Stoves and Cookwear
- Cheesewheel
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Cheesewheel » Fri Nov 03, 2017 7:44 am
Mass drop are doing the Snow Peak Multi Compact Titanium Cookset for about $77 usd delivered (not a smashing deal, but still cheaper than anywhere else atm)
These are ideal for "wet" cooking .... I can manage to cook rice via the absorption method without burning it (most of the time ) .... not sure how the skillets would function in any frying application
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Aushiker » Mon Nov 06, 2017 4:06 pm
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby maxknott » Tue Nov 14, 2017 6:02 pm
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Aushiker » Sat Mar 31, 2018 11:53 am
Kovea Spider Remote Canister Stove (AT) US$44.25
Snow Peak Litemax Titanium Stove @US$55.49
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Trevtassie » Sat Mar 31, 2018 12:06 pm
One thing to watch with the spider is that the top is slippery you need to hold the pot handle when stirring
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby iNGE » Sat Mar 31, 2018 5:40 pm
Used to have an old MSR Whisperlite but sold it for I wanted a burner that I could simmer better on. Still like to do some cooking (even though basic) when camping. Have replaced it with another MSR the Dragonfly and got a Bernie Dawg Dragon Tamer https://www.shapeways.com/product/B9FB7 ... nfly-stove with it. If I had to buy a Dragon like burner again I would go for the titanium version to simply shave of some extra grams. With the Tamer on it makes a lot less noise compared to the Whiperlite and simmers like a charm. Lighting them takes a bit more practice and is a tadd harder than lighting a gas canister burner - but can live with that. I also like the fact that I have a choice of fuels to use. Though currently I am using either white gas but preferably Coleman fuel or Primus fuel for it gives no soot compared to using unleaded petrol. Coleman/ Primus in my experience just burns a little nicer and makes fuel go a bit longer than white gas.
Wondering though: how is the availability of Coleman or Primus fuel in Australia? I am not thinking of the big cities like Perth, Melboune, Sidney etc...
For pots I am going to try out the Evernew non stick pot and skillet. Used last year and the years before a GSI non stick pot and a MSR quick skillet. Reason to try out the Evernew pots are shaving off some grams. I always use the pots in combination with a cosy pot to conserve fuel.
- RonK
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby RonK » Sat Mar 31, 2018 5:53 pm
Methylated spirits (metho) is even more commonly available since it's widely used as a household cleaner.
I'd say shellite stoves are waning in popularity here due to their cost and heavy, toxic fuel.
Trangia stoves have long been popular but with the trend to ultralight are being supplanted by homemade can stoves or titanium burners.
Canister stoves are popular and canisters are widely available.
I have both a Whisperlite and a Dragonfly in my stove collection. Neither have been used for years.
I'm quite fond of my titanium metho stove but metho is inconveniently sold in 1 litre quantities which is more than I want to carry.
So my gas canister stove usually gets the nod.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby rifraf » Sun Apr 01, 2018 3:06 am
Just a comment on your idea to look at a Ti cooker.iNGE wrote:JIf I had to buy a Dragon like burner again I would go for the titanium version to simply shave of some extra grams.
After reading some favourable reviews I bought a Primus Ti Omnilite.
One place it falls flat on its face is due to the thin Ti metal.
Due to the lack of metal, it takes a hell of a lot of priming compared to other multi fuel cookers I've tried.
For a similar amount of alcohol it takes to prime the Omnilite, I can boil enough water in my Trangia to make a cup of tea.
The thin Ti plate is challenged to hold enough heat for the initial start up of kerosene and its easy to misjudge and end up with a flaring sooty flame if your not careful to adequately prime the stove.
I'm not suggesting the MSR suffers similarly but it is something to be aware of as a possibility.
There are repercussions to making a stove very light, so make sure your not buying a stove thats weight savings are going to have to be made up by carrying extra priming fuel.
