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Caudblor Camping Stove with Butane Adapter - Lightweight Backpacking Stove for Hiking & Travel

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$19.99

$ 8 .99 $8.99

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About this item

  • 1 Portable Backpacking Stove - Simple debatable design make backpack stove folded small and fit in zipper case. Portable and easy to carry around, take up little space. Easy to set up, screw on the canister in a minute. Great for your bug out bag.
  • 2 Wider Base, Bigger Cooking Area - This little camping burner does well with your quick morning coffee. Use this backpacking stoves to easily cook meal, boil water in a small skillet. It is you'll need for backpacking/hiking/emergency/bike packing.
  • 3 Economical, Fit 1LB Propane Tank - Small camp stove come with a propane adapter so you could use this on butane cylinders and the 1lb propane bottles. An adapter for larger fuel source, support your cooking.
  • 4 Solid Hiking Stove, Sturdy Platform - Small backpacking stoves have nice balance between weight and sturdiness. It’s stable because the pot supports fold out wide. No worry about your pot or pan tipping. Larger cooking surface, more versatility.
  • 5 Great Flame Adjustment - The control valve handle allow you easy to regulate flame, low or high you want. It has a decent flame pattern, puts out great heat for cooking big or small meals. Stable, efficient, powerful, smooth flame adjustment.



Product Description

Backpacking Stove

Camper's Dream, Portable Backpacking Stove

Small and powerful backpacking stove burner for quick coffee?

Big flame, wider diameter of heat to cook food?

Yes! Our backpack stove is in between the very small stoves that sit on top of the fuel can, and a full-on butane/propane camp stove.

This backpacking burner is a fantastic compromise between the two.

Key Feature

  • Portable Size- easy to take out
  • Easy To Set Up-user friendly
  • Fit For Propane Bottles- with propane adapter
  • Hold Moe Size Cooking Kit-wider base

Compact And Strong Camping Burner

Our portable camping stoves is not so small that you are afraid of putting a bigger pot and yet small enough for a backpack.

It can hold a wide variety of pots/pans/cups, because it is smartly designed with foldable extended legs.

The folding extenders for the top make it very steady with large pots, great stability for small frying pan.

You would have a bigger burner cooks more evenly when you are actually "cooking" food and not just boiling water

Backpacking Stove
Backpacking Stove

Sturdy Hiking Stove, Stable Platform

It’s made of stainless steel. Nice balance between weight and sturdiness

A bit large and heavier than ultralight stove, but if you are concerned about stability and sturdiness, this is a great option.

Overall, it is still very portable and lightweight.

With its increase size and weight comes more stability, a larger cooking surface, and more versatility.

It will cover a variety of needs for 1 hiker to 2-3 campers.

Economical Butane Backpacking Stove

With a propane adapter, you could use a 1lb propane tank, for larger fuel source.

