Looking to buy a new backpack stove
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I am tired of my liquid fuel stove...an MSR Whisperlite. I've held off on buying a canister type stove due to environmental concerns, but I'm leaning towards one because of easy of use, safer operation, etc. How do they work in cold weather? |
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Jetboils are pretty great, I've used them down to about -10 F, and it worked perfectly, not sure about high altitude, low temps though. |
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I have a jetboil, but I also really like my snowpeak. Really small, comes in titanium if you want it and burns pretty hot. The jetboil is nice, but you are trading size for convenience. |
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Tradster, Jetboils are great! We just returned from backpacking a good chunk of the Old historic Mojave Road with the JETBOIL that came in very handy. We've enjoyed it on backpacking/climbing trips from the low-lying deserts to the beach, to higher elevations like the Wind River Range, and John has made use of it on high peaks like Mt. Whitney, and in the Tetons, and such. It's worth the money! We like the big pot for the two of us which is perfect for enough water for our dehydrated meals, with plenty left over for tea, or coffee. This is our exact set-up. |
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jet boils are great and all, but you have to use there pots and there system, which leads for very little customization. The whisper lite is pretty nice easy to repair in the field and you and improvise with it. |
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jet boils rock. |
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I've become a huge fan of my jetboil too. The fact that it can all pack down inside the canister (jetboil has their custom sized canister for this - a little expensive) is nice. And quick to boil! I think it takes less than 2 minutes to boil a little over 2 cups. |
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Jetboil works well at altitude. Fired up many a time on a 14er summit in CO. Can't speak for elevations much above 14. |
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I like my jetboil. I've spent some nights on top of Mt Sherman with it in the cold at 14k and it worked great. I like that I press the button and it ignites. I have a whisperlite international that I used to love till I got my jet boil. Only problem for me is having to lug the fuel canisters around. At least the long slender ones for my MSR are easier to pack around and are a lot lighter at the end of a trip. |
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Thanks for all your input. Looks like the Jetboil is the way to go. Does the pot adapter come with the set or is it extra? Thanks again. |
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Another vote for Jet Boil. |
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I must admit I am a fan of my MSR pocket rocket. Light, fast and cheap. |
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I used my friends jetboil for a couple of trips and I've gotta admit, its awesome. |
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Ok I have put the jetboil up against the MSR Reactor and the Reactor is quite a bit faster. The jetboil was boiling 2 cups of water (its recommended capacity) The Reactor was boiling 4 cups of water (its recommended capacity) Water was the same temp. to start and the stoves were started at the same time. The Reactor was over a minute faster to boil. So has anyone else tried testing the two? What are the pros and cons of both? |
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I am also a big fan of the Reactor. It's only minus is that it is on the pricey side, and the fact that you can't fly with the fuel canisters (like all canister stoves). It is hands hands down the fastest boiling stove when you put it in real world conditions. Usually when you are using a stove there is some amount of wind. This wind does not exist when you are testing the stove in the store or your kitchen. I used to work in a store that sold these things and the MSR rep demonstrated the winds effect on boiling. He set up every demo stove we had in the store, put the same amount of water in everyone's pots and fired them up. The kicker was he added a box fan that simulated a 7ish mph wind. The reactor was by far the fastest of all of the stoves tested, this included Jet Boil, Primus, Snowpeak, and other MSR stoves... liquid and canister. In fact the Reactor was able to boil water twice before some stoves boiled it once. Te winds affect can be minimized by the use of the wind screen, but the Reactor doesn't need one because the burner is shielded by the pot. |
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Jetboil they are fast. |
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Brett B. wrote:I must admit I am a fan of my MSR pocket rocket. Light, fast and cheap.I love mine, too...my only gripe is that it eats through fuel super fast. But it's great if you only need it for a day or two. |
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Have a pocket rocket, and, like it, but, a bit tippy with a pot and small fuel can. |
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If you are looking for a 3 season backpacking stove, go with the 2 cup jet-boil and learn to cook in a zip lock freezer bag. This method will support up to 4 people pretty easily. This last fall I took several family members (11 in our group) up to Thunder lake for a couple days. We used two stoves: my JetBoil and my dads Pocket Rocket with a 2 liter pot. Since we did all the cooking in zip locks, all the stoves did was boil water. In the time it took the Pocket Rocket to boil 4 cups, the Jetboil had already boiled 3 sets of two cups. |
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