Cooking inside nylon tents is never recommended. However, if you are extremely careful (stability of stove, splashes eg. hot oil, small children/animals wandering about, hot surfaces near flammable materials) then of course you can. It's up to you to decide to take the risk or not. Just bear in mind that if a spark does hit a nylon tent, it will go up like a fireball and you will not have any time to escape....
We cook inside our tent, but (a) it is canvas so wouldn't turn into a fireball quite so quickly (b) we have a designated bit of canvas wall that is coated with something or other, specifically to be used as a cooking area - and a huge mesh window for ventilation. (c) If the weather is set fair, we may well put the stove outdoors anyway. I don't like the idea of splashes getting on the tent (d) I don't have small animals wandering around (eg dog) and only one well-drilled child (don't touch the stove! Keep away! etc...)
Sorry if it sounds a bit scaremongery, but you need to know the risks.
------------- Baby Milk Action is a non-profit organisation which aims to save lives and to end the avoidable suffering caused by inappropriate infant feeding.
http://www.babymilkaction.org/
Nylon tents do not go up like a fireball! Modern tents (e.g. Diablo) are made of flame resistant material, which will burn, but certainly not as described above. We regularly cook in the porch in our Diablo. We do have a kitchen tent which we use for longer stays, but for weekends it is fine.
------------- Hotels Suck. Villas are great but I can't take my Cadac on the plane....
the material is made retardent so it wil ignite and burn more slowly but if your tent has a heat source / ignition it will burn and burn very quickly let there be no doubt
it will just burn a little slower than fabric without the treatment
------------- Baby Milk Action is a non-profit organisation which aims to save lives and to end the avoidable suffering caused by inappropriate infant feeding.
http://www.babymilkaction.org/
"A tent fire is always a possibility and while no fire is ever going to be a pleasant experience, cotton burns up fast and is gone where nylon catches easily, melts, sticks, and continues to burn with toxic fumes."
"It takes about 30secs for an 8 man patrol tent to burn... the stuff in it takes longer to finish off. A nylon hike tent will burn even faster, and even if it is ""Flame retardant"" it will go up up in seconds. What's worse is that the burning nylon will drape a layer of burning plastic over everything in the tent, including anyone who happens to be inside. "
------------- Baby Milk Action is a non-profit organisation which aims to save lives and to end the avoidable suffering caused by inappropriate infant feeding.
http://www.babymilkaction.org/
Hi, we sometimes cook inside ours, but only if conditions are so bad as not to allow cooking outdoors. If you must cook in the tent make sure you have fire blanket or extinguisher close at hand, make sure cooking stand is stable and level and positioned far enough from tent wall to prevent canvas blowing onto stand in heavy winds, prepare all food in advance and never leave unattended also keep kids out of the way, make them use rear door if they need to go out.
we've got a canopy added to our diablo 900 and we cook in that, it is fire resistant and we would never leave it alone, if conditions bad will cook in porch area or eat out, back door open for quick exit!!!!! we never cook in the actual tent.