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  1. #1
    hansome,intelligent,rich, zealot,cancer survivor
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    Default alcohol container for stove & volume

    What makes a good alcohol container for alcohol stove & how many ounces does it hold ??

  2. #2
    Registered User orangebug's Avatar
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    Almost anything works, but it is a good idea to use something that identifies it as non-potable. My favorite is to use a small rubbing alcohol bottle, or a carberator cleaner / fuel line dryer bottle. I carry about 12 ounces on my sections. I usually decant the alcohol into a smaller dropper bottle, about 1-2 oz., and squirt that into my stove. I have a nightmare of spilling fuel, and like to keep the main supply away from my stove.

    Bill...

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    I use about 1/2 oz per day, so a 4 oz bottle easily lasts for a week. Currently, I'm using an old "camp-soap" bottle.

  4. #4
    hansome,intelligent,rich, zealot,cancer survivor
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    I think it would be better to use Everclear grain alcohol around my food since it does not cause blindness or death.

  5. #5
    Yellow Jacket
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    Platypus' Little Nipper (the bottle shown in the link) holds 12oz, weighs 0.7oz.

    I've been told that 16oz bottle nozzle that www.brasslite.com sells fits this container. I haven't bothered to find out yet. As I have the 8oz bottle from Brasslite.

    I prefer soft sided containers as they allow you to sqeeze out the air so you don't hear the fluids sloshing around in your pack. Gets kind of annoying after a bit.
    Yellow Jacket -- Words of Wisdom (tm) go here.

  6. #6
    Registered User orangebug's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by markellag
    I think it would be better to use Everclear grain alcohol around my food since it does not cause blindness or death.
    Denatured alcohol causes nausea and vomiting. Methanol can cause blindness and other problems, but only if consumed orally. All alcohol can cause death, directly or indirectly.

    If you can afford to purchase Everclear and burn it, HYOH.

    Bill....

  7. #7
    First Sergeant SGT Rock's Avatar
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    I have an 8.8 ounce plastic soda bottle that weighs about 0.8 ounces. It really holds 9 fluid ounces, and I can do a week to two weeks depending on cunsumption. The bottle, stove, cozy, windscreen, and flint wheel all fit inside my .72 liter pot, so no extra bulk at all past the confines of the pot I already carry. I do like the idea of that soft side bottle though.
    SGT Rock
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    BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
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    NO SNIVELING

  8. #8
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    I leave it in the origional bottle for just a weekend. I'm to afraid of accidently poisening my grandkids to put it in a soda botle. If your just with Army its probably OK in a soda bottle, but if there are any Marines around make sure its well labled.

  9. #9
    Springer - Front Royal Lilred's Avatar
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    In Walmart's camping section they sell a 16oz plastic flask. It has a screw on cap plus a one ounce shotglass over that. This is what i use and can measure exactly what I'm burning, so I know exactly how much fuel I have left. It's very lightweight and very cheap.
    "It was on the first of May, in the year 1769, that I resigned my domestic happiness for a time, and left my family and peaceable habitation on the Yadkin River, in North Carolina, to wander through the wilderness of America." - Daniel Boone

  10. #10
    Beer First! Member Alligator's Avatar
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    Is that the Coghlan's flask ($2.99) Lilredmg? I had one of those, but it used to leak. It held a more consumable alcohol though . Maybe too much use.

  11. #11
    Donating Member/AT Class of 2003 - The WET year
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    Default Alcohol Container

    I second the motion for the flask as an alcohol container. Prior to my thru last year I found them in 10 and 16 oz sized. As already pointed out, they have a airtight top and a 1 oz jigger top for measuring out the alcohol. In addition they are semi-transparent so you can easily tell how much fuel is left. I went ahead before my hike and marked off 2 oz levels so that I knew well in advance how many days worth of fuel I had left.

    But for me, the 2 most important features are that they are oval shaped and the backside (at least of mine) was somewhat concave. I fit well in the outside pouch on my pack. Secondly, they are made of a heavier plastic than a soda bottle and are not easily compressed or crushed. I carried the same one from Springer to Katahdin and it's still going strong. It has never leaked a drop to my knowledge.

    'Slogger
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  12. #12
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    Default Alcohol Bottle

    I prefer to use a 8 oz plastic water bottle with a pop open top. Cheap, lightweight and damn near indestructible. Just label the bottle well and keep it sealed in a ziplock when stowed in your pack as an extra precaution. I'm more worried about mixing up my pee bottle with drinking bottle while winter hiking.

  13. #13

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    I have a red 16oz naglene bottle specifically made for carrying fuel. It has the word "fuel" stamped on the bottle in two places. It also has a spout on the top for pouring fuel. It has never leaked to my knowledge. It's an awesome bottle...but a soda pop bottle would do just fine.

