I've had gasifier stoves for years, but you are the first person to explain the process to my satisfaction. That cut-away diagram along with the knowledge that wood gas is heavier than air really helped me to understand. I'm subbing!
Thank you William. I really enjoy researching the things i use, I find it fascinating! I'm glad to see at least one other person enjoys it as well! 😉😀👍
Best explanation (by far) of how these stoves work! I’ve been using these for years and never quite understood why they were so efficient until seeing this video and you walking through the process using your very clear diagram. Thanks for this. Exceptionally well done!
I have several Solo Stoves, Campfire, Bonfire, etc. Being a technical eclectic (electric, mechanical, industrial ISA career) Find this presentation TOP LEVEL, addressing what others have missed & I have, for the most part (missed the gasification, but understand AhA!), wanted to express. GREAT EDUCATIONAL! Thanks.
My husband and I took a 45 day roadtripping journey a few years back taking only our SOLO STOVE TITAN and my Trangia 28T Mini cooksets. Loved every minute of our time spent cooking as we boondocked various different places. The TITAN is a GREAT system and with careful use you can cook about anything you would ever want using it. Great informational video and review.
I just bought a new Mesa at the thrift store for $3. The Mesa and the Titan are the same size, so I think I will buy the $20 cook-top from the Titan. Thanks for your excellent video.
your a gifted teacher.....thank you for your video lesson on the Co-Axial Downdraft Gasification Stove system Canadian Amazon is selling the 25:23 ...Solo lite for $100 cad and the solo lite pot 900 for $100 cad total for a set (stove and pot only) is $140 cad 26:28... Solo Titan for $135 cad The Solo Stove Pot 1800 is $140 cad total for a set (stove and pot only ) is $ 232 cad Solo Windscreen = $55 cad
Hi from the Uk, this is the best video ive seen on these stoves, great explanation and demonstration. I have just picked up a Solo stove light and now fully understand how it works and how to get the best from it. Many thanks 👍🏻
Thank you very much! This was from a time when I had much more time for research and video production planning. I am thankful it has been received so well. I truly appreciate your comment!
Thank you very much Terrance! I have a tendency to "GEEK OUT" on certain things. I love researching the history and development of wild camping gear. I know most people only want a short pithy 10 to 15 minute (at max) review of things to see if that thing is something worth purchasing. There are a very few however that are (like us) and enjoy the full spectrum approach to reviews. I know I'm not everyone's "cup of tea". I am who and what I am, and do things my own way. My audience may be smaller, however, they are much better informed after the video concludes (at least I like to believe they are). I am elated you liked the review. I will exert extra efforts to consistently continue in this manner.
Thank You! I personally can't figure it out my viewer rate and viewing hours are 50-80 times higher than my subscription rate depending on the month. But, I don't worry about it. It is what it is. I enjoy doing this. If I could do this full time, I would LOVE it, not to mention the quality in every aspect would be far better! Until that happens, IF it ever happens, I'm going to keep on keeping on and enjoy doing it! Thank You So Very Much for You Kind And Generous Words! They ARE DEEPLY APPRECIATED! Blessings to you and yours my Dear Friend!
I really enjoyed your video. Just picked myself up a Solo Stove Titan and your video is very informative and thorough on how to use and fuel the stove. Thank you!!!
Wow finally I found someone that took the time to explain in good detail how these things work and what to do to make them work as they should I thank you very much for that I am now a new subscriber see you on the next one
Thanks for replying to my last comment. I am a little puzzled by your explanation of this stove. Surely only normal air passes up between the walls of the stove to emerge from the holes at the top of the stove. The secondary burn that one can observe at the top set of holes is due to addition of this secondary oxygen aiding the complete burning of - as yet unburnt 'wood gas'. It is not wood gas coming out of the upper holes. In your explanation you are saying that wood gas passes through supply vents in the side of the base of the Ash pan from the main chamber, to the centre of the lower floor pan, down through a hole then up the sides. However air to maintain the primary combustion must flow through the holes at the outer base of the stove and up inside the stove in opposition to the flow of 'wood gas' you describe. The chimney effect of the stove will cause the air flow to be from outside the stove to inside and up (whether inside the main chamber or within the walls). Wood gas flow as you describe does not occur.
John, I am not an engineer. I simply tried to combine what I learned from research and apply it to the solo stove. I merely provided the explanation as I understood it. If that explanation is incorrect, I stand corrected. When I have more time, I will reflect further on your comments and will update any additional information or retraction in the video description. Would it be okay if I credit the update to you with providing the information? Thank You!
@@boonedockery7220 yes of course. I am not an expert either but I have simply come to a different conclusion to you. I appreciate the effort you have gone to. I too am also prepared to be corrected should an actual expert offer their own opinion. It is interesting though as no doubt you agree. I have several different wood gas stoves.
Yep, this explanation of wood gas travelling down then up the sides does not make sense at all and the formal explanations of gasifier stoves do refer to the higher holes as secondary oxidation holes. So that means air comes out of the higher holes and mixes with the wood gas which is rising from the wood. The presence of more oxygen allows that gas to ignite. It's time you updated this video. Your intentions are clearly good and I like your explanation style. Too bad the facts aren't there.
I must admit I thought this too and I have read a few of the research papers about TLUD stoves and how to make them run as clean as possible (e.g. by restricting the rate at which wood gas is generated and so making them burn leaner with a cleaner, bluer flame). So in my understanding the heated air flows up the sides but the wood gas stays in the main chamber and gets ignited by the hot air coming from the vents.
Enjoyed your very clear explanation of the working process and the heads up on the screen addition for pellet burning... I bought the Titan on sale in a bundle with the wind screen and tripod.... I like all 4 parts of the bundle.... but as you said regular prices are a bit high... I later got the Campfire stove on sale alone... it works well for me... I added one of my high carbon steel woks for cooking on that one ... with the Titan I added some cement blocks as a pot rest for the wok.... I do have a separate lid and grill for inside the wok for added cooking flexibility... I am playing with these in my yard and I tend to be a car camper rather than a hiker... when I tried pellets in my Titan I did a stick fire first and used a scoop to add some pellets.... was also surprised how well the stoves burn anything dry... A lot of my wok cooking has been with the lid I added so I could use bio-mass that was less well flavored... found it useful to have a place to rest the pot off the fire from time to time to slow the heating rate some.... The Titan pot and tripod worked well for rice... fast to boil then set both aside to fluff the rice while I used the wok for cooking other stuff... the wok style I use is one with a side handle rather than the shorter loop handles.... on the Campfire one has to be wary of balance of the wok... could have used the (3) 16 inch building blocks with either stove as a pot rest.... the focused hot fire seems to do well with wok cooking for me...I did later get the 4000 pot that nests with the campfire.... the tripod should be useful for doing stews in that 4 liter pot with either the Titan or Campfire heating it.... today I am still finishing off the sausages I cooked in my GoSun Go solar cookers.... was less clean up than a fire and the Solo stoves are very easy clean up...wiping off some soot from pots because I am using dry rotted pine chunks for bio-mass... have a 10 foot high pine stump that critters are done using in yard... I am still developing my cooking styles.... If I am waiting for a movie to start in about an hour after selecting my theater seat... the GoSun Go's and a couple frozen corndogs.... work as a quick snack before and after the movie... the double walled glass tube cookers can stoe the food cold then hot after cooking because of the thermos bottle features... and very packable... but I live on the pacific west coast so sun can be rare here.... so bio-mass cooking with the efficiency twist looks like big earthquake survival skill to learn...
