Norris wrote:Wow, didn't take long to arrive, maybe a week? After ordering on Ebay as described in HJ's blog I received a small parcel via ordinary mail today.
Nice. That's fast shipping.
Norris wrote:The stove is amazingly small and light, and comes in a little black drawstring pouch, with a little igniter tool as described by HJ. The build quality is immediately apparent, the bottom of the stove is a machined brass piece with some small inset screws that reminds one of a watch.
That's part of what impressed me with the stove as well. The machining is really nice. The parts are well designed, and the fit is really good. Just looking at it in a catalog, I knew they had a good basic design provided that the execution was good -- and it is.
Norris wrote:After a short warmup period, you can invert the canister and get a lot more power out of the stove for any given valve setting. I had it on a very low simmer with the canister sitting upright, then inverted the canister and got a good strong output from the stove. So this stove would be great for getting the most out of your gas canisters, especially in cold weather, where I have (with an MSR Reactor for example) found myself cradling the canister in my hands to warm it to help it along.
Yes, you do get a lot of power. Liquefied gas expands about 200 times it's volume when it vaporizes. That's some serious pressure. No candle flame here. Think power. The down side is that it's harder to simmer. But in winter, I'll take the power -- and the cold weather performance.
Norris wrote:Super stoked that I got this, thanks for the tip HJ!! Buy one of these, they are incredibly inexpensive, and so light and portable that you can tuck one in your pack along with a fold-flat aluminum windscreen and a small canister and not notice the weight or space.
This stove weighs 1/3 of what a Reactor weighs and will perform better in temperatures below freezing. (of course in all fairness, the Reactor includes a pot) The spider should work down to 0 Fahrenheit with a fresh canister of 80% isobutane and 20% propane. For cold weather, don't buy gas that contains "regular" butane (Coleman, Primus, Optimus, Glowmaster, etc.).
It's a danged nice stove. A lot of stoves I test -- and then they go into a plastic storage bin until I need that specific stove again (but they don't get regular use). The Spider has gone with me on family trips and stuff. In other words, this is now a "personal" stove, not just one that I picked up for my blog or something.
HJ