Serious post a pic of your favorite Gassification stove or Hobo and why you like it ...give a few specs too... how fast a boil etc,
Serious post a pic of your favorite Gassification stove or Hobo and why you like it ...give a few specs too... how fast a boil etc,
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
stove 1.jpgstove 2.jpgstove 3.jpg
the old "Four Dog" set up, titanium, no moving parts
I like my Emberlit. I don't know that it's any better than others, but it works for me.
As to posting boil times,....it all depends on what kind of wood you have and the skill of the user in building a fire.
With a cotton ball and Vaseline, and a hand full of Rhododendron sticks,.....I can boil water as fast as an alchohol burner,....start to finish.
I like that it folds flat and takes up little space in a pack. The stove pieces alone are maybe 1/8 inch thick stacked together. Add the grill, some fire starting tender, cross pieces for small pot stand, and stuff sack,.....and it gets up to a whopping 1/4 inch thick.
Last edited by Cadenza; 10-11-2012 at 16:33.
I'm a fan of qiwiz's firefly wood burner - especially now that he has an esbit adapter. At 2.5 ounces I think it is the lightest. With dry wood available I boil about as fast as my old alcohol stove. Wet wood or rain I don't struggle and just use esbit. I am really happy with that dual fuel flexibility.
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Lazarus
FFbeauty.JPG
It's a beautiful thing . . . Click on photo for really nice detailed view
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WOO,
You may already be aware..... But may I direct you to bushcraftusa.com? Reading the content in some of your posts ( fuzzsticks, sharp knife, support of fire ect...) you, if not already aware enjoy this site. As far as gassification and hobo stoves you will find the info there endless.
We do have a Wise old Owl there but not sure it is you.
1. nope not me... but very cool... no issue.
2 thanks for makin me aware.
3. lets keep the posts coming.
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
This is a link to an excellent thread on Buhwalk Australia comparing TiTri Caldera Cone and BushBuddy stoves.
http://bushwalk.com/forum/viewtopic....e+wood#p125335
Vargo titanium wood stove anyone tried it?
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
very cool ... I am now looking at "other" wood stoves but, are there nay Sayers to gassification or perhaps there is a time difference?
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
All stoves gassify wood. Your match or bic lighter starts the process. Single wall works just as well as a double wall.
I did all the comparison work and it's posted in the forums here and there and elsewhere. Not many remember nor do they care?
Wise Old Owl tell us your findings. Which is better, single or double and why.
Look how nice this one gassifies:
Zelph - I read just about everything you have posted in the past - I just don't remember the comparison you are referring too...
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
Woo
Backpacking stoves are no where near big enough to produce the very high heat needed to ignite the gasses what so many refer to as the "Secondary Burn"
What we see in backpacking size stoves is all "Primary Ignition" burning of the twigs. The upward draft of air is carrying away any unburned gasses. Those gasses are long gone, no chance for a secondary ignition of them.
Double wall stoves of any worth are large stoves used by 3rd world countrys. Well insulated stove bodies are suppose to be of a benefit to combustion so says the designers which sell them to the local tribes etc.
I'll be back with some links to stove comparisons.
Very interesting stuff. I have heard people say that backpacking stoves are too small to effectively burn woodgas. I've seen videos where you can see smoke swirling around in the firebox, but the flame above it is completely smokeless. Is it possible that backpacking hobo stoves are simply burning off the smoke and not the wood gas? (is that even possible?)
A lot of people claim these stoves run with less smoke - are they just full of it? Your tests used kiln dried wood so they might not necessarily be representative of what happens in the real world with damp wood. There's probably no good way to scientifically test "real world" conditions... I guess you just have to spend a lot of time playing around and getting a feel for the stoves.