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Thread: alcohol stoves

  1. #1
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    Default alcohol stoves

    I try to pack my entire cook kit into one convenient package, i.e., inside the pots. For some time I noticed moisture inside my pot when I unpacked. I thought my bottle was leaking. I found another. Seems like it leaked as well. I went through 3 or 4 bottles before it kind of occured to me that, as the alcohol is actually meant to draw moisture in gas lines, perhaps it was doing the same inside my pot. Last trip out, I stored the bottle in a plastic bag, then inside my pot kit. I experienced no moisture. Not even iside the plastic bag.
    Has anyone else experienced this?

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    No.

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    Me no care, me here free beer. Tap keg, please?

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    Nope, sounds like you either had moisture in the pots to begin with, or you weren't screwing the lids onto the bottles tight enough.
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    Quote Originally Posted by KnittingMelissa View Post
    Nope, sounds like you either had moisture in the pots to begin with, or you weren't screwing the lids onto the bottles tight enough.
    Gee...you'd think after the second bottle at least, way deep down inside my childlike mind, I would have thought...hmmm...I wonder if the lid is tight on this second bottle. Then , at the third bottle, even an ape like me would have given that ol' lid one...more...good...twist.
    And as for already present moisture, I don't know about you campers but maybe from boredom, maybe from habit...dunno...I always kind of scan my cookware, if for no other reason than some tasty little morsel left over from the previous meal. Noooo....no morsels, no twigs, no critters, no water, not even a drop of moisture.
    But thanks Melissa.
    Reckon I'll have to stop wiping my cookware with my sweaty socks.....

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    Quote Originally Posted by EMAN View Post
    Reckon I'll have to stop wiping my cookware with my sweaty socks.....
    someone remind me to never accept an offer of food from Eman
    Conquest: It is not the Mountain we conquer but Ourselves

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    Quote Originally Posted by EMAN View Post
    I try to pack my entire cook kit into one convenient package, i.e., inside the pots. For some time I noticed moisture inside my pot when I unpacked. I thought my bottle was leaking. I found another. Seems like it leaked as well. I went through 3 or 4 bottles before it kind of occured to me that, as the alcohol is actually meant to draw moisture in gas lines, perhaps it was doing the same inside my pot. Last trip out, I stored the bottle in a plastic bag, then inside my pot kit. I experienced no moisture. Not even iside the plastic bag.
    Has anyone else experienced this?
    If the moisture was from your fuel bottle, the alcohol smell would've been obvious and very strong when you opened up your cook kit.

    If you can't smell it , it's water.
    Skids

    Insanity: Asking about inseams over and over again and expecting different results.
    Albert Einstein, (attributed)

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by EMAN View Post
    Gee...you'd think after the second bottle at least, way deep down inside my childlike mind, I would have thought...hmmm...I wonder if the lid is tight on this second bottle. Then , at the third bottle, even an ape like me would have given that ol' lid one...more...good...twist.
    And as for already present moisture, I don't know about you campers but maybe from boredom, maybe from habit...dunno...I always kind of scan my cookware, if for no other reason than some tasty little morsel left over from the previous meal. Noooo....no morsels, no twigs, no critters, no water, not even a drop of moisture.
    But thanks Melissa.
    Reckon I'll have to stop wiping my cookware with my sweaty socks.....
    Sorry, I know a lot of engineers. I've seen them make mistakes like not screwing on a bottle lid five or ten times before they realize what the issue is.

    Yes, engineers are, commonly, pretty dumb.
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    Quote Originally Posted by KnittingMelissa View Post
    Sorry, I know a lot of engineers. I've seen them make mistakes like not screwing on a bottle lid five or ten times before they realize what the issue is.

    Yes, engineers are, commonly, pretty dumb.



