I have recently been looking to improve my cooking fuels and get 'more bang for my gram'
I have been a confirmed Hexamine user ever since working with the Army Youth Team so 45 years ago, sooty, smelly and a little slow, it always gets the water on the boil - even when wet. Part used tablets can be extinguished and saved but is 'messy'.
Cannot adjust temperature, its all or nothing
Comes with its own 'pan-stand' that can be used with 'twigs' when Hexamine exhausted.
A few years ago I 'found' ethanol-gel (also known as Chafer fuel), burns fairly cleanly takes about the same time to boil water as the 'Hexy' but benefits from the fact as soon as the water boils you can extinguish it by putting the lid back on the can. Just about gets the water to a 'rolling boil' but certainly hot enough for a brew, or to use on dried meals.
Cannot adjust temperature, its all or nothing.
Need to also carry a 'pan stand' (mine are about 35 grams) to clip onto the top of the can.
Recently become a gas convert - particularly the 'gas-mix' ( a mixture that gives the cold temp characteristics of Propane, with the output of Butane) Boils water twice as fast as Hexy or Gel, no smell and 'clean' no-soot. Simply switch off when finished.
Temperatures fully adjustable for boiling, simmer, or even (heaven forbid) cooking food.
Needs a stove to fit onto the top (I have several types at £0.99 up to £5.00 off ebay) My favourite weighs 45 grams and cost 99p
So having looked at the pros and cons which performs the best for the carry weight ?
It takes 105 Wh to heat 1 litre of water by 1 degree Celsius, so to heat 1 litre from (say) 5 degrees to 100 degrees takes 9,975 watts (just under 1kw)
Dry Seasoned Wood produces 4.2Wh per gram
Chafing Fuel (Gel) produces 7.44Wh per gram
Hexamine produces 8.0Wh per gram
Camping Gas-Mix produces 14.2Wh per gram
A Hexy stove with 8 tablets (and its own built in pan stand) weighs 361 grams and produces a total of 1.47Kwh
A Chafer Gel Can containing 200g of gel weighs 245 grams, add the 35 gram pan stand for a total cooker weight of 280 grams which produces 1.49Kwh
A Coleman 220g Gas cartridge weighs 372 grams, add the 45 grams for the stove for a total cooker weight of 417 grams which produces 3.12Kwh
Conclusion -
Carrying an extra 56 grams (2 oz) gives over 2x the "bang per gram" when gas is compared to Hexamine.
My 99p 'stove/burner' brings 1 litre of tap water to a ‘rolling boil’ in 4 minutes 30 seconds and uses 15g of Gas (Camping Gas: 70% Butane / 30% Propane mix) So, from a 220g cartridge I can boil approx. 14 litres of water ( or looking at it another way - 50 mugs of tea)
Stove produces 2.84Kw.
If I wanted to reduce the weight further, and only get 20 odd mugs of tea, I could cut down to a 100g cartridge.
I have been a confirmed Hexamine user ever since working with the Army Youth Team so 45 years ago, sooty, smelly and a little slow, it always gets the water on the boil - even when wet. Part used tablets can be extinguished and saved but is 'messy'.
Cannot adjust temperature, its all or nothing
Comes with its own 'pan-stand' that can be used with 'twigs' when Hexamine exhausted.
A few years ago I 'found' ethanol-gel (also known as Chafer fuel), burns fairly cleanly takes about the same time to boil water as the 'Hexy' but benefits from the fact as soon as the water boils you can extinguish it by putting the lid back on the can. Just about gets the water to a 'rolling boil' but certainly hot enough for a brew, or to use on dried meals.
Cannot adjust temperature, its all or nothing.
Need to also carry a 'pan stand' (mine are about 35 grams) to clip onto the top of the can.
Recently become a gas convert - particularly the 'gas-mix' ( a mixture that gives the cold temp characteristics of Propane, with the output of Butane) Boils water twice as fast as Hexy or Gel, no smell and 'clean' no-soot. Simply switch off when finished.
Temperatures fully adjustable for boiling, simmer, or even (heaven forbid) cooking food.
Needs a stove to fit onto the top (I have several types at £0.99 up to £5.00 off ebay) My favourite weighs 45 grams and cost 99p
So having looked at the pros and cons which performs the best for the carry weight ?
It takes 105 Wh to heat 1 litre of water by 1 degree Celsius, so to heat 1 litre from (say) 5 degrees to 100 degrees takes 9,975 watts (just under 1kw)
Dry Seasoned Wood produces 4.2Wh per gram
Chafing Fuel (Gel) produces 7.44Wh per gram
Hexamine produces 8.0Wh per gram
Camping Gas-Mix produces 14.2Wh per gram
A Hexy stove with 8 tablets (and its own built in pan stand) weighs 361 grams and produces a total of 1.47Kwh
A Chafer Gel Can containing 200g of gel weighs 245 grams, add the 35 gram pan stand for a total cooker weight of 280 grams which produces 1.49Kwh
A Coleman 220g Gas cartridge weighs 372 grams, add the 45 grams for the stove for a total cooker weight of 417 grams which produces 3.12Kwh
Conclusion -
Carrying an extra 56 grams (2 oz) gives over 2x the "bang per gram" when gas is compared to Hexamine.
My 99p 'stove/burner' brings 1 litre of tap water to a ‘rolling boil’ in 4 minutes 30 seconds and uses 15g of Gas (Camping Gas: 70% Butane / 30% Propane mix) So, from a 220g cartridge I can boil approx. 14 litres of water ( or looking at it another way - 50 mugs of tea)
Stove produces 2.84Kw.
If I wanted to reduce the weight further, and only get 20 odd mugs of tea, I could cut down to a 100g cartridge.
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