RonK wrote:For its versatility I'm planning on a Vargo Bot and Bot Cosy.
I will nest a Vargo 450ml travel mug, a gas canister and a Kovea Spider inside.
Orion wrote:I use a 700ml aluminum beer can and a 25g stove. Along with a piece of foil as a windscreen and a mini lighter my kit (not including fuel) weighs 79g. The beer can is far from ideal though. It's tall and narrow and tricky to handle when hot. Really only suitable for boiling water or cooking soup. Eating/drinking out of it can be challenging at times. I slathered some silicone on one of them to make it easier to work with but usually I just take a naked one. The canister doesn't fit inside so I stuff other items in there.
If someone made a lightweight aluminum pot of roughly 1 liter volume I would buy a bunch of them. Nobody does though. Titanium mugs weigh several times more and cost a bundle.
So you have all of those Ti mugs and pots to choose from. They're kind of expensive and relatively heavy, but still better than standard bushwalking stuff.
icefest wrote:I do like that setup a lot, tintin!
Do you take another mug/cup? I've been a bit hesitant with the evernew pot as I'd miss my mug...
Orion wrote:Tintin, that looks really good. Maybe I'll convert to titanium after all.
What do you use for a cozy?
And do you carry any sort of windscreen?
I forgot my cup recently and had to drink my coffee out of a metal pot in the morning. I don't recommend it. I couldn't drink it until it had cooled a lot and then it tasted too cold. One possibility to fix that problem is to use silicone "lips". Snowpeak sells them, but you could make your own with silicone sheeting or by just painting some silicone onto the pot in a spot or two.
Aidan wrote:I've read of a propencity for Ti to offer hot spots when cooking. What are they like for cooking things like porridge or should I say cleaning after eating said porridge?
I might be able to get by with a pot and heatable beverage cup of maybe 650 - 750ml, but those 450ml cups would leave me wanting.
Mark F wrote:While I am keen on Ti pots for my style of cooking, if you want to "cook" porridge rather than pour boiling water onto instant oats then the best pots are the hard anodised aluminium. Any foods where the consistency starts to be quite thick and requires simmering rather than bring to boil and put in cozy have a high potential to stick to the base of Ti pots.
Orion wrote:If someone made a lightweight aluminum pot of roughly 1 liter volume I would buy a bunch of them. Nobody does though. Titanium mugs weigh several times more and cost a bundle.
Stew63 wrote:A review on the XL when you get it please.
I'm most intrigued and tempted.
BarryK wrote:Stew63 wrote:A review on the XL when you get it please.
I'm most intrigued and tempted.
Yes, will do.
I have been eagerly awaiting its arrival. I thought, it has to be delivered today... but no.
Online tracking (Australia Post) showed that it arrived in Perth at 10.00am on Monday 6th June, now it is Friday 10th night, so I will probably get it on Monday -- delivered an entire week after arrival in Perth!
There is a review here:
https://backpackinglight.com/forums/topic/60535/
[Jack]son wrote:Orion wrote:If someone made a lightweight aluminum pot of roughly 1 liter volume I would buy a bunch of them. Nobody does though. Titanium mugs weigh several times more and cost a bundle.
Have you seen these by Batchstovez? http://www.batchstovez.com/batchstovez- ... ok-pot.php 32oz aluminium pot at USD$19. Perhaps one option?
Stew63 wrote:.
Question: Should I be using any special type of metho (for minimal carbon) or will Diggers from Bunnings be suitable?
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