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this! Too bad it couldn't have been verbally while sitting beside the campfire smelling the food cooking in the wok! I never thought about it before but a wok would be a natural with the solo stove design! You've got my cerebral wheels turning! Thank you for sharing this information! I certainly hope MANY more than I read this!
@@boonedockery7220 I even tried a frittata with a wok on the Campfire.... it got a bit thick and heavy with all the goodies in it...the flipping the frittata over was going to be tricky.... but I have a second wok of the same style and brand.... Fred Meyers did a buy one get one for half off sale... 12 inch carbon steel woks can get a lot cheaper than camping pots... and in the same Fred Meyers the HD barbeque lids for cheese melting also 12 inch and half off sale... a lot of 12 inch things to fit the woks.... I had "flipped" frittatas before... from sliding them to a plate and flipping the plate back into the skillet .... I felt the frittata in the wok was loose and would slide or flip well, but i grabbed the other wok and flipped from wok to wok.... woks heat fast and finished the other side of the frittata to done... being thicker in the middle and hotter in the center showed up on the first side cooked with an almost burn, not charred but still a bit beyond brown ... it was a huge frittata I have a lidded Pyrex dish I got the center into... the edges I trimmed before the transfer to the dish was put on a couple small plates and had for dinner..., that in the Pyrex dish that fits my GoSun Chill outdoor fridge was allowed to cool before going in that fridge... dined for a couple days on that part of the frittata.... that was a 12 egg frittata with onion ,zucchini, yellow squash, taters, carrots... and some leftover pork loin that I had cooked in my GoSun Fusion on grape leaves and goodies on that... a few different sauces had gone into both dishes... frittatas are great with leftovers added.... if I did it again... smaller amount of food in the wok.... played with doing French fries in oil, but the wok and steam thrown oil could get mean... the 4 liter Campfire pot looks ideal for that adventure ... I did get some wok style wire dippers for removing French fries... and possibly loading the taters into that pot... might have to modify the handle some, so buy one get one half off came into play, the stainless steel handle should allow a little bending for pot dipping rather than wok dipping... My doing this stuff alone does seem to allow me to go down rabbit holes I did not expect to go down... ever have a crown cap on a pop bottle blow off the top of the bottle and just vanish into low cut lawn area... should not happen... was sitting in the shade and figured a magnet might find it if the grass was covering it ... magnet on a cord was not working... designed and built a magnetic yard sweeper from stuff on hand .... a couple Harbor Freight 250 pound magnets from back of truck ('69 F250 with canopy) and a craftsman hand truck and a bit of cord... it worked well the broken bottle now has nails, screws, staples, stray parts and some rust but no bottle cap with top of bottle attached... I seem to have built a magnetic toy that might get me out walking and scanning the driveways more... and that exercise of rolling it around... rabbit holes...
I've got a gasification type stove and it works great for boiling water and things like Raman noodles. Imo if you don't mind a few extra ounces of weight compared to a lot of camping type pots Zebra pots are my pick for cooking pots. They also make something called a lunchbox that make an awesome pot for these type stoves and alcohol burners which actually work pretty good inside the stick burner stoves.
My Wonderful Wife gave me a Zebra Billy can for Christmas a couple years ago and my Solo Stove fits in it great with a little extra room for a Trangia burner and a small bottle of alcohol. It is my favorite pot!
Simply incredible... This vid has altered my paradigm on wood stoves in general. I now understand how my home heating wood stove is designed and why they are as efficient as they are. Cheers, brother! Peace and love
Thank You So Very Much! Your comment is very much appreciated! I do try to share my long term experience with skills and products in order to provide the most information I can so Folks can have the ability to make an informed decision before they make a purchase. Cheers to you Brother! I'll see your peace and love and raise you with Joy And Happiness! Thank you for your kind words!
Right?! I had to come back to this video a month later because I've been thinking about it so much. It's completely changed my level of knowledge it's like being back in school again. This guy is an excellent teacher. This video is the first I saw on his channel but it's one of things.....he belongs up there with coalcracker bushcraft and corporals corner. Totally altered my way of thinking as well. I didn't even know how *air* worked before watching I realized 🤣
Marci, it's purpose specific. If you want to just boil water the traditional style will work fine. The gasification process should work much better and you'll have a better cooking experience with an upside-down fire. The Solo-stove really does require a little experimentation and practice to "cook" with it.
It’s irrelevant which method you use. That’s just the lighting phase of the fire. Once going you’ll be adding wood from the top either way. Basically after fully lit, fire is fire.
You've got just the right amount of smart-assery and information going on here to make this more than some dude rambling and fumbling around with twigs. :) From solo I've had the Titan and Bonfire for a few years now, but my original "BushBuddy" is still my fav - Fritz got it right (and Solo took notice).
You have given me an amazing compliment!!!! I think I will use it on my business card! "Boonedockery: just The Right Amount Of Smart-Assery!" 😄😆😅👍👍👍 I recently found out Solo Stoves are made in china. I just looked up BushBuddy..... "Hand crafted in the U.S.A.......Given that Fritz Handel designed his in 1999, I'd say solo stove (founded in 2011) may have "been inspired" to "use" his design. Thank you so much for posting this! It sent me on an enlightening investigation. My ignorance has caused me to support and endorse the wrong company. Another of my subscribers sent me a link to a near duplicate stove as solo/bushbuddy. It was then I learned Solo Stoves are NOT made in Texas, but yes, china. The unashamedly chinese copy (from ali express was $10. $12 shipping. I received it last Tuesday. It's dimensions are between the Solo Lite and Titan. I will be producing a video about the stoves, my misconceptions a field test of the 3. If I were financially capable of it I would order the BushBuddies as well. Thank you again for the supreme compliment and humbling education!
Excellent review, this has been very helpful information. I have been considering one or both of these for backpacking and general camping. I will definitely wait for a sale, as well as wait to see reviews of the other similar competitor stoves in this category to see if the price difference is worth it - particularly if these are not truly made in the USA as we thought.
Jeremy, I bought a stove from Ali Express that (with minor differences) is the same design to Solo's stoves. I paid just shy of $20. You might want to check it out. Here's a link: www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001896021963.html?spm=a2g0o.productlist.0.0.13037429rWJXgt&algo_pvid=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250&algo_exp_id=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250-5
I am very Lucky to have an oryginal bushbuddy from alaska 😎. I couldnt Get on internet, but a friend of mine from Poland sold to me for 28$. A major score.
I can’t decide between the lite and titan. I mostly would be backpacking, so the lite seems appropriate, but I’m worried it won’t perform as well as the titan.
Thank You Very Much! I never do an actual review of anything without using the item for a long time. I also do a lot of research prior to shooting to provide as much useable information that I can. I know there are always things I miss, but folks will frequently help me out in the comment section. Thank you so much for taking the time to comment and for your kind words! I pray you have a fantastic day!
Thank you very much! I'm not an expert on anything, however I love to learn and share what I've learned. I watched a lot of wood gasification videos and always had more questions than answers. I "tried" to provide the answers to the questions I had in this video. Thanks for the comment and have a fantastic day!
Thank You! I have seen several "fluff" reviews of gasifier stoves in the past and I wanted to do one that covers the entire spectrum. I personally love learning the background, development and mechanics of camping gear. I'm glad you liked it!
