Bushwalking gear and paraphernalia. Electronic gadget topics (inc. GPS, PLB, chargers) belong in the 'Techno Babble' sub-forum.
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Bushwalk Inventory System can help bushwalkers with a variety of bushwalk planning tasks, including: Manage which items they take bushwalking so that they do not forget anything they might need, plan meals for their walks, and automatically compile food/fuel shopping lists (lists of consumables) required to make and cook the meals for each walk. It is particularly useful for planning for groups who share food or other items, but is also useful for individual walkers.
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 2:38 pm
Having decided today that my MSR Winpro 1 stove is deceased/dead/nailed to it' perch, I've had a look around at alternatives. Need to have facility to invert cylinder for winter snow use, and was thinking of buying one of the cheaper end stoves, given that the MSR has clapped out after 3-4 yrs ( I know that only works out any $1/wk....)
Seem to be Kovea Spider, Bulin 100 -B5, or Mark F's Fire Maple "118T", combining 117T with 118. Is there anything else around that I should be looking at - most of my searches hit information from 2012-2014.
Thx
Andrew A
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 2:41 pm
Wouldn't the logical stove to buy be Roger Caffins UL??
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 3:05 pm
My personal stove is a cut down kovea spider used inside a Caldera Cone. This is a great U/L setup and the kit is very versatile (so long as your set on one pot size fitting inside the cone.. and it was also a bit expensive) The little stove has been used and abused for months at a time, impressive. Iv'e even used it (carefully) to start campfires

Nothing new for us since then.
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 5:54 pm
Nuts, would you buy a Bulin or a Kovea spider? Seems like you have 2 uses - personal and ? group.
I'm only wanting something for personal use for ski touring ( max cook size in pot of about 1200mls), and which is as light as possible, and as compact as possible. The Windpro was relatively bulky, but did fit in my cookpot. I'd like something a little smaller.
For summer use, I have one of those little Kovea titanium thingies, on which the piezo device failed years ago, and I only worked out today that you could simply unscrew it and chuck it away and use a lighter instead!
Moondog, the Caffin stove looks fine - I'd forgotten about it, but it is only available on BPL isn't it?
A
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 7:04 pm
Hmmm I'm using the MSR Pocket Rocket for ski touring, when I'm not using the XGK-EX
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 7:24 pm
I got rid of my battered 20+ yo MSR XGK on eBay a few years ago for a surprisingly large amount of money.
The pocket rocket is similar to the Kovea titanium cylinder top stove I have. I would rather a remote canister stove in winter, largely due to stability. I've certainly used the Kovea in winter in the snow, but the remote stove is easier to make a windshield for, and allows canister inversion, as my upright stove has struggled who it has been cold.
A
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 8:08 pm
The Optimus Vega is another one to look at. It folds compact and is very stable.
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 8:57 pm
Nuts wrote:My personal stove is a cut down kovea spider used inside a Caldera Cone. This is a great U/L setup and the kit is very versatile (so long as your set on one pot size fitting inside the cone.. and it was also a bit expensive) The little stove has been used and abused for months at a time, impressive. Iv'e even used it (carefully) to start campfires

Nothing new for us since then.
How did you cut down the spider?
Last edited by
damoprz on Mon 31 Oct, 2016 9:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 9:11 pm
A Trangia 27 with gas burner is extremely fuel efficient, stable and versatile.
A little bulkier than other options but it has much going for it for 1 or 2 persons.
A lot of the other options are unstable, easy to knock over and have poor wind shields.
The Trangia plus gas burner seems to be overlooked and underrated but it is my pick for 1-2 person snow use and for 2 person 3-season use.
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 9:48 pm
damoprz wrote:How did you cut down the spider?
With a grinder. Bolt cutters could work?

- Screen Shot 2016-10-31 at 10.13.35 PM.png (581.4 KiB) Viewed 15481 times
The Caldera Cone is the important bit though, other stoves may be better.
The titanium CC is a strong versatile base/ windshield,
Mon 31 Oct, 2016 11:56 pm
New?
Alpkit Koro - titanium 124gm
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 12:38 am
Ahh the frankenstove returns...a titanium version of the FireMaple 118 without that thin swivel hose connection at the burner base...fixing it's Achilles heel.
http://www.bushwalk.com/forum/viewtopic ... 15&t=10188viewtopic.php?f=15&t=10569
Last edited by
ofuros on Tue 01 Nov, 2016 2:00 am, edited 2 times in total.
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 1:18 am
Nuts wrote:The Caldera Cone is the important bit though, other stoves may be better.
The titanium CC is a strong versatile base/ windshield,
That looks great, did you have to add extra holes or similar to your Caldera Cone? I thought an enclosed shield may not provide enough airflow for a propane/butane stove.
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 6:43 am
Are remote canister stoves that much better?
I've never had a stability problem with the Pocket Rocket but I did buy the small plastic base for the canister.
I can see that the low profile has definite benefits tho
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 8:16 am
I did cut a wider opening/round off the edges to clear the hose entry damoprz. No issue with airflow. I'm guessing if the air hole surface area is bigger than the burner head there wont be? Supports an impressive stick fire in standard form.
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 5:56 pm
Never heard of the brand, but it looks great. Has anyone used one?
How have the "Fire Maple" purchasers been going over the last few years? Eg Mark F with his "118T" .
A
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 6:01 pm
Nuts, regarding the Caldera cone, how much of a PITA is this to pack in a rucksack? I presume it just gets rolled up, but do you find this an issue when jamming it in a rucksack, and, if it gets squashed, is there an issue?
A
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 7:00 pm
That Alpkit stove is almost certainly made by Fire Maple, they've been selling re-branded Fire Maple stoves for a few years and this time it looks like they've specified some good design changes to get an improved model rather than just putting their name on a standard Fire Maple stove.
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 7:04 pm
andrewa wrote:How have the "Fire Maple" purchasers been going over the last few years? Eg Mark F with his "118T" .
A
I have the 117T and I like it a lot compared to my previous stove (MSR Micro Rocket) due to greater stability and wider burner head.
Tue 01 Nov, 2016 8:09 pm
The Alpkit stove seems like the only advance offered over the last 2 yrs.
A
Wed 02 Nov, 2016 11:08 am
Hi Andrew,
The Ti Caldera Cone, a sheet of Titanium, for it's role as a base/fireplace and windshield, is almost perfection.
Those of a certain size are designed to sit inside the circumference of the pot, taking 'no' room. They really need a solid storage spot but are pretty robust to being constantly set up/pulled down.
If you need a bigger pot for snow camping at some point CC switch to a 'sidewinder' which rolls up and lays down inside a pot with a wider base.
I like the setup for a 750ml pot, the CC base sheet, the CC, stove, stakes, scour pad and a small canister will fit in the pot (with the lid loose on top).
Don't have a packed up pic:

- Screen Shot 2016-11-02 at 11.54.23 AM.png (360.31 KiB) Viewed 15258 times
Thu 03 Nov, 2016 5:29 pm
I have been using a MarkF combination FireMaple 117T/118 for best part of a year, works fine. But the FireMaple 116T with a 'tight' Ti windscreen contains enough of the heat so that a standard isobutane/propane mixed cylinder works fine around 0C anyway and is far lighter (and yes I keep 'measuring' the cylinder temperature with my hand and regulate the windscreen to keep the top of the cylinder just warm). But I mostly just boil water and I don't snow camp or cook for larger groups (larger pots) where the inverted canister might be better.
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