blacklab2020
Member
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2005
- Messages
- 391
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I am switching to a hanging stove setup and have always relied on white gas in the past. With the new stove (MSR Superfly ascent system), it runs on butane, isobutane, isopropane, etc. I will be using isopropane for its advantages over butane (higher vapor pressure, burns hotter). The canisters will be warmed by a chemical heat pack.
I am curious about the typical fuel consumption required to melt dense snow to boiling. When using white gas it wasnt uncommon for two of us to use nearly 20 oz of fuel to cook and melt snow to boiling water each day. That was roughly 6-7 liters of water.
I know I cant get an exact answer for many reasons... temperature of fuel, ambient air, pot conductance of heat, style of cooking, etc. I would just like to get a feel for how much I should bring on an overnight or a 2-3 night winter trip... even a 6 day winter trip.
Thanks,
~J
I am curious about the typical fuel consumption required to melt dense snow to boiling. When using white gas it wasnt uncommon for two of us to use nearly 20 oz of fuel to cook and melt snow to boiling water each day. That was roughly 6-7 liters of water.
I know I cant get an exact answer for many reasons... temperature of fuel, ambient air, pot conductance of heat, style of cooking, etc. I would just like to get a feel for how much I should bring on an overnight or a 2-3 night winter trip... even a 6 day winter trip.
Thanks,
~J