Camping Stove

erover82

Well-known member
Surprised this went unmentioned:
 

Napalm00

Technical Excellence Contributor
Well, I channeled my inner self, listening to the words I have said over and over again, "buy once, cry once" and ordered an 18" dual burner, US made Partner stove. At least I know that somebody's grandkids will cook a meal camping 50 years from now.
Learn something new everyday this thing looks awesome
 

uc4me

Well-known member
.. ordered an 18" dual burner, US made Partner stove.

Saw a few of these at the Vermont Overland last couple yrs and snapped pics. I was throughly impressed.

Can you share your decision on the 18" vs the other related Partner offerings?.. ie; 16/22" 2 burner..the compact foldable 9" 2 burner that can be broken apart. These things are full on bomber.

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javelinadave

Administrator
Staff member
My first Partner Stove was a 2 burner, non detachable, folding unit that I sold to @Chefdaddyscoti after I sold my Defender. I didn't plan on doing much truck camping after that but I missed camping and missed my Partner Stove. I went with the 18" 2 burner with a wind guard. There were a few times that the folding stove had a tough time staying lit due to the wind. I went with the 18" because it had a bit more room than the 16" but it wasn't as big as the 22" model.
As for folding or not, it occupies the same cubic inch area, you need to decide if you want flatter or taller when closed up.
The only two negatives to the Partner is the lack of an ignition system (which can be fabbed up) and the internal threading into the propane tank which I modified in this write-up: Partner Stove Hose Modification
 

javelinadave

Administrator
Staff member
I found this picture from a few years back. Best stove, best coffee pot and a free enamel mug photographed along the Camino del Diablo trail.
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Frobisher

Well-known member
I found this picture from a few years back. Best stove, best coffee pot and a free enamel mug photographed along the Camino del Diablo trail.View attachment 23040
Agreed. A pot every day at school with two buddies to prep for the middle schoolers, and a kit always in the Rover just in case.
 

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mitherial

Well-known member
Great old thread that I missed at the time. Not the original question, but my wife raves about cooking on our Skottle (i.e. overpriced ploughing disc on a stand). The TemboTusk we have comes with a great carrying case from Blue Ridge Overland (another great company).
 
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mitherial

Well-known member
For those of you with a space-constraints, the GSI Pinnacle Pro stove is a neat conceptual improvement on the classic two-burner: crazy thin, it folds down to only 1.4" tall, and is about the size of a large laptop. I ordered one back when it was still just a Kickstarter project, and ended up having to wait well over a year for it to arrive, once Covid shut the factories down (which is why I ended up getting the Skottle mentioned above). Overall, it's a neat idea, but a little flimsy for the $$$--not something that you could beat on for generations like some of the other models out there. Maybe if they offered a version made out of billet aluminum (like a Macbook Pro) instead of bendy stainless.

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mitherial

Well-known member
There is also this Jetboil setup: whole thing packs into a small bag:



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pfshoen

Well-known member
The Primus single burner was used by Sir Douglas Mawson on his epic Antarctic expedition that became one of the greatest solo survival stories ever told. After all other members of his team had died, and he had eaten the last of his sled dogs, his Primus was his only companion.
 
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