I think it is worth a short discussion on the availability of fuel.
When you travel you need to take into account the availability of the fuels you need for your stove. In the modern age of air travel and security on the Eurostar, you can't take any fuel with you, it all has to be sourced at your destination.
The wonderful thing about standards, is there are so many to choose from. On a trip to Scotland a friend of mine said "it'll be fine, my stove uses normal gas canisters you can get them everywhere", we arrived, I got some petrol from a local petrol station, and he spent a morning scouring the village to find a shop selling the right gas, before finding that the three outdoor shops in the village did not stock the right gas for his stove.
My housemate went for a hiking trip to the Dolomites, I offered to lend him my Whisperlite, but his hiking partner said it wouldn't be needed, they were taking a smaller lighter gas stove, and you can get the Cylinders everywhere. They spent 10 days cooking on the crusader my housemate had with him as it was attached to his water bottle when he packed.
After 3 trips with my Whisperlite where I found that I was surrounded by diesel vehicles, and noone had any petrol, I went out and got the MSR Dragonfly which will burn anything.
What I am trying to say, is think about what you want your stove to do, and where you are going to get fuel from en route.
J