When I was a Marine we used these stoves on our many trips to Greenland. We had one stove per two Marines and we bet our lives on them. They always came through. They cooked our meals, kept us warm, and dried out our wet gear in the tent! I love this little stove and bought one a few years back. They say a certain Folgers coffee container fits this stove, but I have not been able to find it. Trying to buy the original Coleman case is near impossible, so I bought a metal pot that kind of fits it. Great video! Thanks!😊
1:30 and 1:48 Correction, propane does perform well below freezing, Butane does not. Isobutane is better than Butane by 20 degrees, not close to Propane. See the below the boiling points of Butane, Propane, and gasoline: Butane: Boiling point of butane is -2 degrees Celsius (28.4 Fahrenheit). It is the reason butane gas cylinder might not work as effectively in colder weather as low temperatures make it difficult to produce gas vapor. Propane: Boiling temperature of propane is -42.04 Celsius (-43.672 Fahrenheit). It is the reason propane for fuel is considerably better than Butane. Isobutane: Boiling point is -11.7 Celsius, 10.94 Fahrenheit. In cold weather Isobutane is better than straight Butane, however not as good as Propane. Isobutane is a blend of Butane and Propane. Gasoline: Different elements of the fuel are made from unique molecules, which will become more solid at different times. You could probably give it a range of about -40 and -200 degrees Fahrenheit, with most of it freezing at -100 degrees. Also, there are debates about which grade gasoline to use in dual fuel stoves. Some say high octane fuel is better for dual fuel stoves than regular gasoline. Their reasoning, higher octane gasoline contains more cleaning additive for engines than Regular (low octane) gas which will keep the dual fuel generator cleaner longer. Coleman's manual recommends regular grade. Another debate is which gasoline should be burned, gasoline with Ethanol or without? So many questions, so little time.
You are much too cynical. This video is a user's review. If you call this a commercial then every and any product review on RUclips you would classify as a commercial as well.
When I was a Marine we used these stoves on our many trips to Greenland. We had one stove per two Marines and we bet our lives on them. They always came through. They cooked our meals, kept us warm, and dried out our wet gear in the tent! I love this little stove and bought one a few years back. They say a certain Folgers coffee container fits this stove, but I have not been able to find it. Trying to buy the original Coleman case is near impossible, so I bought a metal pot that kind of fits it. Great video! Thanks!😊
Awesome video!! Great review! Keep ‘em coming!
Excellent Review. Right to the point with the specs and what we need. Sub'ed.
To keep the pump leather lubricated you can use Chapstick
Nice review on the stove. Stay safe my friend
1:30 and 1:48 Correction, propane does perform well below freezing, Butane does not. Isobutane is better than Butane by 20 degrees, not close to Propane. See the below the boiling points of Butane, Propane, and gasoline:
Butane: Boiling point of butane is -2 degrees Celsius (28.4 Fahrenheit). It is the reason butane gas cylinder might not work as effectively in colder weather as low temperatures make it difficult to produce gas vapor.
Propane: Boiling temperature of propane is -42.04 Celsius (-43.672 Fahrenheit). It is the reason propane for fuel is considerably better than Butane.
Isobutane: Boiling point is -11.7 Celsius, 10.94 Fahrenheit. In cold weather Isobutane is better than straight Butane, however not as good as Propane. Isobutane is a blend of Butane and Propane.
Gasoline: Different elements of the fuel are made from unique molecules, which will become more solid at different times. You could probably give it a range of about -40 and -200 degrees Fahrenheit, with most of it freezing at -100 degrees.
Also, there are debates about which grade gasoline to use in dual fuel stoves. Some say high octane fuel is better for dual fuel stoves than regular gasoline. Their reasoning, higher octane gasoline contains more cleaning additive for engines than Regular (low octane) gas which will keep the dual fuel generator cleaner longer. Coleman's manual recommends regular grade. Another debate is which gasoline should be burned, gasoline with Ethanol or without? So many questions, so little time.
My coleman is way more durable than my msr international. Especially the pump.
Commercial
You are much too cynical. This video is a user's review. If you call this a commercial then every and any product review on RUclips you would classify as a commercial as well.
Commercials don’t show the negatives of a product.