Not a Flexistove review.
The Flexistove is made to work with a fuel block or fuel gel and I don’t use those.
It is specifically designed to work with the Crusader cup and I don’t have one.
This stove was gifted to me by
@walker who had modified it - see below.
IT WILL PROBABLY WORK DIFFERENTLY IF THE CORRECT FUEL AND THE DESIGNATED CUP ARE USED.
The stove is made of a black non-woven fabric backed on the inside by a thick reflective aluminium foil. It folds flat and it’s flexible enough to tuck away anywhere in your kit. If you use sticks for fuel then you’ll also need a bag/wrapper as it will get sooty.
Sorry, can’t get the pictures where I want them. Don’t ask about the numbering!!!
So:
I have experimented with it using a very limited range of options.
1. A military (125cc) Trangia alcohol burner and a Kelly Kettle (round) 500cc mug.
This worked. It took about six minutes to boil 300cc on a very yellow flame - it’s an old burner. The round cup allows for hot flu gases to flow around the cup in a way that they couldn’t do with the tailored fit of the Crusader cup
2. Using bush candles.
This worked slowly, but it did work using two candles at the same time. It was noticeable that the candles burned up brighter when the cup was removed suggesting that the stove needed more air.
3. The fastest option was just the lid of a Trangia burner, O ring removed, filled with meths and ignited.
I don’t recommend this as I now have cracks in the brass lid but any shallow tin lid such as a polish tin would do the job.
4. Sticks.
Now we had a problem and it is exactly what
@walker found when he tried sticks - the stove doesn’t breathe properly. While I was working on another hobo stove I discovered that sticks need a massively greater air flow than hydrocarbon fuels in order to maintain combustion.
@walker was absolutely right in his decision to cut out the bottom of the stove but it still wasn’t enough. At least a third of the stove ABOVE the fire needs to be open. Half is optimal.
Also I have learned to use the Svea M40/M44 (“Swedish Army Trangia“) windshield/support, upside down when burning sticks. Wood typically produces a long flame that needs distance to propagate heat. The Flexistove choked when used the right way up but just about worked upside down. I found it best to burn twigs rather than bits of wood to keep a bright flame.
A fried egg is hardly a test of anything as it will cook in sunlight on a warm day. 500cc of water took just over ten minutes which is OK by me. I’m never in a hurry when I’m out in the woods. I was impressed that the fabric tube would support the pan with a litre of water in it.
Is the Flexistove going to be part of my kit? No. I have a better options with more general application.
I think that this stove could work for a day tripper who just wants a brew or a pot noodle along the way. There aren’t many stoves that you can fold up and shove into your back pocket.