@@boonedockery7220 it was excellent and I loved the science of it which I don’t think I’ve seen in any other videos. Really appreciate the time and care you’ve taken to produce the review
Thank you Zach! I have discovered, much to my surprise, "My Style" has been much better received than I had anticipated.😉 Through the comments, I have found, I believe I would get along great with several folks via this platform. It has been a wonderful surprise that I am truly grateful for. I feel the "Titan" is an ideal size. The smaller size is good for minimalistic hiking, backpacking, bushcrafting or wild camping. I think the "campfire" would be good for car camping or as a "group stove" when load sharing with several other people. The "Titan" is perfect for me. Not too large or to small. I love that I can use a large variety of fuel sources other than twigs with it. It has definitely stood up to the abuse I have subjected it too over the years. Thank you very much for commenting, I really enjoy this part of YouTubing!😉😄👍
Awesome video. Only video I found that explains how these work. Given the design, is it possible to start without a commercial fire starter? I couldn’t get mine started without using a commercial product as the fire seems to blow out so fast.
Thank You, David! I try very hard to make my reviews as detailed as I can. I don't always succeed, but I do try. To answer your question, YES! I use the upside-down fire technique. Once you've crisscrossed your fuel from bottom to top, you build a miniature right-side-up fire on top of it using whatever ignition source you want. I usually just use one of my homemade fire starters but I could just as well use paper, fatwood, birch bark, etc... I have found the upside-down fire maximizes the efficiency of the wood gasification design. It produces a more controllable cooking temperature and will burn for a longer amount of time. Thank you very much for commenting David! I really appreciate it!
How did you find out there is a hole in the centre of the base ate. Did you cut one open? I have one and cannot see the centre hole due to obstructions.
It was a matter of observation. One time when I was camping, I used it quite a bit one night. The next morning, I saw there was ash in the open area at the bottom. I looked and looked but couldn't figure out the mystery as to why the ash was there. I took my glassed out of my pocket and slid the template through one of the bottom vent holes and slip it to the center and it stopped, dead center. I tried it a few more times and it did the same thing. That's how I discovered it.
Without a doubt, this is the most thorough explanation of this sort of stove and the most balanced and informative review of them that I have come across. My thanks for this. Subbed. Cheers, - Martin
Thank you very much Martyn! I deeply appreciate that! I have been fearful that my videos are too long too keep the viewers attention covering the topics the the depth I do. I unfortunately don't have the time to produce all my videos to the degree I would like. I absolutely love researching the origins and engineering of the items we carry in our kits. I plan on doing one on the Surplus Swiss Volcano Stove. It will be another long video. It will take a lot of time to produce as it will include historical images and information. Organizing that one will be a challenge. Thank you again for your kind words. I have subbed your channel as well and will check it out later. Cheers Martyn! -John
@@boonedockery7220 Keep going with the research, good sir, and I'll be watching. I can get pretty eggheaded myself in some of my own videos. It's nice to see someone reviewing gear they have used long enough to offer an informed opinion born of knowledge and experience. Cheers, - Martin
I LOVE my solo stoves...I have the lite, titan and the campfire. Thank you for explaining the gasifier process. I have a couple of questions. Are wood pellets safe to grill food over? I recently bought a bag of hickory chunks and looking forward to cooking a bacon wrapped filet over very high flavorful heat!
Thanks for adding to the conversation! You can certainly cook over wood pellets! However, you will need to practice cooking with them. They burn quite hot compared to sticks. They are very inexpensive and a large bag will last a long time and store well in a dry area. I use emptied large plastic pretzel containers to store them in. More compact and easy to retrieve the pellets from. The pellets do impart good wood smoke flavor to the food. I'd also add a good bit of distance between the top of your stove and your grill. again this might take some time and practice. to find that optimum cooking heat to food space. Thanks again for commenting and have a great day!
Answered all my questions perfectly , you Sir are a professional and I am grateful for your expert views, and I am not a complete novice to these things as I have camped and cooked outdoors for at least 30 of my 70 years on this planet, so again I say thanks with a subscription to your fine channel kind regards Tom Adair in South Australia.
I am truly humbled and blessed by your comment Tom. I do not feel as though I am an expert on anything. I truly enjoy bushcrafting and wild camping. I have an insatiable appetite for history and details. I personally really enjoy researching anything I'm interested in. I deeply appreciate your comment and subscription. I am thankful you wrote this. Sincerely! John Timms
I strongly recommend against using aluminum in the fire chamber of said stove. I use a stainless steel grate in mine for wood pellets and it works perfectly. You can probably find a sink stainless steel strainer mesh that can fit and it would work perfectly. I do not like the idea of using aluminum because I am concerned that it could be vaporized.
You don't. The coals at a mid burn are hot enough to ignite the fresh fuel and with the stove already hot the airflow and draw are good to continue the gasification process.
You are an excellent reviewer and your research skills are a great addition to the video. I nest my Lite in a Snowpeak 900. It works good and I already had the pot so…
@@boonedockery7220 many thanks for response, I value it a lot. I ordered Titan straight away on amazon :) about £20 less than other retailers. Available only from May in UK. I liked Titan as you put in larger bricks and have piece of mind for a while. Worth carrying extra bulk for sure! Here in UK not allowed to do bonfires, a shame. Many thanks!
Thank You! That's a great compliment to me but you shouldn't insult Dave like that!😉😊😜 I actually know Dave. Haven't seen him in years. He lives about 40 minutes from me. He's a great guy and of course, you know, he's a Walking, Talking, Doing, Survival Encyclopedia!
I have a basic Chinese Ohuhu stove and I'm highly interested in upgrading to the Solo Titan. You have done a great job explaining how it works. Nice diagram too. 🔷Do you think I would be happy with the upgrade? Thank You very much!
The Solo Stoves are excellent quality, however I personally do not believe they are worth their asking retail price. I prefer my Titan to the Lite. If you like the Solo design (Which is actually Bush Buddy's design) I'd recommend trying another Chinese stove I found on Ali Express. It's the same design and the size is between the Solo Lite and Titan. I bought one and I really like it. The stove I ordered was just shy of $20 including shipping. Very minor differences compared to Solo's/Bush Buddy's stoves. Here's a link: www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001896021963.html?spm=a2g0o.productlist.0.0.13037429rWJXgt&algo_pvid=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250&algo_exp_id=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250-5
@@boonedockery7220 Thank you so much for your time and help. I just looked at that stove and it looks really good for my needs. I also just watched your video update on the Solo stove and I agree completely with you! Nice presentation 👍👍
@@BingWatcher Thank you! I caught a little flak for that one, but I felt I needed to post that information. Get it out there and let the viewer decide.
Good Morning Bo, I would have to say the Trangia Burner works best in the smaller stove. However, if you set the burner on top of the lid (remove the o-ring first) in the Titan it will improve the effectiveness of the flame.
Great review! Finally I'm beginning to understand the ingenuity of that stove. woodgas is a story for itself. wikipedia says that by the end of ww2 there were 500.000 vehicles in Germany driven by it... liked & subscribed 👍
Jurgen, I had so much more research I could have shared, but it would have doubled the already long video length! I went down a lot of rabbit holes while researching for this video and I loved every second of it! With the way fuel prices and availability is going we may have to bring back wood gas vehicles! Thank you very much for your comment, and I hope you have a fantastic day!
