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Reviewed in Canada on August 17, 2024
I purchased this stove to use primarily as a mini fire pit for when I am too lazy to collect fire wood or for use under a tarp in the rain. It easily assembles for me. The pieces did warp as I expected but I did burn wood for several hours each night on a recent 3 night canoe trip. It provided a nice fire light ambiance in camp but required frequent attention as it burns through wood rather quickly. I’m pleased with the product.
George
Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2024
This stove is very efficient, slightly larger and a clone of my USA made Emberlit titanium stove which I paid 3x more for. And it’s only a few grams heavier than my Emberlit. The thin walled titanium keeps the weight down.I took a star off because of the black color of the pouch. Black is very difficult to see and find sometimes. I thought I had lost mine from my recent bikepacking trip, only to find it a month later buried flat at the bottom of my pannier, which is also black. In contrast, my Emberlit comes in a bright orange pouch which is very easy to located.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2024
This is light, larger than the stainless steel models, and just works like it should. You can get a decent cook fire with a little tinder and kindling as long as you have some reserve to keep feeding it. It doesn't take much to boil your water or cook something. Ended up getting one for my wife too so we both one one in our backpack now. The stainless ones are good too but just a bit heavier and smaller.
DonutsNCoffee
Reviewed in Canada on November 26, 2024
these are great stoves,lays flat when disassembled, take no room.works great with dry wood.
Grokker77
Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2024
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Customer
Reviewed in Canada on February 19, 2022
Lixada Titanium LargeJust got this today, and first impressions are very good. The quality is good, the finish looks nice, the edges are nice and smooth - no sharp edges or burrs. It is well designed and all the parts fit together perfectly. It was easy to assemble, and once fully assembled, it is very sturdy. In fact it was a bit challenging to take it apart afterwards. (tip: wear some work or gardening gloves when assembling/disassembling this thing)The weight and dimensions are exactly as described.I would think that the "large" size is just about right for most people. Anything smaller would just be awkward to work with, in most cases. At least in my opinion.Perhaps it is a bit expensive for what it is, but considering that everything is exactly as advertised and the quality is what it should be, I can't really complain. Overall I am happy with this purchase so far.
Matthew Phoenix
Reviewed in Canada on January 25, 2022
michael
Reviewed in Canada on May 14, 2021
Perfect little stove for my day pack out on the trail. Extremely light weight and packs up small.
Steven Zalan
Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2021
Thought this looked like a cool piece of gear and was pleasantly surprised when I used it on an overnight winter camping trip in the Catskills the last week of 2020. I cooked both dinner (tofu mushroom soup) and breakfast (potato sausage hash) on this stove on the trip.The stove folds up very flat and slides nicely into the map or water bladder pocket in pack. It comes together in a few seconds and is sturdy once assembled. The size of the top of the stove is a good size for the standard camping cookware set you can get an Amazon.I'm still working a good wood feed rate out. It's a little tricky due to the small size of the stove. If you feed too many small sticks took quickly you can either suffocate the fire or have a everything catch at once and have a 24" flame shoot out the top. if you want a low flame hot fire which is best for cooking, I found taking to time to get some thicker (2-3" Dia) sticks to reach a steady burn or dump hot coals into the stove and feed medium sticks from there. This isn't bad for dinner but is a bit time consuming if you're trying to use it for breakfast then hit the trail. I did use it for breakfast as shown in the photos where I had it up on a flat stone and just fed small to medium sticks in while I cooked and broke down camp. It worked well but the fire almost went out at one point and was only burning slowly at the back which I was waiting for the stuff I loaded in from the from front.
bigcountryKY
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2020
This is a great little stove. It’s really lightweight and super low profile to pack away well. Honestly, it might be hard to find in a pack it’s so flat. It’s really well fabricated and goes together easily in about 2 minutes. A handful of twigs had a strong flame going for around 5 minutes. I can imagine that if you really loaded it up it would boil water in no time. The ventilation makes for a great stovepipe effect and the flames/heat get going quick. It IS really thin metal however and doesn’t feel super sturdy, but it’s titanium so I doubt it’s as flimsy as it looks. It also only takes 5-10 minutes to cool enough to pack back up. It’s a great tool for the backpacker or hiker who may not be able to have an open fire or just wants to boil water/cook food quickly. Mine is staying in my hiking pack from now on, I mean with it’s super low profile and weight, why not?
AmericanConsumerX
Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2019
I've steadily been amassing items for doing lightweight backpack camping as I want to move away from car camping. That means no heavy camp stoves and no propane tanks. I tried this thing this past weekend and I'm in love with it. Good engineering, good materials, folds down to a thin cardboard thick 6" x 6" square that you could literally put in a jacket pocket. Besides that...the thing just works. Incredibly well too.Used a small chunk of solid fuel tab since it rained and we didn't have super dry kindling and we had a roaring fire under this tripod wok in less than a minute. If I wasn't lazy, I could have easily gotten a fire going without a solid fuel tab too, just would've taken a few more minutes.Also, it's absolutely necessary that if you want to use a rocket stove to cook alot of food at once and keep the grill hot, you HAVE to have something that feeds on the side and not top so you don't have to take off the pot on top to fuel feed it. I bought a smaller one on amazon too that was top loading and it's just a pain in the ass to cook with and not worth it.Didn't use the top to balance pots as it was just used a heat source for the wok so I can't speak to stability that way but it was incredibly solid as a standalone heat source.TIPS:-As with alot of these rocket stove things, it works almost TOO well. Sucks fuel down like a beast. Although there are pictures of people putting small logs in (which you definitely can do since the feed hole is very large) I think you just get a pile of a ton of small sticks and break them into 5 inch long twigs. Leads to a hotter fire than solid logs. You'll have to kind of continually feed ti every minute of cooking or so.-When assembling, link the sides up as one flat chain first and then wrap it around the bottom. I think it's easier to assemble that way. However, I didn't have issues assembling like other people did.If you're a person who's into wilderness camping and don't want to make an entire big fire every morning to feed people, this is something you absolutely need to have!
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