Yellowstone Telescopic fire tripod - FAIL!

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tedw

Settler
Sep 3, 2003
513
3
68
Cambridgeshire, UK
This is not a review as the tripod was not thoroughly tested across a range of conditions. It was bought as part of a Wilkinson's sale package that seemed good value with a pair of large billy cans and some enamelware, but it was the main thing I wanted.

Positives first - the aluminium tripod is light and sturdier than it first appears. Packed size in its own bag is 73cm, extended on its telescopic legs it's 133.5cm high with a sturdy adjusting chain to hang the pot from. The 3-section legs operated smoothly and the button-catches were a little fiddly but locked the legs out effectively.

So, I took it with me to my local Wildlife Trust work day - a hot meal is provided for the volunteers during the winter. The legs flexed under the weight of the Dutch oven but it held steady and seemed safe. The fire was large and hot, being a mixture of cuttings from hedgerow scrub we were clearing, and the tripod was placed over one end with one leg in the hot ash = FAIL! Before we could hang the pot, the tripod leg had melted away and the tripod collapsed over, no harm done.:(

The instructions give no warning about excessive heat and it seems reasonable to me that a fire tripod should withstand the heat of a wood fire, albeit a big one. Maybe it would be OK over a small fire but I'd not trust it - be warned if you have one.

My advice - if you want a fire tripod, buy a solid iron-rod one from one of the makers on here.
 
That's a bummer Ted,

I'd be miffed it melted too, was it a huge hot fire? For it to melt with a leg in ash doesn't seem FFP to me. I'd question the supplier. Luckily I have a solid one which is very good.

Cheers for the warning though.

GB
 
Aluminium melts at 660 Degrees C and will loose strength at a much lover temp, so to be honest im not that suprised, I wonder if the designer had a very small fire in mind?
 
DO was not the problem (to my surprise!) it was the heat.
Yes it was a big hot fire, but all the same......
At least the billy cans seem useable, so I shan't bother to take it all back to Wilko.
Buy cheap, pay for it later!
 
I'm not suprised it melted either. There is no reason why any of the tripod should touch hot ashes or even be in continuous contact with flames, for it to serve its purpose well. I have adapted/modified aluminum telescopic camera tripods for the same purpose. I have even hung and cooked/boiled a 2 gallon cast pan on them. Make your own & keep it wide of the fire.
 

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