Free: Contests & Raffles.
I prefer my MSR whisperlite or my Pocket rocket as sometimes I like to cook fish or if I want to cook up some meat I can. Jetboil does have their advantages that is if you only need hot water but I don't care to be that limited. The thing about cooking over a stove as opposed to an open fire it the black soot is a mess on the fry pan unless you cook the meat in foil.
I have two now. Both boil water fast and both can be used to cook on. One takes fuel and one uses wood.the first is below and the reviews and the cost is what brought me to this unit. It works plain and simple. I give it 5 stars!http://www.amazon.com/Ultralight-Backpacking-Canister-Stove-Ignition/dp/B004U8CP88/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1375454161&sr=8-1&keywords=backpacking+stoveI recently purchased this from another site member and am completely happy with it. It boils water, can be cooked on, and has no fuel to pack. This baby is awesome! it burns so efficiently there is almost no smoke at all and it really does charge USB devices. My pan had almost no soot on it and after boiling water wtill had fire to make SMORES After the coals went cold there was NO SMELL of smoke at all! it is a little heavy that is the only draw back.http://www.biolitestove.com/campstove/camp-overview/features/
Quote from: CoryTDF on August 02, 2013, 07:41:43 AMI have two now. Both boil water fast and both can be used to cook on. One takes fuel and one uses wood.the first is below and the reviews and the cost is what brought me to this unit. It works plain and simple. I give it 5 stars!http://www.amazon.com/Ultralight-Backpacking-Canister-Stove-Ignition/dp/B004U8CP88/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1375454161&sr=8-1&keywords=backpacking+stoveI recently purchased this from another site member and am completely happy with it. It boils water, can be cooked on, and has no fuel to pack. This baby is awesome! it burns so efficiently there is almost no smoke at all and it really does charge USB devices. My pan had almost no soot on it and after boiling water still had fire to make SMORES After the coals went cold there was NO SMELL of smoke at all! it is a little heavy that is the only draw back.http://www.biolitestove.com/campstove/camp-overview/features/how well do you think the biolite will perform under less than dry conditions? I cant imagine finding too many dry fuel up in the cascades during oct/nov.
I have two now. Both boil water fast and both can be used to cook on. One takes fuel and one uses wood.the first is below and the reviews and the cost is what brought me to this unit. It works plain and simple. I give it 5 stars!http://www.amazon.com/Ultralight-Backpacking-Canister-Stove-Ignition/dp/B004U8CP88/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1375454161&sr=8-1&keywords=backpacking+stoveI recently purchased this from another site member and am completely happy with it. It boils water, can be cooked on, and has no fuel to pack. This baby is awesome! it burns so efficiently there is almost no smoke at all and it really does charge USB devices. My pan had almost no soot on it and after boiling water still had fire to make SMORES After the coals went cold there was NO SMELL of smoke at all! it is a little heavy that is the only draw back.http://www.biolitestove.com/campstove/camp-overview/features/
MSR Reactor, hands down. Jetboil is a close second depending on circumstances. The MSR is more efficient, faster, and actually has the ability to boil useful amounts (1 or 1.7 liter) of water. Have you ever tried to feed multiple people 1 cup (actually think it will do 16oz) at a time? With the Jetboil you can only fit the small fuels in the cup, not the larger canisters that nest nicely in the Reactor. The Reactor will boil (rolling boil) 19 liters (~40 degree water, ~50 degree ambient) per large (8oz) canister. The Jetboil is good for personnal use or shorter trips. For larger groups and extended trips the Reactor takes it.