Great little unit on butane (IMHO) but a little suspect on my previous fuel of choice.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Warin » Sun Apr 01, 2018 8:06 am
The priming heat should be going into the fuel, not so much the metal. Try opening the fuel valve a little to prime the fuel tubes? May be even a little weeping of fuel while priming would help ... carefull with any resulting flare.rifraf wrote:One place it falls flat on its face is due to the thin Ti metal.
Due to the lack of metal, it takes a hell of a lot of priming compared to other multi fuel cookers I've tried.
iNGE - Coleman fuel is usually only found in camping goods stores. Most people use shellite for them as that is far more widely avalible here in Australia. Flying with a liquid fuel stove requires that it does not smell of fuel .. and you need written permission from the airline too. Much easier with a gas canister stove - there is no liquid so they quickly loose any smell and as they are not liquid fuelled they don't require written permission. They also simmer well.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby rifraf » Sun Apr 01, 2018 3:26 pm
Having had my Optimus 111T (clean and tank filled with water) confiscated by Qantas a few years ago now still makes me steam.Warin wrote: Flying with a liquid fuel stove requires that it does not smell of fuel .. and you need written permission from the airline too. Much easier with a gas canister stove - there is no liquid so they quickly loose any smell and as they are not liquid fuelled they don't require written permission. They also simmer well.
I'd been to a few different countries and continents with it and for it to be "stolen" for a national flight (NSW to WA) was galling to say the least. I'd owned it for many a year.
I'm sure this was done by someone erring on the side of passenger safety which is a good reason for having done so, but for all that it was a frustrating and expensive exercise given it was very well taken care of and in great condition.
Moving right along, I think Warins suggestion of a gas (propane/butane) stove is the way to go these days if only to not incur the loss of a favourite stove by someone whose knowledge of whats "safe" may be a little unclear (with regards flying)
This with the obvious caveat of course that one doesn't try to board a flight with a canister.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Trevtassie » Sun Apr 01, 2018 3:47 pm
Personally I've gone off liquid fuel entirely and now use a hosed gas stove with a preheat loop and butane cartridges because they are cheap ($1.11 for 220g of gas) and can be flipped to feed liquid gas to the stove.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby iNGE » Sun Apr 01, 2018 4:41 pm
Good to know that shellite (naptha) is widely available but that gas canisters are also easy to get - will, keep this in the back of my head for once I make it to Australia (long time dream is to cycle Perth - Syney - with a stop in Tasmania. Need to save up first for I am cycling 2 months inCanada/ USA this summer). Will whenever I make it definitely think about a gas canister stove if it is so readily available as you all say.
Ronk -
Why is the 1litre more than you would like to carry?I'm quite fond of my titanium metho stove but metho is inconveniently sold in 1 litre quantities which is more than I want to carry.
Rifraf - thanks for the info on the extra long priming time it takes. Am glad that I decided - ignorance is bliss sometimes - to go for the "normal' Dragonfly after reading this. If it holds up as well as the Whisperlite it will keep me company at least for another 20 -25 years. With a 30oz/ 890ml fule bottle I have enough fuel to last about 4 - 41/2 weeks in which I cook most days.
Warin -
Thanks for this bit of extra information. Did not know that you need written permission for a liquid fuel stove. Here it is enough if fuel bottle and stove do not smell of anything - dental cleasning tablets do a good job of that.Flying with a liquid fuel stove requires that it does not smell of fuel .. and you need written permission from the airline too. Much easier with a gas canister stove - there is no liquid so they quickly loose any smell and as they are not liquid fuelled they don't require written permission. They also simmer well.
Suppose you wanted such a letter of permission from whom at an airline would you get one?
