Has anyone ever made a stove for fuel tablet? I'm thinking of purchasing a Esbit titanium stove for 15.00 but curious if anyone ever made one? The titanium weights .4 oz and thought it serve as a handy backup when my primary gas stove is low on fuel. There just no way you can feel an extra .4 oz stove plus fuel tablets. Versus carrying an extra gas canister in event the other burns out.
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It is one of the blessings of wilderness life that it shows us how few things we need in order to be perfectly happy.-- Horace Kephart
Registered: 02/23/07
Posts: 1735
Loc: California (southern)
I believe I have that same titanium gadget is one of my kits. Its convenience makes it worthwhile. I often carry a few Esbits as backup, and I figure I can improvise using aluminum foil and rocks, if necessary. In dire circumstances, I could build a fire. I understand lots of can stoves can be used with Esbits, as well.
These days I use Esbit whenever I'm solo, which is most of the time. It's not at all fussy. I used rocks and foil a lot and it's easy to do (two or three small rocks as windbreak/pot support and a little square of foil on the ground - to protect ground and reflect heat).
I have since bought one of the tiny titanium wing stoves and made an aluminum windscreen. The windscreen fits neatly in my pot. It has the bottom cut up about a quarter of an inch leaving three "legs" (more stable than four) on the ground and a ring of ticket-punch holes near the top. It also has a couple tabs on the end I can crimp together to hold it together.
It just curls around the pot wall on the inside for storage, overlapping about an inch and height is just short of the lid. It started life as an aluminum foil single-use roaster pan.
Cut it down with ordinary scissors, probably in less time than it took to write this. Works like a charm. I still use a piece of foil on the ground (cut in circle to fit in the bottom of my pot.
These days I use Esbit whenever I'm solo, which is most of the time. It's not at all fussy. I used rocks and foil a lot and it's easy to do (two or three small rocks as windbreak/pot support and a little square of foil on the ground - to protect ground and reflect heat).
I have since bought one of the tiny titanium wing stoves and made an aluminum windscreen. The windscreen fits neatly in my pot. It has the bottom cut up about a quarter of an inch leaving three "legs" (more stable than four) on the ground and a ring of ticket-punch holes near the top. It also has a couple tabs on the end I can crimp together to hold it together.
It just curls around the pot wall on the inside for storage, overlapping about an inch and height is just short of the lid. It started life as an aluminum foil single-use roaster pan.
Cut it down with ordinary scissors, probably in less time than it took to write this. Works like a charm. I still use a piece of foil on the ground (cut in circle to fit in the bottom of my pot.
Best, jcp
Yeah! I was thinking about those too, using rocks for pot support, aluminum foil as a windscreen, etc.
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It is one of the blessings of wilderness life that it shows us how few things we need in order to be perfectly happy.-- Horace Kephart
Yeah, that's the critter I'm using these days (though from different supplier). Works fine, though you do need windscreen (I think a bit of foil for reflection under it helps as well - though I have not tested that theory.
Registered: 01/26/02
Posts: 572
Loc: Santa Cruz CA, Sierra Hiker
Wow. .4 oz? Of course the regular one only weighs 3 oz...but .4 oz? Cool. All I use is esbit....I googled and looked at it...make sure you bring enuf foil for windbreak. They blow out easy....
Registered: 01/26/04
Posts: 269
Loc: SF Bay Area, CA
I use esbits (or other sold fuel) for all my 3 season solo trips. There is a article on thru-hiker about correct height for esbits stoves I tried esbits a number of times and didn't like them until I tried them inside a Caldera Cone system... and was sold. I have a few notes about using solid fuel stoves.
I use esbits (or other sold fuel) for all my 3 season solo trips. There is a article on thru-hiker about correct height for esbits stoves I tried esbits a number of times and didn't like them until I tried them inside a Caldera Cone system... and was sold. I have a few notes about using solid fuel stoves.
--mark
Thanks for posting this information.
_________________________
It is one of the blessings of wilderness life that it shows us how few things we need in order to be perfectly happy.-- Horace Kephart
I was in Knoxville today and they had the Esbit Titanium wing stove at a local outfitter. I picked it and a box of fuel cube. I'm going play with it. See how long a cup of water boils with and without a windscreen, etc. I need something to do in the evening while sitting around the house as I got nothing to study for at the moment.
Edited by ETSU Pride (09/26/1205:59 PM)
_________________________
It is one of the blessings of wilderness life that it shows us how few things we need in order to be perfectly happy.-- Horace Kephart
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