Patient, throrough explanation. A good bit of engineering goes into these. I LIKE the artwork! Would one of our modern high-tech adhesives work better than spot welding to reattach those handles? (Later in the video) WATCH THE ENTIRE VIDEO; shows 'everything' about building a fire and lighting and burning each model. BRING ON THE COOKING VIDEOS!
Praise His Holy Name!!!! I don't have an extra hat to give you, but I'd be happy to send you a "Follow Me" patch that I wear on the hat. Just send me your mailing address and I'll send one out ASAP! My email is boonedockery1750@gmail.com
Great review and I bought one. In fact, I used your recommendation for the "disposable grill topper" with the wood pellets and it worked great. It also melted the grill topper just enough to adhere to Solo Stove's original mesh. I'm not too worried about it but wondered if this happened to you - or - should I have purchased a higher quality version? Cheers, - Steve
The budget toppers do melt. I have had them melt to the steel grate in the bottom of the stove too. For the most part it all came off fairly easily. If you can find higher quality steel variations, that should produce one that will last a while. With as inexpensive as they are, and they are available very close to home, I just make several and as they burn out I I've got several ready to replace it with. Thanks for asking, I know that several that read this had the same question. Cheers!
@@boonedockery7220 Do you think a stainless steel mesh, something like the ones on frying pan splatter screens, would allow enough airflow? Or would that be too tight of a mesh? Cheers, - S
@@stevencbeck I think the spatter guard mesh would clog with ash thus preventing air and gas flow. You could probably cut a coffee can bottom with tin snips to fit and drill a lot of 1/2" to 3/4" holes in it to do the job? If done well it would certainly las a good while and basically be free. I might have to try it. Cheers!
Great review bro. I came late to the party but the benefit is that I found out what the solo company was up to early on. I bought the same design stove for $12.00 shipped from Ali, more than likely created by the same company that makes the solo, it rocks, but without the branding. That said I want to get an American made gasification stove and support my brothers and sisters here. Solo is a rip-off. Both in price and in stealing another American company’s ideas, then using Chinese labor to increase their profit margins. Just my 2 cents.
I just bought one from AliExpress. Don't be upset, the original is also produced in China. It is exalcly the same and the same technique. I bought it for 10 euro, that's about $ 11. It's a scam to buy the original, sorry to say it but it's true. The review is great btw!!!
Jasper, That news breaks my heart..... However, I have seen many variations and designs of Wood Gasification Stoves available through Ali Express at fantastic prices. From what I have seen on TH-cam a forum reviews most all of them are great stoves and perform very well. I honestly thought they were manufactured in Texas. Thank you for ending my ignorance on that point! PLEASE let me know how it performs and how well you like it! You have my attention!!!!
@@boonedockery7220 Well yeah it is sad. But I am pretty sure they don't make it in Texas. nl.aliexpress.com/item/1005001877248533.html?spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.25334c4dAUeET2
@@jasper2438Thank you very much for the link! Have you received your stove yet? I think I'm going to order one as well. It will be great to do a side-by-side test and comparison! I am in complete agreement with your scam statement. If these two stoves, both being made in china are made to the same specifications and perform the same, it is a ridiculous case of price gouging! If you have received yours, please let me know your thoughts and how well it performs and quality of manufacturing. I am VERY Interested in what you have to say! Thanks again! This is a real eye opener!
@@jasper2438 I just pulled up both websites. The Ali Express stove dimensions are almost identical to Solos Titan. The Titan retails for $109.99 but is now on sale for $89.99. I can see a couple very minor differences but they are essentially the same stove. I am going to order one and do the test and evaluation of the two and will do a video on my findings. Thanks again for letting me know about this!
😄😅😆 Matthew, they are super easy to make. Look in the grilling section of your local department store. I purchased mine at our local dollar store, they cost $2.00 for two. I use my top stove attachment inner circle as a template. I trace it with a permanent marker and cut it out with a regular pair of scissors. I can get 6 circles from each sheet. In a pinch you might be able to get two burns out of one circle. I just keep six in the bottom of my stove all the time so I know I'll have them when I need them. I only use them when I'm using wood pellets as my fuel source. Have a great day Matthew!
I've had gasifier stoves for years, but you are the first person to explain the process to my satisfaction. That cut-away diagram along with the knowledge that wood gas is heavier than air really helped me to understand. I'm subbing!
Thank you William. I really enjoy researching the things i use, I find it fascinating! I'm glad to see at least one other person enjoys it as well! 😉😀👍
I agree
@@boonedockery7220you did a really great job explaining how this type of stove works. Thank you for creating this excellent video.
Best explanation (by far) of how these stoves work! I’ve been using these for years and never quite understood why they were so efficient until seeing this video and you walking through the process using your very clear diagram. Thanks for this. Exceptionally well done!
Thank You VERY MUCH!!!!
I have several Solo Stoves, Campfire, Bonfire, etc.
Being a technical eclectic (electric, mechanical, industrial ISA career) Find this presentation TOP LEVEL, addressing what others have missed & I have, for the most part (missed the gasification, but understand AhA!), wanted to express.
GREAT EDUCATIONAL! Thanks.
Thank You Very Much!
My husband and I took a 45 day roadtripping journey a few years back taking only our SOLO STOVE TITAN and my Trangia 28T Mini cooksets. Loved every minute of our time spent cooking as we boondocked various different places. The TITAN is a GREAT system and with careful use you can cook about anything you would ever want using it. Great informational video and review.
I just bought a new Mesa at the thrift store for $3. The Mesa and the Titan are the same size, so I think I will buy the $20 cook-top from the Titan. Thanks for your excellent video.
That is Awesome! Congratulations on the find! I'm glad you liked the video!
The best explanation of how the stoves work, and the best way to build the fire, I've heard or read anywhere. Thank you!
your a gifted teacher.....thank you for your video lesson on the Co-Axial Downdraft Gasification Stove system
Canadian Amazon is selling the
25:23 ...Solo lite for $100 cad
and the solo lite pot 900 for $100 cad
total for a set (stove and pot only) is $140 cad
26:28... Solo Titan for $135 cad
The Solo Stove Pot 1800 is $140 cad
total for a set (stove and pot only ) is $ 232 cad
Solo Windscreen = $55 cad
Thank you for the compliment! Also, Thank you for the per item Currency Conversion!
Hi from the Uk, this is the best video ive seen on these stoves, great explanation and demonstration. I have just picked up a Solo stove light and now fully understand how it works and how to get the best from it. Many thanks 👍🏻
Thank you very much! This was from a time when I had much more time for research and video production planning. I am thankful it has been received so well. I truly appreciate your comment!
@@boonedockery7220 your more than welcome all the best 👍🏻
Absolutely stellar explanation and data. Probably the best video on TH-cam concerning the specifics of solo stoves.
Thank you !
This is one of the best reviews on these stoves I have seen. Wish I could give two👍instead of just one.
Thank you very much Terrance! I have a tendency to "GEEK OUT" on certain things. I love researching the history and development of wild camping gear. I know most people only want a short pithy 10 to 15 minute (at max) review of things to see if that thing is something worth purchasing. There are a very few however that are (like us) and enjoy the full spectrum approach to reviews. I know I'm not everyone's "cup of tea". I am who and what I am, and do things my own way. My audience may be smaller, however, they are much better informed after the video concludes (at least I like to believe they are). I am elated you liked the review. I will exert extra efforts to consistently continue in this manner.
indeed, an excellent explanation of the design and function.
This channel deserves so many more subs/followers. The quality, detail and information in every video is absolutely amazing.