Backpacking Stove

Robert
Reviewed in the United States on September 21, 2024
Got this for a backpacking trip. Works great for small 100g butane cans and big 16oz butane cans. The only thing I wish it had was an igniter. But lighter works just as good.
R. Langley
Reviewed in the United States on September 18, 2024
Very compact and works great for a nice hot cup of tea while hiking. I would definitely recommend.
Blahblahblah
Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2024
Works great. Nice packaging and easy to use.
that guy
Reviewed in the United States on December 21, 2024
Small, lightweight and it works!
ForeverYoung
Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2023
I have had several backpacking stoves and this one is by far the easiest to assemble, light and use. We added a base to our tall propane tank and had not trouble with balance with a large heavy frying pan. Nice, even heating for grilled cheese and quesadillas and pancakes. The only thing missing that I have had with previous stoves is a windshield for the flame, but I used the windshield from an older stove I had and it worked great.Loved the sturdy and petite case this comes with, too. Even has a belt loop for east hooking on your pack.
david
Reviewed in the United States on March 6, 2023
This little burner brings on the heat fast and effectively. Its simple in design, meaning it has only what the user needs , no more. Its built sturdily, very compact and comes with all you need but for the fuel , the ignition and the griddle. The flame retention head is precisely engineered to deliver the best bang for the fuel that you choose to fire it with. My personal choice is LPG. But if you prefer butane , this burner will perform just fine on that also. Great for go-bags, provides heat and eats. Get two, their small but mighty.
Full Time
Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2023
After 15 years of use my MSR Pocket Rocket no longer functions. Where it failed is the threaded part at the bottom that connects to the butane cannister. That part is soft aluminum and over time it just wore out. Toward the end it required more and more pressure to tighten and the last time I tightened it, it stripped out. There appears to be no way to fix it.This current stove took 2 days to deliver and it appears to be new, not previously owned and returned.Whereas the part that failed on my Pocket Rocket failed was made of aluminum, on this new stove it appears to be brass. Maybe that will translate into better wear. We'll see.The stove comes in a small, blue canvas pouch, 4" x 4-3/8" x 1-1/4" thick.Nice, but, you have to disassemble the stove each time to get it to fit in the pouch and I do not want to stress the threads unnecessarily, so will not be using the pouch.The stove comes in 2 parts and I don't know why that is necessary. There is the large burner part, and a stem that connects to the butane can. On the Pocket Rocket those 2 parts are just one part. I will keep the 2 parts connected.Also, an adapter comes with this stove for connecting it to 1 lb "Coleman Type" propane bottles. The adapter threads onto the stove stem, then the bottle threads onto the adapter. All threaded connections see nice and solid, secure.I threaded this stove to a 230gr butane cannister after I tightened the on/off wire lever in the off position. Other than a very small "pffft" there was no other noise or leak. I twisted the on/off lever half a turn and could hear the gas coming out and I struck the Bic lighter next to it. It fired up instantly. I twisted the lever 1 complete turn and the fire was roaring. A nice, big, blue ring of fire. No sputtering, no plugged holes, perfect.Note: There is one place on the fire ring where there are no holes and I don't know why that is. Looks like there is a gap of about 6 holes in 3 rows that do not exist. Maybe if it gets to bothering me too much I'll use a small drill bit and carefully drill in the missing holes. Regardless, the missing holes do not seem to effect the performance.After letting the stove cool down for half an hour I connected the propane bottle and adapter to it and fired it up. Again, the performance was flawless.This new stove has a much larger diameter flame pattern than that of the MSR Pocket Rocket. I mainly cook in an MSR 800ml titanium kettle and the Rocket always made a black mark in a specific place on the bottom. Maybe a thin spot in the metal? Or a hotspot with the stove? Dunno. So it will be interesting to find out if the larger flame pattern of the new stove will do the same thing, or not, or create a different type of blackening. shrugThe things that are diff between my old stove and the new one are:1. The new stove is bigger than the old.2. The new stove seems to have a more robust material where it connects to the butane tank.Time will tell.So far I am pleased with this stove and I hope it will last at least as long as my old MSR Pocket Rocket, which doesn't seem to be available any more.
team W
Reviewed in the United States on May 4, 2022
Honestly, this product is really not much of a backpacking stove. It has no wind screen, and the burner looks like a burner you'd have on a gas range in your house. It is not crazy heavy, but you can definitely find lighter stoves out there. So if you are backpacking and just need something as light as possible to boil water, keep looking.Nor is it a great car camping stove. When you don't really care how much your stove weighs, you want something a bit more solid and stable. When this thing is perched on top of a big green propane cylinder it is not exactly the most stable thing in the world. It works, but there are better choices.What this thing is good at is being an emergency backup stove for power outages and such. It is small, it tucks away neatly in its little carrying case, and will run either the backpacker style iso-butane or the big green propane bottles with the included adapter.And when you unfold it, it will heat almost any normal pot or pan since it basically looks just like the burner on a regular gas range in your house. You will just have to be careful with it, but it works fine. You can turn it down and simmer, cook basically anything with it. It works just like the burner in your house once you light it with a lighter.
sylvain noreau
Reviewed in Canada on December 14, 2022
photo pas bonne
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