Everyone has been suggesting titanium of stainless steel, going with card is a bold move but it you can keep it from bursting into flames, you might be onto something!
Everyone has been suggesting titanium of stainless steel, going with card is a bold move but it you can keep it from bursting into flames, you might be onto something!
Ultralight, flatpack but capable of taking all sizes of pots (using the cross-piece) with easy side feed of long pieces of wood? Simple - Ti Emberlit!
20,000 btu in a wood-burner - again with adjustable heads for any size pot - Vital stove.
Bullet-proof all-in-one stove with billy and fry-pan/lid/cup, with windshield you can use with either the alcohol burner or as a wood-stove - the Army Trangia.
Honey stoves and many similar variants.
Excellent stove/pan alcohol sets - civvy trangia sets - 25/27, Meta 50 or various clones. Optimus Trapper.
Then you start on the gas/liquid fuel stoves for serious cooking/snow melting duties.
Point I'm making is that what stove you choose - or choose to design - depends on what you want it to do! There are already many good ones out there covering most roles, and at very good prices. (and clones of the best ones at even better prices!) To come up with a new design, break into an already glutted market at a competitive price point and keep the clone copies at bay long enough to actually make a profit will be an interesting exercise!
Everyone has been suggesting titanium of stainless steel, going with card is a bold move but it you can keep it from bursting into flames, you might be onto something!
1) Flat pack / hinged easy to store
2) Fire pan or similar way of increased protection of grass etc
3) Ability to handle Crusader Cup as well normal pans and Mess Tins
4) Big enough firebox to ensure consistent cooking heat and larger pieces of fuel
5) Sturdy construction to take regular punishment
6) Ignore Wood Gas features
7) Accept slight weight penalty due to materials used, but still light enough to be practical to carry on a long trip
8) Expandability? Is this really important if the cooking area is big enough for 2 people? Beyond that you are getting into Frontier Stove territory surely?
If the 'new' stove is a flat pack please make sure most plates are hinged.
1) Flat pack / hinged easy to store
2) Fire pan or similar way of increased protection of grass etc
3) Ability to handle Crusader Cup as well normal pans and Mess Tins
4) Big enough firebox to ensure consistent cooking heat and larger pieces of fuel
5) Sturdy construction to take regular punishment
6) Ignore Wood Gas features
7) Accept slight weight penalty due to materials used, but still light enough to be practical to carry on a long trip
8) Expandability? Is this really important if the cooking area is big enough for 2 people? Beyond that you are getting into Frontier Stove territory surely?