    Scotty: On Earth, we have a saying: Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.
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    Quote Originally Posted by EMAN View Post
    Gee...you'd think after the second bottle at least, way deep down inside my childlike mind, I would have thought...hmmm...I wonder if the lid is tight on this second bottle. Then , at the third bottle, even an ape like me would have given that ol' lid one...more...good...twist.
    Nah, prolly not.
    . . . Reckon I'll have to stop wiping my cookware with my sweaty socks.....
    Sheesh, everybody knows that's wrong. That's what you save the toilet paper for.
    Quote Originally Posted by KnittingMelissa View Post
    Sorry, I know a lot of engineers. I've seen them make mistakes like not screwing on a bottle lid five or ten times before they realize what the issue is.

    Yes, engineers are, commonly, pretty dumb.
    Hmm, haven't heard a wisecrack like that since Minnie Smith left us. In that spirit:
    Me no care, me here free beer. Tap keg, please?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Skidsteer View Post
    If the moisture was from your fuel bottle, the alcohol smell would've been obvious and very strong when you opened up your cook kit.

    If you can't smell it , it's water.
    Yeah, that's what was weird, it was definitely water. You know I only boil water, don't actually cook anything in the pot but I always at least wipe it out to help prevent possible rust if nothing else. But with the two brain cells I have left from the 70's, I thought, maybe there's just enough moisture left in any flaws in the pot to seek it's way through the bottle I store the alcohol in.
    Then again, all this could be from nipping off the HEET too. HA!

    Quote Originally Posted by KnittingMelissa View Post
    Sorry, I know a lot of engineers. I've seen them make mistakes like not screwing on a bottle lid five or ten times before they realize what the issue is.

    Yes, engineers are, commonly, pretty dumb.
    No offense meant darlin'...strictly humor.....I appreciate any help or advice.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Two Speed View Post
    Nah, prolly not.Sheesh, everybody knows that's wrong. That's what you save the toilet paper for.Hmm, haven't heard a wisecrack like that since Minnie Smith left us. In that spirit:


    Just something here about the way she's....posing....uh...hmmmm....

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    Soooo, any advice I could offer? You know, like making sure the lid's tight on the alky bottle or something?

    Seriously, I usually put my alcohol* in an external mesh pocket. I figure I've got a better chance of smelling the alcohol if it starts leaking.

    * fuel for the stove. I'm pretty sure you'd swipe my cognac if I didn't stow in inside the pack.
    Me no care, me here free beer. Tap keg, please?

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    Wow...sure screwed that up.

    And I wonder about alcohol leaks........

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    COGNAC.....ohhhh.....ohhhh......mmmmm.....

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    Quote Originally Posted by Skidsteer View Post
    If the moisture was from your fuel bottle, the alcohol smell would've been obvious and very strong when you opened up your cook kit.

    If you can't smell it , it's water.
    Lookit Skids playing Mr. Science and all.

    Engineers get confused by that whole righty tighty lefty loosey thing.
    You never turned around to see the frowns
    On the jugglers and the clowns
    When they all did tricks for you.

  16. #16
    PCT, Sheltowee, Pinhoti, LT , BMT, AT, SHT, CDT, TRT 10-K's Avatar
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    1. Leave the alcohol bottle out and see if it happens.

    If it does, it's not the alcohol. If it doesn't:

    2. Put the alcohol bottle back in

    If it does, it's the alcohol. If it doesn't, you're just weird. ;-)

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    If it does, it's the alcohol. If it doesn't, you're just weird. ;-)[/QUOTE]

    This part...yeah...

  18. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dances with Mice View Post
    Lookit Skids playing Mr. Science and all.

    Engineers get confused by that whole righty tighty lefty loosey thing.
    I tried the whole righty tighty-lefty loosey thing once and I think it's bunk.

    It really didn't seem to matter which hand I used.
    Skids

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    Albert Einstein, (attributed)

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    Lots of hits at us engineers here. Makes me real uncomfortable. Especially since it's all true. Remind me to share my collection of engineer jokes sometime.

    My guess is that even after a wipe, there's some residual water left on the pot surface, or perhaps on other things in the pot also. Over time, with temperature changes through the day and with the pot in a relatively stable position, it condenses and collects at the bottom. I don't see how a tight bottle that doesn't appear to be leaking could draw water. But 10-K has the definitive test.

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