  14. #14
    2.17% and counting
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    Thumbs up lysterene bottle

    I have recently relegated a lysterene bottle to fuel bottle duty. It is sort of flask shaped. I believe it was marked as 500mL, which would be approx. 16 ounces. I like the fact that it has a very distinct shape, making it very difficult to get it mixed up with a water bottle -- even in the dark.

  15. #15
    1811 miles and counting!
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    Default Cough syrup bottle

    Drug stores will give you (or sell you for about 35 cents)
    empty cough syrup bottles, and they come in various sizes.
    I have everything from 2 oz to 8 oz depending the length
    of my trip. Your fuel will not be mistaken for water, but I did
    use a labelmaker and made a big "FUEL" label for it.

    The best part is, the ounces are marked on the side, so
    you can tell at first glance how much fuel you have left,
    and easily dispense the correct amount.

  16. #16

    Default About alcohol used for stoves...

    What type of alcohol is usually used by those stoves, methanol, ethanol, or isopropyl? Also, what is the maximum practical percentage water considered acceptable in alcohol used as fuel in alcohol stoves hikers carry?

  17. #17
    Registered User orangebug's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by minnesotasmith
    What type of alcohol is usually used by those stoves, methanol, ethanol, or isopropyl? Also, what is the maximum practical percentage water considered acceptable in alcohol used as fuel in alcohol stoves hikers carry?
    Typically, denatured ethanol or methanol is used for alcohol stoves. Rubbing alcohol (isopropyl) has a great deal of water, soots up, and isn't a very hot flame. Denatured and Grain Alcohol (Everclear and other brands) max out at 95% alcohol.

    I like the sound of the plastic flask and shot glass, other than the risk of getting it confused with "medicinal" alcohol. Cough syrup bottles are an attractive option, also, perhaps an empty Nyquil bottle with its jigger.

    Bill...

  18. #18
    First Sergeant SGT Rock's Avatar
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    Types of alcohol:

    Isopropyl. This is the type used in rubbing alcohol. There are concentrations of 70%, 90%, and over 99%+. Regular rubbing alcohol is 70% and makes lousy stove fuel because the rest is water. 90% has a lot of BTUs and can also be purchased where medical supplies are sold. 99%+ can be found as gas line de-icer and dryer like Iso-HEET and other brands. Isopropyl has more BTUs per ounce than other alcohols, but it leaves a lot of soot and can cause funny burning times or properties in stoves tweaked for other alcohols.

    Methyl alcohol is corn whiskey in it's purest form. Everclear is the cleanest you can get, and it is 95% pure. It is very expensive, so it doesn't make good stove fuel. Methyl Alcohol is the second highest for BTU content.

    Ethyl Alcohol is wood grain alcohol and is deadly to drink. It burns clean, but has the lowest BTU content per ounce. You can get this in yellow bottles of HEET as gas line de-icer and dryer.

    Denatured alcohol is a mixture of Ethyl and Methyl alcohol. It depends on the brand and what the company that makes it is doing at the time as to the mixture. You can usually find the MDS (Material Data Safety Sheets) for download on the Internet because to meet OSHA requirements, any company that has these, must label the place containers are stored to be legal. As a service to customers, manufacturers provide these labels free on the Internet. This is important because you can find the mixture for a denatured alcohol in this information. What I have found is that some alcohol comes in at about 50% Methyl and 50% Ethyl, and some comes in at 90% Methyl and 10% Ethyl. Higher Methyl content is desirable. The reason they cut it, is because if they make pure, or close to pure alcohol (like Everclear) then they have to pay liquor tax and pass that on. but if they make it poisonous to drink (denature it), then they don't have to pay.
    SGT Rock
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    My 2008 Trail Journal of the BMT/AT

    BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
    -----------------------------------------

    NO SNIVELING

  19. #19

    Default Orangebug, more about fuel...

    I remember that any alcohol/water mixture above 50% alcohol will burn. The isopropyl alcohol in my cabinet (costs about 43 cents a pint at Wal-Mart) is 70% alcohol. I also have some 91% isopropyl from the same source that cost around 4x as much (I use it for my ears after swimming). The former I can understand not being worth carrying, but the latter is still not that expensive and is fairly widely available at nonspecialty pharmacies and large grocery stores. Is there any reason why the 91% stuff would be unacceptable for stove fuel on a thru-hike that you are aware of, such as cold-weather performance or purity issues causing stoves to gum up?

  20. #20
    First Sergeant SGT Rock's Avatar
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    Depending on the stove, the soot may clog it. It will make a sooty mess on everything in contact with the flame - worse than cooking over an open fire if I remember right. For an experiment you can take a small tuna can and fill it with about an ounce of Isopropyl and use three or four tent stakes as a pot stand to lift the pot off the burner by about 3/4". Put a pint of water in the pot and light your ultralight simple stove and watch it burn. There should be a sooty flame and it should boil the water with plenty of fuel to spare.
    SGT Rock
    http://hikinghq.net

    My 2008 Trail Journal of the BMT/AT

    BMT Thru-Hikers' Guide
    -----------------------------------------

    NO SNIVELING

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