🇺🇲
Thank You! I personally can't figure it out my viewer rate and viewing hours are 50-80 times higher than my subscription rate depending on the month. But, I don't worry about it. It is what it is. I enjoy doing this. If I could do this full time, I would LOVE it, not to mention the quality in every aspect would be far better! Until that happens, IF it ever happens, I'm going to keep on keeping on and enjoy doing it! Thank You So Very Much for You Kind And Generous Words! They ARE DEEPLY APPRECIATED! Blessings to you and yours my Dear Friend!
Outstanding explanation of how the Solo Stove Lite works, I appreciate the visual demonstrations and diagrams (very informative).
Thanks!
I really enjoyed your video. Just picked myself up a Solo Stove Titan and your video is very informative and thorough on how to use and fuel the stove. Thank you!!!
You're Very Welcome! Thank you for watching and commenting! It's greatly appreciated!
Excellent video answered all my questions
Excellent! Glad I could help!
Wow finally I found someone that took the time to explain in good detail how these things work and what to do to make them work as they should I thank you very much for that I am now a new subscriber see you on the next one
Thank You Very Much! I happy you appreciate my effort! Welcome to the family!
Amazing Work. This is very satisfying explanation
Thank You Very Much!
this is the exact video i needed..! wish i found this an hour ago 😄 would have saved me some lifetime googling size comparison and stuff. THANKS ALOT!
Thanks for replying to my last comment. I am a little puzzled by your explanation of this stove. Surely only normal air passes up between the walls of the stove to emerge from the holes at the top of the stove. The secondary burn that one can observe at the top set of holes is due to addition of this secondary oxygen aiding the complete burning of - as yet unburnt 'wood gas'. It is not wood gas coming out of the upper holes.
In your explanation you are saying that wood gas passes through supply vents in the side of the base of the Ash pan from the main chamber, to the centre of the lower floor pan, down through a hole then up the sides. However air to maintain the primary combustion must flow through the holes at the outer base of the stove and up inside the stove in opposition to the flow of 'wood gas' you describe.
The chimney effect of the stove will cause the air flow to be from outside the stove to inside and up (whether inside the main chamber or within the walls). Wood gas flow as you describe does not occur.
John, I am not an engineer. I simply tried to combine what I learned from research and apply it to the solo stove. I merely provided the explanation as I understood it. If that explanation is incorrect, I stand corrected. When I have more time, I will reflect further on your comments and will update any additional information or retraction in the video description. Would it be okay if I credit the update to you with providing the information? Thank You!
@@boonedockery7220 yes of course. I am not an expert either but I have simply come to a different conclusion to you. I appreciate the effort you have gone to. I too am also prepared to be corrected should an actual expert offer their own opinion. It is interesting though as no doubt you agree. I have several different wood gas stoves.
John,
you are absolutely correct.
Yep, this explanation of wood gas travelling down then up the sides does not make sense at all and the formal explanations of gasifier stoves do refer to the higher holes as secondary oxidation holes. So that means air comes out of the higher holes and mixes with the wood gas which is rising from the wood. The presence of more oxygen allows that gas to ignite. It's time you updated this video. Your intentions are clearly good and I like your explanation style. Too bad the facts aren't there.
I must admit I thought this too and I have read a few of the research papers about TLUD stoves and how to make them run as clean as possible (e.g. by restricting the rate at which wood gas is generated and so making them burn leaner with a cleaner, bluer flame). So in my understanding the heated air flows up the sides but the wood gas stays in the main chamber and gets ignited by the hot air coming from the vents.
Enjoyed your very clear explanation of the working process and the heads up on the screen addition for pellet burning... I bought the Titan on sale in a bundle with the wind screen and tripod.... I like all 4 parts of the bundle.... but as you said regular prices are a bit high... I later got the Campfire stove on sale alone... it works well for me... I added one of my high carbon steel woks for cooking on that one ... with the Titan I added some cement blocks as a pot rest for the wok.... I do have a separate lid and grill for inside the wok for added cooking flexibility... I am playing with these in my yard and I tend to be a car camper rather than a hiker... when I tried pellets in my Titan I did a stick fire first and used a scoop to add some pellets.... was also surprised how well the stoves burn anything dry... A lot of my wok cooking has been with the lid I added so I could use bio-mass that was less well flavored... found it useful to have a place to rest the pot off the fire from time to time to slow the heating rate some.... The Titan pot and tripod worked well for rice... fast to boil then set both aside to fluff the rice while I used the wok for cooking other stuff... the wok style I use is one with a side handle rather than the shorter loop handles.... on the Campfire one has to be wary of balance of the wok... could have used the (3) 16 inch building blocks with either stove as a pot rest.... the focused hot fire seems to do well with wok cooking for me...I did later get the 4000 pot that nests with the campfire.... the tripod should be useful for doing stews in that 4 liter pot with either the Titan or Campfire heating it.... today I am still finishing off the sausages I cooked in my GoSun Go solar cookers.... was less clean up than a fire and the Solo stoves are very easy clean up...wiping off some soot from pots because I am using dry rotted pine chunks for bio-mass... have a 10 foot high pine stump that critters are done using in yard... I am still developing my cooking styles.... If I am waiting for a movie to start in about an hour after selecting my theater seat... the GoSun Go's and a couple frozen corndogs.... work as a quick snack before and after the movie... the double walled glass tube cookers can stoe the food cold then hot after cooking because of the thermos bottle features... and very packable... but I live on the pacific west coast so sun can be rare here.... so bio-mass cooking with the efficiency twist looks like big earthquake survival skill to learn...
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this! Too bad it couldn't have been verbally while sitting beside the campfire smelling the food cooking in the wok! I never thought about it before but a wok would be a natural with the solo stove design! You've got my cerebral wheels turning! Thank you for sharing this information! I certainly hope MANY more than I read this!
@@boonedockery7220 I even tried a frittata with a wok on the Campfire.... it got a bit thick and heavy with all the goodies in it...the flipping the frittata over was going to be tricky.... but I have a second wok of the same style and brand.... Fred Meyers did a buy one get one for half off sale... 12 inch carbon steel woks can get a lot cheaper than camping pots... and in the same Fred Meyers the HD barbeque lids for cheese melting also 12 inch and half off sale... a lot of 12 inch things to fit the woks.... I had "flipped" frittatas before... from sliding them to a plate and flipping the plate back into the skillet .... I felt the frittata in the wok was loose and would slide or flip well, but i grabbed the other wok and flipped from wok to wok.... woks heat fast and finished the other side of the frittata to done... being thicker in the middle and hotter in the center showed up on the first side cooked with an almost burn, not charred but still a bit beyond brown ... it was a huge frittata I have a lidded Pyrex dish I got the center into... the edges I trimmed before the transfer to the dish was put on a couple small plates and had for dinner..., that in the Pyrex dish that fits my GoSun Chill outdoor fridge was allowed to cool before going in that fridge... dined for a couple days on that part of the frittata.... that was a 12 egg frittata with onion ,zucchini, yellow squash, taters, carrots... and some leftover pork loin that I had cooked in my GoSun Fusion on grape leaves and goodies on that... a few different sauces had gone into both dishes... frittatas are great with leftovers added.... if I did it again... smaller amount of food in the wok.... played with doing French fries in oil, but the wok and steam thrown oil could get mean... the 4 liter Campfire pot looks ideal for that adventure ... I did get some wok style wire dippers for removing French fries... and possibly loading the taters into that pot... might have to modify the handle some, so buy one get one half off came into play, the stainless steel handle should allow a little bending for pot dipping rather than wok dipping...
