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Cooking Stove - high altitude / cold weather
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<blockquote data-quote="Litehiker" data-source="post: 1766851" data-attributes="member: 54178"><p>graywolf,</p><p>Gotta disagree bit about isobutane ("canister") stoves in the cold, even at high altitudes. The very best operating canister stove system in cold weather use an <em>inverted </em>canister together liquid fuel into the burner together heated into gas. This requires a primer fuel to heat the tube a bit for initial vaporization. </p><p>But even then I'd rather take along a white gas stove for utter reliability. Winter is a time for "belt and suspenders" reliability.</p><p></p><p>Eric b.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Litehiker, post: 1766851, member: 54178"] graywolf, Gotta disagree bit about isobutane ("canister") stoves in the cold, even at high altitudes. The very best operating canister stove system in cold weather use an [I]inverted [/I]canister together liquid fuel into the burner together heated into gas. This requires a primer fuel to heat the tube a bit for initial vaporization. But even then I'd rather take along a white gas stove for utter reliability. Winter is a time for "belt and suspenders" reliability. Eric b. [/QUOTE]
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