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Camping Equipment and all Clothing Tents, sleeping bags, stoves etc. Riding clothing, boots, helmets, what to wear when not riding, etc.
Photo by Marc Gibaud, Clouds on Tres Cerros and Mount Fitzroy, Argentinian Patagonia

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Photo by Marc Gibaud,
Clouds on Tres Cerros and
Mount Fitzroy, Argentinian Patagonia




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  #1  
Old 19 Feb 2008
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Talking Svea

I bought my SVEA gas stove in 1975. Its my stove and I'm sticking with it.
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  #2  
Old 20 Feb 2008
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If your out in the desert you wont have wood. And if your batteries run out, it probably wont burn good enough either. The petrol stoves seem a better idea. Only thing you worry about is petrol in your bike. And if you run out of that, your screwed anyway.
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  #3  
Old 20 Feb 2008
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tripper is on the money witht last post. - Perfect for some situations but not all, the same for everything.
As far as liquid fuel stoves go one thing to look at is maintance - an MSR liquid fuel stove (whisperlite, Dragonfly, X-GK, etc) are far easier to maintain than a Coleman ( I worked for a store for 6 years that was an offical repairer for Coleman stoves and lanterns - i own MSR....). Quite they are not!
Flimsyness of MSR? i owned a whisperlite international for something close to 7 years and only sold it because i was given a new shiny dragonfly. It had some serious use - the advantage of living in NZ - I averaged 65-70 days a year in the bush hunting, tramping(hiking) and climbing. The whisperlite never failed me once.
Colemen, Primus, and lets not forget the old Optimus are all good, capable bits of kit but MSR for outright long-term maintance - my money is on MSR
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Old 20 Feb 2008
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For me it is important that the stove can burn petrol. I seldom carry firewood on my bike and if there is firewood available I can manage without a cooker.

I used the MSR for 5 years. During that time I changed the pump four times. The pump is rather flimsy especially when it’s cold, the plastic brakes.
When I used leaded fuel it clogged up quite often, but it was efficient and light.

Now I have a Primus and is much sturdier then the MSR. The construction is more or less the same but no flimsy plastic parts.
Haven’t used it on leaded petrol so I’m not sure how it will behave.
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  #5  
Old 5 Apr 2008
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Hi
I have had my Coleman 533 stove for coming on 15 years and its still going strong, a new genorator pipe and a good clean ever now and again keeps it working fine, only thing ive found thats better is a nice camp fire..... Skip
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Old 21 Feb 2008
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Not only are politicians too difficult to find away from their chauffered limos, they are so greasy that you can't rub them fast enough to get the friction needed to set them aflame.
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Old 21 Feb 2008
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you must learn the trick of putting sand in between, or rough them up a bit with an angle grinder 1st
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Old 21 Feb 2008
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the only problem with wood is. When good dry wood is lying about in abundance, often you aren't allowed to set fire to it. and it really isn't practical to carry it on a bike. Although.. I did see a wood-smoke powered combo ( ural) once.

I do like wood fires though
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Old 25 Mar 2008
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I tried to order from ZZstove and they're in the process of being bought out by another company. They have no stock until the new company takes over. I'll have to find another stove for my trip to the States.
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Old 29 Mar 2008
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What about this one???

DIY Benzinkocher « Das Freiluft Blog
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  #11  
Old 29 Mar 2008
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Thinking of getting one of these



An expensive version $30. But hey with the $-£ exchange rate it's a snip! It weighs an ounce. It should do my morning coffee no problem.

Last edited by Flyingdoctor; 14 Apr 2008 at 07:19.
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  #12  
Old 14 Apr 2008
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevesawol View Post
tripper is on the money witht last post. - Perfect for some situations but not all, the same for everything.
As far as liquid fuel stoves go one thing to look at is maintance - an MSR liquid fuel stove (whisperlite, Dragonfly, X-GK, etc) are far easier to maintain than a Coleman ( I worked for a store for 6 years that was an offical repairer for Coleman stoves and lanterns - i own MSR....). Quite they are not!
Flimsyness of MSR? i owned a whisperlite international for something close to 7 years and only sold it because i was given a new shiny dragonfly. It had some serious use - the advantage of living in NZ - I averaged 65-70 days a year in the bush hunting, tramping(hiking) and climbing. The whisperlite never failed me once.
Colemen, Primus, and lets not forget the old Optimus are all good, capable bits of kit but MSR for outright long-term maintance - my money is on MSR
I was wondering why you tossed the Whisperlite... They are THE standard for real work. I've had mine since they came out with the non-rubber hose, or about 15 years and I've never done anyhting but grease the cup in the pump once. Oh, and I probably use it 20 days per year as well ... at least. Was on the road for a year in 2006 and it saw probably 100 days of use... I use it to make tea in the morning, even in hostels....
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Old 14 Apr 2008
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After another look around the web I settled on a Brasslite turbo II D for my US trip. The test reports for this little alcohol stove were really good. Anyone here used one?
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  #14  
Old 14 Apr 2008
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never heard of it, but thats no surprise, there must be hundreds on the market these days!
its definately got the 'bling' factor
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Old 8 Jan 2009
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Diesel burning stove

I'm looking for a diesel burning stove. The MSR XGK says it burns a lot of things but does not specify diesel

MSR Mountain Safety Research : Stoves : XGK EX™ Expedition™ Stove

Does anyone know if this particular model works with diesel as well.

Any other stove that will work with diesel? The Primus Omnifuel looks promising too

Rough Gear Outdoor Adventure Store:
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