My doing this stuff alone does seem to allow me to go down rabbit holes I did not expect to go down... ever have a crown cap on a pop bottle blow off the top of the bottle and just vanish into low cut lawn area... should not happen... was sitting in the shade and figured a magnet might find it if the grass was covering it ... magnet on a cord was not working... designed and built a magnetic yard sweeper from stuff on hand .... a couple Harbor Freight 250 pound magnets from back of truck ('69 F250 with canopy) and a craftsman hand truck and a bit of cord... it worked well the broken bottle now has nails, screws, staples, stray parts and some rust but no bottle cap with top of bottle attached... I seem to have built a magnetic toy that might get me out walking and scanning the driveways more... and that exercise of rolling it around... rabbit holes...
@@ACheshireCat2001 I never thought a lost bottle cap could have been turned into such an epic tale! Bravo Sir! Well Done!!!!
Thumbs up for the illustration. Solo should hire you to be a salesman.
Thank You! It was a whole lot easier than cutting one of my stoves in half!😉😄😅😆👍
Очень толковый обзор печек, с размерами и весом в разных системах единиц, и очень наглядно объясняет, как горит, и почему! Спасибо! 👍
Спасибо, мой друг! Ваш комментарий очень ценен!
I've got a gasification type stove and it works great for boiling water and things like Raman noodles.
Imo if you don't mind a few extra ounces of weight compared to a lot of camping type pots Zebra pots are my pick for cooking pots. They also make something called a lunchbox that make an awesome pot for these type stoves and alcohol burners which actually work pretty good inside the stick burner stoves.
My Wonderful Wife gave me a Zebra Billy can for Christmas a couple years ago and my Solo Stove fits in it great with a little extra room for a Trangia burner and a small bottle of alcohol. It is my favorite pot!
Excellent explanation - both in content and delivery!
Thank You Very Much! I Deeply Appreciate That!
Simply incredible... This vid has altered my paradigm on wood stoves in general. I now understand how my home heating wood stove is designed and why they are as efficient as they are. Cheers, brother! Peace and love
Thank You So Very Much! Your comment is very much appreciated! I do try to share my long term experience with skills and products in order to provide the most information I can so Folks can have the ability to make an informed decision before they make a purchase. Cheers to you Brother! I'll see your peace and love and raise you with Joy And Happiness! Thank you for your kind words!
Right?! I had to come back to this video a month later because I've been thinking about it so much. It's completely changed my level of knowledge it's like being back in school again. This guy is an excellent teacher. This video is the first I saw on his channel but it's one of things.....he belongs up there with coalcracker bushcraft and corporals corner. Totally altered my way of thinking as well. I didn't even know how *air* worked before watching I realized 🤣
@@pharaohsmagician8329 Thank You Very Much!
Great video and explanation of how it works. Thanks.
Thank You Bill!
Ah geez, I’ve been building the fire wrong. From now on I’ll use the top-down method.
Marci, it's purpose specific. If you want to just boil water the traditional style will work fine. The gasification process should work much better and you'll have a better cooking experience with an upside-down fire. The Solo-stove really does require a little experimentation and practice to "cook" with it.
It’s irrelevant which method you use. That’s just the lighting phase of the fire. Once going you’ll be adding wood from the top either way. Basically after fully lit, fire is fire.
Great review, very well explained. I have the solo stove lite. Think I'll purchase the windscreen.
Thank You! They are great stoves!
You've got just the right amount of smart-assery and information going on here to make this more than some dude rambling and fumbling around with twigs. :) From solo I've had the Titan and Bonfire for a few years now, but my original "BushBuddy" is still my fav - Fritz got it right (and Solo took notice).
You have given me an amazing compliment!!!! I think I will use it on my business card! "Boonedockery: just The Right Amount Of Smart-Assery!" 😄😆😅👍👍👍
I recently found out Solo Stoves are made in china. I just looked up BushBuddy..... "Hand crafted in the U.S.A.......Given that Fritz Handel designed his in 1999, I'd say solo stove (founded in 2011) may have "been inspired" to "use" his design.
Thank you so much for posting this! It sent me on an enlightening investigation. My ignorance has caused me to support and endorse the wrong company. Another of my subscribers sent me a link to a near duplicate stove as solo/bushbuddy. It was then I learned Solo Stoves are NOT made in Texas, but yes, china. The unashamedly chinese copy (from ali express was $10. $12 shipping. I received it last Tuesday. It's dimensions are between the Solo Lite and Titan. I will be producing a video about the stoves, my misconceptions a field test of the 3. If I were financially capable of it I would order the BushBuddies as well.
Thank you again for the supreme compliment and humbling education!
@@boonedockery7220 Hahahahahahahaha. It's all you, bud. :D Great vids!
A practical review with very useful information. Thanks.
Thank You Rich! I am glad you liked it!
That was the best video on gasification stoves on you tube!! Thank you sir!!
WOW! Thank You Very Much Mr. Bizarro!!!!!!
Excellent review, this has been very helpful information. I have been considering one or both of these for backpacking and general camping. I will definitely wait for a sale, as well as wait to see reviews of the other similar competitor stoves in this category to see if the price difference is worth it - particularly if these are not truly made in the USA as we thought.
Jeremy, I bought a stove from Ali Express that (with minor differences) is the same design to Solo's stoves. I paid just shy of $20. You might want to check it out.
Here's a link:
www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001896021963.html?spm=a2g0o.productlist.0.0.13037429rWJXgt&algo_pvid=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250&algo_exp_id=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250-5
Research like none other..awesome job sir!
Thank You Very Much Nathan! That comment is deeply appreciated!
I am very Lucky to have an oryginal bushbuddy from alaska 😎. I couldnt Get on internet, but a friend of mine from Poland sold to me for 28$. A major score.
That Is Fantastic!!!! What a deal!!!!👍👍👍
Thanks
I’ve learned so much more in this video then any other really appreciate the time and research done for this video definitely subbing 👍🏼
Thank You! I really enjoy doing the research, almost as much as using the items!
I can’t decide between the lite and titan. I mostly would be backpacking, so the lite seems appropriate, but I’m worried it won’t perform as well as the titan.
I personally prefer cooking on the Titan. It is a little bigger, a little heavier, but it's worth it for me to actually be able to cook on it.
This is perfect for me for my long travel 😲👍
I think it's a great design. I have used mine a lot and will for many years to come.
Thank you so much I've watched a lot of videos on this stove your vid was the best by far the breakdown on this stove and specks in your vid awesome.
Thank You Very Much! I never do an actual review of anything without using the item for a long time. I also do a lot of research prior to shooting to provide as much useable information that I can. I know there are always things I miss, but folks will frequently help me out in the comment section. Thank you so much for taking the time to comment and for your kind words! I pray you have a fantastic day!
This is the best review of these stoves I've come across. Thanks!
Thank you very much! I'm not an expert on anything, however I love to learn and share what I've learned. I watched a lot of wood gasification videos and always had more questions than answers. I "tried" to provide the answers to the questions I had in this video. Thanks for the comment and have a fantastic day!
I do not go camping but they would be good for SHTF.
Absolutely!
This was a great review. Thank you!
