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No hay artículos en el carroErik
Comentado en México el 26 de abril de 2020
Construcción súper robusta de la pequeña estufa, los acabados excelentes, funciona todo muy bien, el soporte es de buen tamaño para sartenes o cosas con base amplia pero no para otras cosas más pequeñas, aún así funciona.
JEN
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 18 de agosto de 2017
The stove is great and a real trangia stove but in the description it said it had all of the trangia mini pecies wich are a pot, a pan, a winscreen/potstand, and the stove. All that came was the stove and potstand. It is still a good price but the description is incorrect and needs to be changed.
Christian Fernandez
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 6 de marzo de 2017
I bought this specifically for the burner as I had been using a very similar set with an 'off-brand' burner and I wondered what the difference was. Like the other set, the windshield is tragically problematic. It's just slightly too small for me to use any of my small camping pots on. With my larger pots, it seemed like the flames coming off the trangia in this setup were unusually high and various twigs and things on the ground were getting scorched. I think the open configuration let too much oxygen into the combustion in even a light breeze. It works, but it's worrisome.The burner itself is great, especially when used in a Clikstand or a full-sized Trangia cook set. For a solo hiker, I like using it with the and a 1L kettle. That's enough water to rehydrate a meal and have a warm drink afterwards.
Thomas Coffey
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 28 de septiembre de 2016
The Trangia Mini Windshield and the famous Trangia Alcohol Burner are sold here apart from the Trangia 28-T "Mini-Trangia Set" developed for a Mountain Marathon competition. So the set concept was minimal, lightweight, versatile, and compact. Those goals clearly can't accommodate perfection in a specific aspect, but reflect a good compromise that leaves other aspects to the user. Here the Mini Windshield is designed to be strong, light, an adequate stand for the 28-T bowl and pan (these aren't part of this bundle), and an attempt to provide wind shielding at the same time. the stand diameter at the arms is 3.8", and its height is 2.5". So if you buy this for a mug, you may need to modify the 'arms' by drilling a hole or cutting a slot to drop in lengths of steel wire to support that mug; if you have a 1L pot, no problem; if you have an 10' fry pan, you'll need to be careful of balance. Note that the GSI Stainless Mug, the Olicamp Space Saver, and the Walmart Stainless Mug are all the same size and snug fit into the arms, but wires in shallow slots cut in adjacent arms would give confident support.And if you are in a windy place, you won't find this effective enough, so bring a bit of heavy foil or pile rocks or use your pack or find a more sheltered place.The strong points of this kit are the Mini Windshield's strength as a pot/kettle support and the Trangia burner itself. One could either burn Esbit in this Mini-Windshield with or without a foil for easy clean-up, or even use the cut-off bottom of a beverage can as an Esbit holder, nesting it with the Trangia burner when packed. The volume of this kit may be a drawback, but really it isn't that much bigger than the Trangia. In fact, in around the Trangia you can easily pack a mini-BIC, a Ferrocerium, some Esbit tabs, etc., making a compact stove kit to slide into a ZipLock, and fit into, for example, an MSR Alpine Stowaway 475mL or 775mL pot or Olicamp LT 1L.For an even smaller volume for packing, consider the Esbit Ultralight Folding Pot Stand with Tray - 3 pieces of stainless that lock together with an Aluminum dish that pops into slots in the 3 pieces to support an Esbit Tab - or a Trangia Alcohol Stove. This item collapses and fits in a thin pouch - but if you use a Trangia, you'll need to pack it separately in a ZipLock.
Aaron
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 8 de enero de 2015
The picture on the product page is misleading. It shows the mini Trangia cook kit. This product is the Trangia Spirit burner and the mini windscreen/pot stand ONLY. I understood that when I ordered the product, so I have no issues giving it five stars.The burner is the original, time tested Trangia Spirit burner. It is a bit smaller than the military burner that can be found at some surplus stores. That is a good thing, since all the aftermarket pot stands and whatever are designed for this burner, not the military one. While the Trangia burner is not ultralight and not the most efficient stove out there, it is very tough and carries its own fuel; enough for an overnighter at the least if I'm doing simple hiking grub (for two).In addition to the included Trangia windscreen, I have used the Spirit burner with the Esbit pocket stove (designed for either Esbit fuel tablets or a Spirit burner), Vargo Hexagon woodstove and more recently with the Emberlit Fire Ant woodstove. The Esbit pocket stove works GREAT and is very compact (folds flat). For the Vargo woodstove I recommend elevating the Spirit burner for a better burn. I use the screw lid for this. If you're worried about heat, remove the o-ring from the lid first. The Fire Ant is an ultralight woodstove first and a fuel tab/alcohol stand second. But if you don't care that your burner weighs much more than your snazzy new ultralight wood burning pot stand, have a ball.I like the windscreen/pot stand because it is stupid simple and also very rugged. I have two very narrow cookpots: a Snow Peak Mini Solo cookset and a single wall Snow Peak 600 mug. Neither is very stable on the mini windscreen. So I grabbed some pliers and bent the top 1/2" of the peaks inward. Through some amazing miracle I got them level. That made the windscreen the most stable stand I have for my Snow Peak stuff. Bending the windscreen peaks reduced the distance from the top of the burner to the bottom of my cookpot. I'm sure that made the burner less efficient, but not by enough for me to care.Bending down the points of the windscreen also made it less likely to snag on stuff. Although the windscreen does not fit inside either cookpot, it fits nicely (and snag free) in the mesh stuff sack on top of the Mini Solo cookset. My trail kitchen and most of my food for an overnighter fits inside the cookset, so I'm happy with how it packs.Warning: bending the pot stand peaks any more than 1/2" will make it difficult to insert or remove the burner. You would probably feel stupid. Or blame me. Either way that would be bad. So try this at your own risk, and only if you're sold on using a narrow cookpot. And bend as little as you need to make your narrow cookset stable.I rate the windscreen highly, and I like it. But it is not perfect. For starters, the windscreen is too small to effectively use the simmer ring. It will still snuff out the burner just fine though. And while it provides enough wind protection for mild weather, in windy conditions you'll need to carry a separate windscreen or take some other measure to protect your cooking area from wind. Lastly, the windshield does not collapse. Since it houses the Spirit burner that's not a big loss of space -- but there are plenty of more compact options on the market. None of that really bothers me, but your mileage may vary.Bottom line, this is a tried and true alcohol burner paired with a simple windscreen/pot stand. The mini Trangia is about as uncomplicated as trail cooking can get. I recommend this compact little set.
JCB_Man
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 21 de agosto de 2013
I love the Trangia burner, it's fairly light, quiet, well made and only has one moving part.I never have trouble finding fuel. Denatured alcohol is easy to find in most hardware, paint and DYI stores or you can burn Heet gas line antifreeze from a auto parts store and even many gas stations.It burns clean and is easy to light in any weather I'd be camping in. I know it can be tricky in the winter but I don't go snow camping.It's not as fast at boiling water as many petroleum fueled stoves but I'm not in a huge hurry when I'm camping. It is much quieter than petro fueled stoves though and I'm happy to trade speed for noise.The simmer ring works well and it holds enough fuel to cook things like rice that require simmering.The pot stand is nothing special but does an adequate job if the pot is not too wide, narrow or heavy. I don't think it works well as a windscreen though so I take some folded up heavy duty aluminum foil.If you're into cast iron camp cooking this probably isn't the stove for you. It also might not be the best choice for winter camping. However if you're looking for a small, reasonably light weight camp stove for backpacking or light car camping the Trangia might be a great choice for you.
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