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Warin » Sun Apr 01, 2018 5:13 pm
There are large gaps where there are not many people along some sections of that route ... you'll not find much there except for the occasional fuel and fast food stop in the way of supplies along some sections (think days). Some have even refused to supply water unless you buy it from the commercial plastic bottles in the fridge, those may have to get their water from rainfall or have it brought in by truck so it is a valued commodity. There are a few commercial camp grounds where you might find things. The bigger 'roadhouses' (large fuel service areas) where trucks stops can have showers for a modest fee, don't forget to fill your water bottles there.iNGE wrote:Good to know that shellite (naptha) is widely available but that gas canisters are also easy to get - will, keep this in the back of my head for once I make it to Australia (long time dream is to cycle Perth - Syney
For QANTAS - https://www.qantas.com/dangerousgoods/d ... ainers.pdfiNGE wrote:Suppose you wanted such a letter of permission from whom at an airline would you get one?
Other airlines you'll have to ask, I'd start at where you expect to buy a ticket.
I found that the small fuel tubes retained fuel. The solution I found was to drain the fuel and then operate the stove - burning off as much as I could. Then treat it in anyway you want .. I just aired it.
Note the requirement to wrap in absorbent material and then in a sealed plastic bag detailed in the QANTAS document.
The regulations are ITATA - an international organisation for all airlines. So the drain, no fuel smell, bagging and wirtten permission should be required on all of them.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby RonK » Sun Apr 01, 2018 6:06 pm
A litre of metho weights a kilogram and is bulky. Metho is sold in very flimsy 1 litre containers so it's essential to decant or risk spills. My fuel bottle has a 500ml capacity, but limits usage. It's simply not convenient to carry compared to a 220gm canister.iNGE wrote:Ronk -Why is the 1litre more than you would like to carry?I'm quite fond of my titanium metho stove but metho is inconveniently sold in 1 litre quantities which is more than I want to carry.
My entire cook set fits with ease in the Anything bag, along with a canister of gas and a bag of meds/toiletries, and is carried in an Anything cage.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby iNGE » Mon Apr 02, 2018 5:07 pm
Won't forget.There are a few commercial camp grounds where you might find things. The bigger 'roadhouses' (large fuel service areas) where trucks stops can have showers for a modest fee, don't forget to fill your water bottles there.
Brilliant the link to Quantas and a good suggestion to indeed start where buying a ticket.
I have not come across this requirement on the Dutch World Cyclists forum yet ie the written permission one. The no smell and a clean not smelly fuel bottle go without saying.The regulations are ITATA - an international organisation for all airlines. So the drain, no fuel smell, bagging and wirtten permission should be required on all of them.
Will keep this in mind as well - and will bag the stove as you indicated. Usually I just have it in its original bag.Note the requirement to wrap in absorbent material and then in a sealed plastic bag detailed in the QANTAS document.
Ronk - I understand - Flimsy bottles not convenient. And handy when
. I have my stove seperate from my pots for it simply does not fit. Though I put my Dromedary blatter, tea towel mu/pot in biggest pot (1.3L)fits with ease in the Anything bag, along with a canister of gas and a bag of meds/toiletries, and is carried in an Anything cage
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Warin » Mon Apr 02, 2018 5:48 pm
Most have not updated to the newer regs. Not everyone is examined .. so only a few are caught.iNGE wrote:Brilliant the link to Quantas and a good suggestion to indeed start where buying a ticket.I have not come across this requirement on the Dutch World Cyclists forum yet ie the written permission one.The regulations are ITATA - an international organisation for all airlines. So the drain, no fuel smell, bagging and wirtten permission should be required on all of them.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Aushiker » Wed Apr 04, 2018 10:52 pm
The Primus OmniLite Ti-Stove is subject to a drop at Massdrop. US$119.99+postage. Seems a popular drop so I am guessing the price is good.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby BobtheBuilder » Tue Apr 10, 2018 9:14 pm
Neither did I and I've flown nationally and internationally for decades with my MSR Internationale! Made sure the bottle was empty and evaporated (don't think I've always cleaned it any more than that) and packed in the middle of my bag with the lid off, so can't be mistaken to be containing liquid... in the unlikely case that someone on the X-ray is paying attention!iNGE wrote:Did not know that you need written permission for a liquid fuel stove.