Thank You! I have seen several "fluff" reviews of gasifier stoves in the past and I wanted to do one that covers the entire spectrum. I personally love learning the background, development and mechanics of camping gear. I'm glad you liked it!
@@boonedockery7220 it was excellent and I loved the science of it which I don’t think I’ve seen in any other videos. Really appreciate the time and care you’ve taken to produce the review
@@pebble888 That really means a lot to me! Thank you so much!
I love your style, we would get along great. Would you recommend the larger model size "campfire"? Or just stick to the "Titan" size?
Thank you Zach! I have discovered, much to my surprise, "My Style" has been much better received than I had anticipated.😉 Through the comments, I have found, I believe I would get along great with several folks via this platform. It has been a wonderful surprise that I am truly grateful for. I feel the "Titan" is an ideal size. The smaller size is good for minimalistic hiking, backpacking, bushcrafting or wild camping. I think the "campfire" would be good for car camping or as a "group stove" when load sharing with several other people. The "Titan" is perfect for me. Not too large or to small. I love that I can use a large variety of fuel sources other than twigs with it. It has definitely stood up to the abuse I have subjected it too over the years. Thank you very much for commenting, I really enjoy this part of YouTubing!😉😄👍
Awesome video. Only video I found that explains how these work. Given the design, is it possible to start without a commercial fire starter? I couldn’t get mine started without using a commercial product as the fire seems to blow out so fast.
Thank You, David! I try very hard to make my reviews as detailed as I can. I don't always succeed, but I do try. To answer your question, YES! I use the upside-down fire technique. Once you've crisscrossed your fuel from bottom to top, you build a miniature right-side-up fire on top of it using whatever ignition source you want. I usually just use one of my homemade fire starters but I could just as well use paper, fatwood, birch bark, etc... I have found the upside-down fire maximizes the efficiency of the wood gasification design. It produces a more controllable cooking temperature and will burn for a longer amount of time. Thank you very much for commenting David! I really appreciate it!
Top notch video, thank you for creating it 🙏
Glad you liked it!
Another great video! I have the Titan and love it!
Thanks, I think it's just the perfect size for my needs! I'm going to do a cooking video with it soon.
That was informative, well worth my time. Thanks.
Thank You Very Much Rob!
Thanks for all the research ind information.
It's my pleasure Brian! Thank You For Watching!
How did you find out there is a hole in the centre of the base ate. Did you cut one open? I have one and cannot see the centre hole due to obstructions.
It was a matter of observation. One time when I was camping, I used it quite a bit one night. The next morning, I saw there was ash in the open area at the bottom. I looked and looked but couldn't figure out the mystery as to why the ash was there. I took my glassed out of my pocket and slid the template through one of the bottom vent holes and slip it to the center and it stopped, dead center. I tried it a few more times and it did the same thing. That's how I discovered it.
Without a doubt, this is the most thorough explanation of this sort of stove and the most balanced and informative review of them that I have come across. My thanks for this.
Subbed.
Cheers,
- Martin
Thank you very much Martyn! I deeply appreciate that! I have been fearful that my videos are too long too keep the viewers attention covering the topics the the depth I do. I unfortunately don't have the time to produce all my videos to the degree I would like. I absolutely love researching the origins and engineering of the items we carry in our kits. I plan on doing one on the Surplus Swiss Volcano Stove. It will be another long video. It will take a lot of time to produce as it will include historical images and information. Organizing that one will be a challenge. Thank you again for your kind words. I have subbed your channel as well and will check it out later.
Cheers Martyn!
-John
@@boonedockery7220 Keep going with the research, good sir, and I'll be watching. I can get pretty eggheaded myself in some of my own videos. It's nice to see someone reviewing gear they have used long enough to offer an informed opinion born of knowledge and experience.
Cheers,
- Martin
I LOVE my solo stoves...I have the lite, titan and the campfire. Thank you for explaining the gasifier process. I have a couple of questions. Are wood pellets safe to grill food over? I recently bought a bag of hickory chunks and looking forward to cooking a bacon wrapped filet over very high flavorful heat!
Thanks for adding to the conversation! You can certainly cook over wood pellets! However, you will need to practice cooking with them. They burn quite hot compared to sticks. They are very inexpensive and a large bag will last a long time and store well in a dry area. I use emptied large plastic pretzel containers to store them in. More compact and easy to retrieve the pellets from. The pellets do impart good wood smoke flavor to the food. I'd also add a good bit of distance between the top of your stove and your grill. again this might take some time and practice. to find that optimum cooking heat to food space. Thanks again for commenting and have a great day!
Answered all my questions perfectly , you Sir are a professional and I am grateful for your expert views, and I am not a complete novice to these things as I have camped and cooked outdoors for at least 30 of my 70 years on this planet, so again I say thanks with a subscription to your fine channel kind regards Tom Adair in South Australia.
I am truly humbled and blessed by your comment Tom. I do not feel as though I am an expert on anything. I truly enjoy bushcrafting and wild camping. I have an insatiable appetite for history and details. I personally really enjoy researching anything I'm interested in. I deeply appreciate your comment and subscription. I am thankful you wrote this. Sincerely! John Timms
Awesome video brother John!! Very educational!! Thank you for your hard work making these videos brother I truly enjoy them🙂👍 God bless
Thank You Brother Jay! God Bless You Too Dear Friend!
I strongly recommend against using aluminum in the fire chamber of said stove. I use a stainless steel grate in mine for wood pellets and it works perfectly. You can probably find a sink stainless steel strainer mesh that can fit and it would work perfectly.
I do not like the idea of using aluminum because I am concerned that it could be vaporized.
I agree and appreciate your concerns completely!
After the initial top down fire burns all the wood , how could you maintain a top down fire ?
You don't. The coals at a mid burn are hot enough to ignite the fresh fuel and with the stove already hot the airflow and draw are good to continue the gasification process.
You are an excellent reviewer and your research skills are a great addition to the video. I nest my Lite in a Snowpeak 900. It works good and I already had the pot so…
Thank You! Great idea with Snowpeak 900!
Good video
Thank You! Glad you enjoyed it!
Quality, you just helped me to choose Solo titan. Comparing Lite and Titan there is not that awful size difference and lot more benefits of Titan.
Kris, I sincerely hope you enjoy your Solo Titan as much as I have. I believe it's a fantastic piece of kit. Cheers!
@@boonedockery7220 many thanks for response, I value it a lot. I ordered Titan straight away on amazon :) about £20 less than other retailers. Available only from May in UK. I liked Titan as you put in larger bricks and have piece of mind for a while. Worth carrying extra bulk for sure! Here in UK not allowed to do bonfires, a shame. Many thanks!
Excellent job. You sound a lot like. Dave Canterberry
Thank You! That's a great compliment to me but you shouldn't insult Dave like that!😉😊😜 I actually know Dave. Haven't seen him in years. He lives about 40 minutes from me. He's a great guy and of course, you know, he's a Walking, Talking, Doing, Survival Encyclopedia!
Outstanding Brother! Thanks for your time and the knowledge! >
Thank You! I appreciate it!
How are those wires holding up, and if they fail can they be replaced?
Very Surprisingly Well!!!!
Brilliant review.
Thank you very much! I'll be filming a follow-up video soon.
Excellent review!
Thank You!
I have a basic Chinese Ohuhu stove and I'm highly interested in upgrading to the Solo Titan. You have done a great job explaining how it works. Nice diagram too. 🔷Do you think I would be happy with the upgrade?
