Saturday, July 9, 2011

Three Fuels for Your Alcohol Stove


A friend of mine is heading out to the Wind River Range for a backpacking trip, and he asked me what kind of fuel to get for his alcohol stove, and this was my response to him.
Typical Alcohol Stove

1. Heet - Gas line antifreeze, which is sold in the yellow bottle.  It must be the yellow bottle! If you get the red bottle, you will regret your alcohol stove for the rest of your trip. You can get the yellow bottle it at most automotive stores.  You can actually ship it to yourself in the mail, since it has a low flashpoint.  Yep, you can actually challenge your own postmaster on this point and win!

2. Denatured Alcohol - You can find this at most hardware stores. I know that stores in Southern California have pulled denatured alcohol (or this link) off the shelves, because the unburned vapor is not good for the atmosphere.  Usually denatured alcohol is used as a solvent or a thinner.

3. Everclear - They sell the real stuff in Wyoming (180 proof), and it burns the hottest and cleanest of all three.  My companions on the CDT used it for a stove fuel, and were very impressed with its performance.  Of course they also made CDTinis (CDT + Martinis) out of it, and served night caps for everyone at camp at night.  The problem with Everclear is that it is expensive, but it is ubiquitous, especially in a state like Wyoming.  You'd be the life of the party every night if you packed it out with you, cooked with it, and served your friends drinks at the end of the day.

One more thing about alcohol stoves is be careful when using them.  Please be sure to monitor them at all times, especially in dry areas.  I've heard too many stories on the Pacific Crest Trail, where an alcohol stove got out of hand, and caused a fire.  Enjoy your meals on the trail, or nightcaps if you choose the Everclear!

4 comments:

Sara Benson said...

Hey Chris! Good to see you on +1 and here on your blog. Do you have any experience with solid-fuel stoves? I go backpacking and camping in Hawaii a lot, and it can be hard to find stove fuel in the islands. Someone told me that if I used a solid-fuel stove, I could check the fuel in my airplane luggage. I don't know if that's true, but was wondering if you had any experience with those kind of portable stoves?

PS Feel free to come on over and take a look at my blogs, www.indietraveler.blogspot.com and www.toptrailsmaui.com

Jason Anderson said...

Just discovered your blog while doing a little online research for a jaunt up Maroon Bells in two weeks, making sure my pack list and route are all in order - been a while since I hiked that high, and was wondering about stove performance. I just picked up an alcohol stove a week or two ago and REI had the denatured alcohol there too.

Neat little tip: pour it into smaller containers for easier and lighter packing - works great if you are only going out for a day or two!

Chris "Freefall" Sanderson said...

Jason, have a great trip! My alcohol stove performed well (albeit slower) at the 10-12K altitudes on the Four Loop Pass. If just requires a little patience. Thanks for the tip too!

Chris "Freefall" Sanderson said...

Jason, have a great trip! My alcohol stove performed well (albeit slower) at the 10-12K altitudes on the Four Loop Pass. If just requires a little patience. Thanks for the tip too!