This is a follow on from the Air Mats I advertised here recently. They were in general sent to me as Editor of Backpackinglight for test & review. In most cases they have been used no more than 2 or maybe 3 times. They were tested with Coleman Fuel in general.
All of these stove will burn Shellite, Coleman Fuel or (US) white gas (petrol, so to speak). Some of them will also burn kerosene. Kerosene has the advantage that, unlike petrol, it does not go 'whoomp' when it is spilt. It does need priming, typically with a little bit of metho. I used kerosene for many years before switching to canister stoves. In some cases the kit includes different jets for the different fuels.
They all come with fuel bottle and pump (except as noted). Note that there seems to be two different threads used on the fuel bottles (coarse and fine), and brands cannot be mixed without very careful checking. Regular checks of the O-ring seals is a good move. Replacement with Viton O-rings is recommended: other rubbers are not so good.
Prices shown in () are list prices where I can find them; the second price is the sale price. P&P and Paypal fee need to be added to this. Contact me via roger@backpackinglight.com for the correct Paypal address (it is not my email address!). Shipping will be to your Paypal address unless otherwise notified.
Coleman Denali
This is actually a dual-fuel stove in that the kit includes an attachment for canisters as well as for the normal fuel bottles. No mention made of kerosene.
Stove 322 g; fuel tank 120 g; metal pump 123 g; canister tripod adapter 109 g
Also fuel tank cap 19 g, aluminium windshield, carry bag and tool set
(US?), $50
The photo on the left has a different burner head from the actual unit, but it shows the canister stand.
Coleman Fyrestorm Ti
This too is a dual-fuel stove including both tank and pump for Shellite and a canister stand and adapter. A carry bag, a spare parts kit and a windscreen are also included.
Stove 218 g; Pump and fuel bottle 198 g; Canister adapter 94 g
(US$?) $50
Coleman Apollo
Called a dual-fuel stove, in that it runs on Coleman fuel and petrol. No mention made of kerosene or canisters.
Stove 383 g; tank and pump 200 g. Also aluminium windshield and spares (mainly O-rings) kit.
(US$?) $50
MSR Whisperlite w tank & pump
Somewhat of a classic stove. Burns Shellite and kerosene fuels. Can be throttled to some degree.
This one has been used by me for a number of years, mainly burning kerosene, so it is a little sooty. Hence the reduction in price.
(US$90)
(US$100) $50
Optimus Nova
Similar to and competing to some degree with the MSR XGK EX but it never got the PR. Pump included but not the fuel bottle. The MSR fuel bottles appear to be compatible.
(US$150), $45
Optimus Nova+
A later version of the Nova. Very similar to the Nova but made in China.
(US$150), $50
Primus Gravity MF (2 off)
This is a light dual-fuel stove, taking both Shellite and canisters. I am not sure about kerosene.
($100) $50 each
Primus Express Lander
Another variant on the Whisperlite. Interestingly, the air inlet holes are screened by mesh to prevent a form of flame backlash. The fuel bottle was not included with the stove. The thread matches that on the 16 oz MSR bottles, but the pump is tilted and will not fit in them: the Primus bottles are wider. I may be able to provide a suitable large (old) SIGG bottle.
Stove 174 g; Pump 104 g; fuel bottle 132 g
(US$?) $50
Continued in Part 2 below