Thank You very much!
The Solo Stoves are excellent quality, however I personally do not believe they are worth their asking retail price. I prefer my Titan to the Lite. If you like the Solo design (Which is actually Bush Buddy's design) I'd recommend trying another Chinese stove I found on Ali Express. It's the same design and the size is between the Solo Lite and Titan. I bought one and I really like it. The stove I ordered was just shy of $20 including shipping. Very minor differences compared to Solo's/Bush Buddy's stoves.
Here's a link:
www.aliexpress.com/item/1005001896021963.html?spm=a2g0o.productlist.0.0.13037429rWJXgt&algo_pvid=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250&algo_exp_id=397c7512-55fb-463b-91e7-6e95da81a250-5
@@boonedockery7220 Thank you so much for your time and help. I just looked at that stove and it looks really good for my needs. I also just watched your video update on the Solo stove and I agree completely with you! Nice presentation 👍👍
@@BingWatcher Thank you! I caught a little flak for that one, but I felt I needed to post that information. Get it out there and let the viewer decide.
What does you research show that "EXCAPING" is ???
Rusty, I would have to watch the video to see what exactly your referring to. Could you be more specific?
Which is the best model for the trangia burner?
Good Morning Bo, I would have to say the Trangia Burner works best in the smaller stove. However, if you set the burner on top of the lid (remove the o-ring first) in the Titan it will improve the effectiveness of the flame.
Great review!
Finally I'm beginning to understand the ingenuity of that stove.
woodgas is a story for itself. wikipedia says that by the end of ww2 there were 500.000 vehicles in Germany driven by it...
liked & subscribed 👍
Jurgen, I had so much more research I could have shared, but it would have doubled the already long video length! I went down a lot of rabbit holes while researching for this video and I loved every second of it! With the way fuel prices and availability is going we may have to bring back wood gas vehicles! Thank you very much for your comment, and I hope you have a fantastic day!
Patient, throrough explanation. A good bit of engineering goes into these. I LIKE the artwork! Would one of our modern high-tech adhesives work better than spot welding to reattach those handles? (Later in the video) WATCH THE ENTIRE VIDEO; shows 'everything' about building a fire and lighting and burning each model. BRING ON THE COOKING VIDEOS!
Thank you James! I will try to get a Solo Stove Cooking Video for you in January! 😉👍
Nice and good detailled presentation of this nice stoves, thank you! Definitely on my wishlist combined with the original billican 😎
Thank You Jorg! I appreciate that! It really is a great family of stoves!
Awesome info . Upside down fire with the secondary burn genius
Thank You Earl! It works beautifully!
great review
Thank You!
Nice job. I love these stoves for my wilderness camping.
Thank You! It's a great design!
So this thing basically works like the same way you make biochar except that it burns everything
Dig the Hat Bruv that my KING !!! PRAISE THE LORD JESUS CHRIST FOOOORRREEEEEEVVVVVEEEERRRRRR!!!!
Praise His Holy Name!!!! I don't have an extra hat to give you, but I'd be happy to send you a "Follow Me" patch that I wear on the hat. Just send me your mailing address and I'll send one out ASAP! My email is boonedockery1750@gmail.com
Great review and I bought one. In fact, I used your recommendation for the "disposable grill topper" with the wood pellets and it worked great. It also melted the grill topper just enough to adhere to Solo Stove's original mesh. I'm not too worried about it but wondered if this happened to you - or - should I have purchased a higher quality version? Cheers, - Steve
The budget toppers do melt. I have had them melt to the steel grate in the bottom of the stove too. For the most part it all came off fairly easily. If you can find higher quality steel variations, that should produce one that will last a while. With as inexpensive as they are, and they are available very close to home, I just make several and as they burn out I I've got several ready to replace it with. Thanks for asking, I know that several that read this had the same question. Cheers!
@@boonedockery7220 Do you think a stainless steel mesh, something like the ones on frying pan splatter screens, would allow enough airflow? Or would that be too tight of a mesh? Cheers, - S
@@stevencbeck I think the spatter guard mesh would clog with ash thus preventing air and gas flow. You could probably cut a coffee can bottom with tin snips to fit and drill a lot of 1/2" to 3/4" holes in it to do the job? If done well it would certainly las a good while and basically be free. I might have to try it. Cheers!
@@boonedockery7220 That’s a great idea. Doing that. Cheers, - S
@@stevencbeck Awesome! Please let me know how it turns out!?!
Thank u
My pleasure Peter!😀👍
Great review bro. I came late to the party but the benefit is that I found out what the solo company was up to early on. I bought the same design stove for $12.00 shipped from Ali, more than likely created by the same company that makes the solo, it rocks, but without the branding. That said I want to get an American made gasification stove and support my brothers and sisters here. Solo is a rip-off. Both in price and in stealing another American company’s ideas, then using Chinese labor to increase their profit margins. Just my 2 cents.
I just bought one from AliExpress. Don't be upset, the original is also produced in China. It is exalcly the same and the same technique. I bought it for 10 euro, that's about $ 11. It's a scam to buy the original, sorry to say it but it's true.
The review is great btw!!!
Jasper, That news breaks my heart..... However, I have seen many variations and designs of Wood Gasification Stoves available through Ali Express at fantastic prices. From what I have seen on TH-cam a forum reviews most all of them are great stoves and perform very well. I honestly thought they were manufactured in Texas. Thank you for ending my ignorance on that point! PLEASE let me know how it performs and how well you like it! You have my attention!!!!
@@boonedockery7220 Well yeah it is sad. But I am pretty sure they don't make it in Texas.
nl.aliexpress.com/item/1005001877248533.html?spm=a2g0s.9042311.0.0.25334c4dAUeET2
@@jasper2438Thank you very much for the link! Have you received your stove yet? I think I'm going to order one as well. It will be great to do a side-by-side test and comparison! I am in complete agreement with your scam statement. If these two stoves, both being made in china are made to the same specifications and perform the same, it is a ridiculous case of price gouging! If you have received yours, please let me know your thoughts and how well it performs and quality of manufacturing. I am VERY Interested in what you have to say! Thanks again! This is a real eye opener!
@@jasper2438 I just pulled up both websites. The Ali Express stove dimensions are almost identical to Solos Titan. The Titan retails for $109.99 but is now on sale for $89.99. I can see a couple very minor differences but they are essentially the same stove. I am going to order one and do the test and evaluation of the two and will do a video on my findings. Thanks again for letting me know about this!
@@jasper2438 Oh, the Ali Express stove is $10.76 U.S. and $9.18 for shipping. If these do turn out to be identical, It's going to be candelas!
$30 for the 900 cup.
Can you cut me a grate like that? I’ll pay you.
😄😅😆 Matthew, they are super easy to make. Look in the grilling section of your local department store. I purchased mine at our local dollar store, they cost $2.00 for two. I use my top stove attachment inner circle as a template. I trace it with a permanent marker and cut it out with a regular pair of scissors. I can get 6 circles from each sheet. In a pinch you might be able to get two burns out of one circle. I just keep six in the bottom of my stove all the time so I know I'll have them when I need them. I only use them when I'm using wood pellets as my fuel source. Have a great day Matthew!
@@boonedockery7220 thank you and stay safe ☺️☺️
I know exacly know how a wood gas stove works to m8 😁😎
👍🔥
🤣 cant even say it pa
?
Amazing detailed review 🎉
Thank You! Thank You VERY MUCH!!!!!