sthughes wrote:And in the cold a 100g canister is worse than the bigger ones.
South_Aussie_Hiker wrote:On the Overland this year, all I could get was one coleman and one other brand. The Coleman was pathetic. Only worked with temps above 10 degrees, or in the morning after being in my bag all night.
Can't recall the specifics but has to do with the evaporative surface area of the liquid in the canister, the fact the whole thing cools faster when in use (due to the smaller mass) and on top of that as you will be mostly burning off the propane first the fact it has less than half as much to begin with means the percentage mixture of propane to butane drops much more quickly. etc. etc. But they are much easier to stick in your pocket/sleeping bag so in my eyes that offsets the drawbacks.Orion wrote:sthughes wrote:And in the cold a 100g canister is worse than the bigger ones.
Why?
Orion wrote:sthughes wrote:And in the cold a 100g canister is worse than the bigger ones.
Why?
Franco wrote:I have used the Elemental canister on snow and not upside down.
(cheap China made burner)
With one stove last year I could not use the canister upside down in spite of the pre-heat tube however it worked sitting on snow the right way up.
(Optimus canisters from memory)
This year with another stove I could use that either way but had no need to turn it anyway.
It is an Isobutane/propane mix so that should work down to about -5c but so should the Jet Boil branded one.
One trick with gas stoves below zero is the same as melting snow, have some water to start with...
So just sit the cartridge in some water, that will be over 0 degree and therefore will warm it up.
To clarify...
I mean any WATER as in liquid stuff not WARM water...
If you need to melt snow I would suggest a remote stove for stability and ease of use.
( I keep the canister close enough to the burner to pick up some heat but not too much. However don't do that because ....)
In this photo :
the first on the left is for mild weather, the one in the center works but can't take a liquid feed (canister upside down) the one on the right works (for me)
to add..
if you do neet to cook and melt snow for more than one person , then white gas is generally better.
Franco
sthughes wrote:Can't recall the specifics but has to do with the evaporative surface area of the liquid in the canister, the fact the whole thing cools faster when in use (due to the smaller mass) and on top of that as you will be mostly burning off the propane first the fact it has less than half as much to begin with means the percentage mixture of propane to butane drops much more quickly. etc. etc. But they are much easier to stick in your pocket/sleeping bag so in my eyes that offsets the drawbacks.
Strider wrote:Canister top stoves wont work below approximately 0 degrees. Not sure where you heard otherwise.
corvus wrote:To work in very cold conditions gas canister stoves need to be "remote" with a heat exchanger and even then you may need to invert the canister and insulate it from the ground to get good results depending on the stove![]()
corvus
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