On stoves, I'd go the MSR Internationale because even though I use shellite/white fuel/Coleman fuel, it can take about anything, including good old petrol (which is dirty and stinks, but readily available). Environmentally it's above most other forms because the only single-use item is the plastic bottle it comes in.
As far as simmering on it, you can approximate it if you put very low pressure in the bottle before lighting. Not optimal, but doable!
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby Warin » Wed Apr 11, 2018 8:55 am
I too have flown with my fuel stove .. with no written permission. It was perfectly within the rules back then.BobtheBuilder wrote:Neither did I and I've flown nationally and internationally for decades with my MSR Internationale!iNGE wrote:Did not know that you need written permission for a liquid fuel stove.
But the rules have changed.
The people doing the examinations should know the new rules. They don't check everyone.
If they get you then you will loose the stove ... if they know the new rules. If caught you have no option - you loose the stove, no exceptions.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby BobtheBuilder » Wed Apr 11, 2018 1:10 pm
How would you be caught? By the X-ray examination in the baggage handling area?Warin wrote:If caught you have no option - you loose the stove, no exceptions.
Anyway, good to know, will make sure I get the permission next time I fly, I'd be totally devo to lose that stove - 16 years of loyal service!
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby RonK » Wed Apr 11, 2018 3:15 pm
Have no doubt about it - rifraf lost his.BobtheBuilder wrote:How would you be caught? By the X-ray examination in the baggage handling area?
rifraf wrote:Having had my Optimus 111T (clean and tank filled with water) confiscated by Qantas a few years ago now still makes me steam.
I'd been to a few different countries and continents with it and for it to be "stolen" for a national flight (NSW to WA) was galling to say the least. I'd owned it for many a year.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby BobtheBuilder » Wed Apr 11, 2018 4:38 pm
Yes, but how?RonK wrote:Have no doubt about it - rifraf lost his.
I wouldn't make the mistake of drawing attention to it. How else would it be picked up?
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby RonK » Wed Apr 11, 2018 6:21 pm
That would be your first mistake. Failing to declare dangerous goods carries serious penalties.BobtheBuilder wrote:Yes, but how?RonK wrote:Have no doubt about it - rifraf lost his.
I wouldn't make the mistake of drawing attention to it. How else would it be picked up?
The baggage xray will detect it. Bomb sniffers will detect it.
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Re: Stoves and Cookwear
Postby BobtheBuilder » Wed Apr 11, 2018 6:40 pm
Mmmm... even if bomb sniffers would detect it, which I'm not convinced of, it's fairly unlikely they'd be used. Clearly baggage x-ray doesn't detect it, given how many people routinely carry camping stoves.RonK wrote: Failing to declare dangerous goods carries serious penalties.
The baggage xray will detect it. Bomb sniffers will detect it.
Regardless of that, the Qantas dangerous goods info is a bit unclear. It doesn't seem that pressurised liquid type stoves fall under the dangerous goods definition, though the liquid fuel containers that supply them do.
https://www.qantas.com/travel/airlines/ ... ing-stoves
Under "Camping stoves and liquid fuel containers" it says airline approval is required, whereas under "Gas camping stoves" it says approval isn't required.
As MSR and similar stoves are gas stoves by the time the fuel reaches them, I think it's reasonable to assume approval isn't needed. I think the issue is residual liquid fuel in equipment - this is what Qantas' flushing procedures imply: -
"I have drained (for at least one hour) all flammable liquids from the camping stove and tank/fuel containers, removed the mantle/wick"
https://www.qantas.com/dangerousgoods/d ... ainers.pdf
So, for those stoves, the only issue is the fuel container, which I always drain, wash and air dry for a good few hours before travel. Technically, it might need approval, and now that I know that it's required, I'd probably get it, just to be safe, but, being sensible, I don't think there's much chance of being caught.
In the case cited above, it would be interesting to know if there was an obvious smell or if it was declared beforehand. It might just be the bad luck of coming across an overzealous employee being on the crazy side of safe.
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