Oh, a word of first hand advice, don't put "chunky" stews or soups in them unless you have a means of cleaning them thoroughly after poring…I thought it a good idea at the time to heat up chicken noodle soup...
There is a certain type of mentality that thinks if you make certain inanimate objects illegal their criminal misuse will disappear!

Damn the TSA and Down with the BATF(u)E!
Support the J P F O to "Give them the Boot"!!
User avatar
workinwifdakids
Posts: 3594
Joined: Tue Aug 19, 2008 3:57 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by workinwifdakids »

I have to go on record with a propane stove. For $20, you get a Coleman one-burner propane stove that's as light and small and agile as anything on the market. I've used one the better part of 25 years, over some pretty rugged terrain, at altitudes as varied as below sea level to 14,000 feet, and in temperature extremes from 115 degrees to below freezing, and it's been absolutely amazing. Guys say propane will freeze over, but I've watched seasoned backpackers struggle to get a liquid stove to light when my propane stove started with zero effort.

There's my advice; worth exactly what you paid for it.
And may I say, from a moral point of view, I think there can be no justification for shoving snack cakes up your action.
--Weetabix
User avatar
HTRN
Posts: 12403
Joined: Wed Aug 20, 2008 3:05 am

Re: Backpacking stove recommendations?

Post by HTRN »

The reason why they say "propane will freeze over", is often, because when you buy "propane" it's actually, Butane - which is all but identical in terms of burn characteristics(BTU/lb, jet size, etc), except heat of vaporization, and freezing/boiling point). - The reason why they do this is simple, it's cheaper. Most people buying it for they're summer grilling, won't notice, because the summer temps are high enough that the difference is irrelevant. BUT, when you're in cold weather, the difference between the boiling point of Propane(-44C) and Butane(-.5C) is VERY IMPORTANT - if it's below 31 deg. F, BUTANE WON'T VAPORIZE.


HTRN
HTRN, I would tell you that you are an evil fucker, but you probably get that a lot ~ Netpackrat

Describing what HTRN does as "antics" is like describing the wreck of the Titanic as "a minor boating incident" ~ First Shirt
Post Reply