Hi All!
There's three stoves I find myself coming back to over and over for my touring...
1) I've been very pleased with a recent acquisition, a
Esbit Alcohol Burner with Trekking Cookset E-CS985HA. Retail usually runs about USD$45 here in the States. Sales link here:
http://www.amazon.com/Esbit-CS985H-EX-Cookset-Alcohol-Exchanger/dp/B00B49U1DWCompany link here:
http://www.esbit.de/en/products/10/cookset-cs985haPowered by what is basically a Trangia clone, I prefer the simmer/snuffer lid on this one as it has a nice, cool little handle for placement that avoids the ring-toss I commonly had to use when capping a hot Trangia in a similar cookset. The parts are interchangeable and I have used the simmer/snuffer lid on my Trangia. The Esbit burner differs in having alternating larger/smaller holes and a few more of them than the Trangia. Burn and boil times are comparable and it stores fuel under its gasketed storage cap as well as the Trangia does. I get a solid 40 minutes unthrottled burning, 2 hours 40 minutes at 50% simmer from a 2.5oz/74ml fill. I like how it includes a little stand to use heat tabs instead of the spirit stove; it adds versatility but at the cost of leaving some sticky residue on the bottom of the pots. One pot serves as a lid for the other, and both locate into the stand so the lot is very stable. It is much smaller than it appears, totaling about 120 x 145mm. When
This little stove kit is made entirely of hard-anodized aluminum, and I augmented with the stand's windscreen with wraparound one I made from annealed sheet aluminum for really windy days. Everything in the photo below stores inside so I have a grab-and-go solution with dish soap, scraper, dish towel, swiss army knife (Classic) with P-38 can opener, two Primus folding spoon/forks, and an Optimus Sparky piezoelectric igniter.
2) For day rides, I prefer my
"Pocket Kitchen" that fits in a rear jersey pocket and is built around a Heineken beer can penny stove and stand I made and two anodized cups with lid. See:
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?topic=3850.msg16915#msg16915As much as I love my alcohol stoves (I also own a Mini-Trangia and a whole slew of homemade/assembled ones) and mjuch prefer them for day rides and shorter tours, I've found alcohol's lower heat density means they are less economical for me the longer I am away from civilization.
3) For long solo tours away from resupply here in America, I prefer one of my
Coleman Peak1/eXponent multi-fuel stoves, the kind with the wider, more squat base/fuel tank. I've never had a failure in the field or clogged jets, and with just a change of generator pipe, the same stove has burned Coleman fuel/white gas/naphtha, unleaded automotive petrol, No.2 heating oil, kerosene, diesel, and JP-4 jet fuel (used in rancher's helicopters in the Great Basin). Often, I find the only fuel readily available in America's Great Basin is automotive unleaded petrol, so this is the stove of choice there if I run out of carried Coleman fuel. It also has a pump for pressurization at altitude and will simmer nicely and the burner design is nearly windproof, making it a favorite of American troops in Afghanistan for their own kits. The heaviest of my stoves especially when full, it becomes the lightest for longer trips simply because it has proven to be the most efficient user of fuel for me -- especially in extreme cold and/or at altitude/wind.
These are my three touring favorites and the ones I go to most often.
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I deplore cannister/cartridge stoves because of the fuel packaging -- it takes up the same space full or empty and must be disposed of responsibly. Still, there are times when they can be handy and I have one in a kit assembled for less than USD$20 from Chinese imports bought on eBay -- a hard-anodized 2-pot set like the Esbit's and Optimus cold-weather iso-butane cartridge an "orange box" piezo-ignited burner:
http://www.thorncycles.co.uk/forums/index.php?topic=4637.msg22737#msg22737 There's also my father's ancient Primus 71L (same basic innards as a Svea 123) and my own Primus/Optimus 8R, which runs nicely but has horrible fuel economy compounded by a tiny tank and the need for manual priming if the accessory pump isn't used. A blowtorch stove, it doesn't simmer well and is way heavy in its clever little blue case with the slide-out drawer for operation and stay-cool phenolic handle and integrated cleaning needle...but I got it from my father, and so it remains precious and I can't imagine selling it. Like any good tool, for me it is a touchstone for precious memories.
Best,
Dan.