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7 Feb 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ukiceman
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That stove is fantastic value for money.
My money still goes with the trangia though - what a solid machine.
m
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10 Feb 2008
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Camping stoves
Hi
MSR Superfly.Best stove on the market bar none!
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17 Feb 2008
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Or you can use a large (coffee can size) can, fill it to 2 1/2- 3 inches below the top of the can with sand. poke holes 1 inche below the top of the sand level. pour in a cup or so of whatever you have, gasoline, kerosene, light it. It will produce a hole flame for about 30 minutes on one cup. finished, just pour out the sand and tie the can to someplace on your bike, or throw it away and hope to find another can that night.
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17 Feb 2008
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stoves
not trying to turn this into a 'who's got the best stove' but just to say the we took the coleman on our UK to South Africa. It runs on petrol and boiled water quicker and was quieter than the MSR dragonfly, is it?, which our friends took. It is cheaper but probably bigger than the MSR.
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17 Feb 2008
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We have used a MSR Whisperlite. This was good, but a bit flimsy. Since upgraded to the Primus Omnifuel: far sturdier than the MSR equivalent: all metal components, no plastic. Powerful and compact. Very pleased
Having said that the wood burning equivalent looks very neat and practical. An added bonus is you don't have to buy fuel or syphon your tank, and its carbon neutral, even if a stove's CO2 output is minimal compared the motorbike that got you to your camping spot... I like.
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(so ride what you like, but ride it somewhere new!)
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17 Feb 2008
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Whats wrong with my current stove? In all seriousness... If it ain't broke dont fix it... nothing wrong with my Coleman Sportser 533.. And the trangia's are great too
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29 Mar 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hindu1936
Or you can use a large (coffee can size) can, fill it to 2 1/2- 3 inches below the top of the can with sand. poke holes 1 inche below the top of the sand level. pour in a cup or so of whatever you have, gasoline, kerosene, light it. It will produce a hole flame for about 30 minutes on one cup. finished, just pour out the sand and tie the can to someplace on your bike, or throw it away and hope to find another can that night.
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Bengahzi Stove:
"Troops on the move often cooked food and brewed tea on a makeshift stove dubbed the 'Benghazi Burner.' This was basically half a tin filled with sand soaked in petrol and set alight." www.iwm.org.uk/upload/package/ 21/creteegypt/standegypt06.htm
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29 Mar 2008
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jesus, i cant believe someones got the balls to ask $30 for a cola-can stove, or that someones willing to pay it and not make their own!!!!!
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29 Mar 2008
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It's worse than you think. I'm stuck at work all day today with access to the cans, the internet for a step by step guide and a workshop! The phrase "overpaid and unmotivated" springs to mind. Maybe I should spend more time working and less time internet shopping. I just hope that when I bring it back from the States in my luggage they don't think it's a landmine!
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8 Jan 2009
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hindu1936
Or you can use a large (coffee can size) can, fill it to 2 1/2- 3 inches below the top of the can with sand. poke holes 1 inche below the top of the sand level. pour in a cup or so of whatever you have, gasoline, kerosene, light it. It will produce a hole flame for about 30 minutes on one cup. finished, just pour out the sand and tie the can to someplace on your bike, or throw it away and hope to find another can that night.
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Known a Benghazi burner amongst other things. You occasionally see them specially made out of artillery/naval cartridge cases (which are brass).
My grandfather ran a mobile forge based on the same idea in the Western desert in the early-mid 1940's. I'd love to have a go at the oil drum version, but his "recipe" involved a jerry can full of petrol which is rather expensive and probably more than a little dangerous. There was also mention of emptying rifle cartridges  . Probably one for the ADV rider lot  .
You don't need the can if you have enough petrol, just loosen a patch of sand in a compacted area, the hard sand will contain the fire.
Andy
(Arsonist)
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