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If you’re looking for a small and efficient backpacking stove, then you should definitely check out the MSR Pocket Rocket. The pocket rocket is one of the smallest canister fuel stoves available on the market. If you want to go lightweight and want to keep a good small stove rather than a small beer can alcohol stove, this is the way to go.
The Pocket Rocket retails for about $39.95 and is worth the money. Here are the technical specs on this:
Suggested Use: Backpacking/mountaineering
Weight: 3.2 ounces
Dimensions: 4.1 x 2.1 x 2 inches
Average Boil Time: 3 min. 58 sec.
Stove Stability: Excellent
Pot Stability: Fair
Here are some more details!
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- Ultralight, Pocket-Sized: Weighs just 3 oz. (86 g). Palm-size dimensions, 4×4x2 inches.
- Simple, Lightening-Fast Operation: No need for priming, pressurizing or maintenance.
- Blazing Heat Output: Boils a liter of water in under 3.5 minutes.
- Simmer or Boil:
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Glove-friendly controls allow precise flame adjustment and stability.
- Windclip™ Windshield: Micro-burner, tri-sectional clip protects flame in light wind gusts.
- Burns MSR IsoPro™ Premium Fuel: Clean burning, ultimate performance from start to finish of canister life.
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Welcome back!
When dealing with a backpacking stove or camping stove, there are a lot of different things that could go wrong or be a problem. It is important to keep in mind a lot of differnet things when using the stoves to make sure that you are operating them safely. Here are a list of Do’s and Don’ts to help you keep your stove running season after season without any problems.
Do’s
- Do carry fuel only in recommended/approved containers – Volatiles are best transported in aluminum liter bottles or in their original steel can.

- Do frequently check the temperature of your stove’s fuel tank by feeiling it with your hand. If the tank is too hot to hold, reduce the stove’s heat and or pour cold water on the tank.
- Do carr extra stove parts and tools – An extra pressure cap and leather pump washer are usually enough. Bring a small screwdriver and pliers.
- Do empty the fuel in your stove at the end of each season – Impurities in fuel left in stoves can cause malfunctions. This is the most common cause of long term stove failure.
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- Don’t loosen or remove the filler cap of a gasoline stove when the stove is burning. This could result in an explosion
- Don’t refuel a hot stove. There may be sufficient heat still available to ignite he gas fumes.
- Don’t set oversize pots on stoves that have integral fuel tanks. Large pots reflect excessive heat back to the fuel tank, which may cause overheating of the stove. Run stoves at three-fourths of maximum heat output if you use oversize pots.
- Don’t use automotive gasoline in a stove designed to burn white gas.
- Don’t state a stove inside a tent or confined area; the resulting flare up could be dangerous.
- Don’t operate any stove without suffieient ventilation. A closed tent is not sufficently ventilated.
- Don’t set stoves on sleeping bags or tent floors. There’s enough heat generated at the base of the stove to melt or warp these items.
- Don’t run stoves that have integral fuel tanks at full power for extended periods of time. The tank may overheat and cause the safety valve to blow. Stoves with seperate fuel tanks that are connected with an armored fuel line can be run on fuel power indefinitely.
- Don’t enclose a stove with aluminum foil to increase the heat output. The stove may overheat and explode.
- Don’t fill gasoline or kerosene stoves more than three-fourths full. Fuel won’t vaporize if there’s insufficient room for it to expand.
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When you are deciding what kind of stove you want to purchase for your backpacking or camping trips, there are a ton of different features and different types to consider. Today, I’m writing about a few of the different features that you should look at when you are deciding on a stove for backpacking or camping. they can be expensive purchases, so you want to make sure you get the right thing!
- Stability – There is nothing more frustrating than simmering a big pot of spaghetti on a precarious little ebast that wobbles with every stir of the spoon. Remember that just because it looks great in the store, the stove could tip over in the field.
- Ease of starting – Butane and propane stoves start instantly. Gasoline and kerosene models reqire priming. Some models flare violentl until warmed so be careful! Fast, easy ignition is a plus for any stove.
- Susceptibiltiy to wind – The firs time you have to build a rock wall around your stove to keep it perking you’ll undersand the value of a good windscreen. Avoid stoves with thin aluminum windscreens that burn up, or detachable ones that can be lost.
- Adjustable Flame
– If ou intend to fry pancakes or simmer stew, you will want an infinitely adjustable flame – a feature most compact trail stoves don’t have. The Coleman twin burner camp stoves probably offer the best adjustability, however, many backpacking stoves can offer you a great range of flame heights.
- Plastic parts - Plastic is bad for stove parts. Plastic hardens with heat and age and will eventually break. If there is a stove flare up, plastic will melt and burn. Also, stay away from any stoev that does not have a flameproof armored fuel line.
In our next post, we will point out some of the do’s and don’ts for operating your stove and keeping it running as it should!
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