Hi to all, great information on here, could sit and read for hours!!!
We've just got back into camping after about 15 years and are looking for some advice on the best double stove to get. Haven't really got the space in the motor for a gas bottle so thinking small canisters etc, what advice does anyone have on the best type?????
By the time you have packed half a dozen canisters you have taken up the same space as a 907, we found the canisters last a day, but the 907 lasts weeks (and a lot cheaper)
------------- Nick
2017
April - New Forest(9)
May - Dorset (9)
August - Camping Le Pin Parasol, Vendee (18)
October - East Mersea (8)
and five nights in the one man tent!
Quote: Originally posted by NickH on 07/6/2014By the time you have packed half a dozen canisters you have taken up the same space as a 907, we found the canisters last a day, but the 907 lasts weeks (and a lot cheaper)
Half a dozen?? We just got back from a week's camping and only used one cannister, cooked about three meals on that plus warmed stuff up.
Rather than a double stove we take two suitcase stoves. We've used a double in the past and just find this set up easier to pack and more versatile to use.
------------- May/June - Spring Valley
Aug/Sept - Leekworth
I swear by my Coleman Dual Fuel 2-burner stove, as it can be used all year round including the colder months when gas canisters can be ineffective due to low temperature.
Also, unlike suitcase stoves, I do not have to worry about explosion risks by having too large a pan or placing the pan in the incorrect position etc...
DK
------------- * Apple The Campervan - A Van For Work, Rest And Play! *
- 2025 - inc. FR & DE
- 2024 - 10/56 inc. FR & NL
- 2023 - 48 inc. FR
- 2022 - 49
- 2021 - 34
* Ex-tenter & solo female camper *
* Treat life events like a dog: If you can't eat it, play with it, or hump it, p1$$ on it and walk away! *
Everyone has their own idea of what is best, really it's what suits our needs which is 'best'.
A suitcase stove isn't a huge investement to make, you can easily get one for ten pounds or less and if you shop around , a pack of four canisters will be around £5.
I think the suitcase stoves are all much the same , some may have brand names , but I think they all perform about the same.
Again,not such a huge investment that you can't change after a couple of trips
------------- Zymocenosilicaphobia-excessive fear of an empty beer glass
' When I die, I will return to seek the moments I did not live by the sea'
I use all types of stoves depending on circumstances,ie in car with canvas tent I use old tilly with bottle + suitcase stove for quick tea in morning or emergancys,for just a weekend probably suitcase stove with cannisters,when camping abroad on motorbikes...when obviously space is at a premium...we use a suitcase stove,but last year in France we had to search out the cannisters,so weird usually in the big supermarkets they are readily available but all there were last year were the really old pierce campingaz cannisters,so this year we are taking a coleman sportster stove...always fuel to be had from our bikes! and a suitcase stove I got from Asda a few weeks ago..brilliant about the third of the size of the old suitcase stove but takes the same canisters due to a rather clever sliding bitty on the end for the canister !
evo
Camping Gaz 907 2.75kg at £30 per refill so approx £1.10/100g
Calor Gas 4.5kg 4.5kg at £17 per refill so approx £0.37/100g
Suitcase cartridges 908g at £5 for four so approx £0.55/100g
Camping Gaz is significantly more expensive than Calor and also a lot more than cartridges.
Regarding cartridges, remember that the cheap one generally have 227g gas in them but Camping Gaz branded ones (CP250) have 250g. Even with Argos pricing of £9.99 for four CP250s, they're still cheaper than a 907 bottle!
Camping Gaz bottles only ever make sense if you travel outside the UK a lot...