Coleman Stove

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Steve saw a reference to this stove over on the TSBB. Looks like a good deal. —Eds

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written by Tim, February 08, 2009
The one problem I see with this stove is that it appears that a pot could slip much easier off than some of the others I have seen. such as one like I have on my P19.

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written by Charles Whipple, February 08, 2009
Yeah, nice looking stove, but the best stove ever made for small boats to use under way was the Sea Swing or one that Force 10 used to sell that I have forgotten the name of. Fully gimbaled with a huge 10 oz Coleman bottle feeding the burner. I had one aboard Resolution and found I could use it no matter how confused the seas. I really want one for whatever new boat I decide on. But Force 10 no longer makes them. Why. Why. Why?
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written by Steve Haines, February 08, 2009
You guys raise interesting points, and they go back to the issue of how you use your boat. I don't use a stove much, and when I do, it's at anchor, or at the dock, and in the cockpit, getting my full attention.

Using a stove below, or when underway requires a different design. I'd buy a gimballed stove in a heartbeat, especially if it could be moved from cabin to cockpit and cost less than a trillion dollars. For now, though, I'll go cheap.
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written by John Manson, February 25, 2009
This is the one I use on my Suncat. Works great. One can of fuel lasts about 3 days. Nice and stable. We cook in the cockpit.

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