#68028 - 06/24/06 03:23 AM
Re: Boiling Water - containers?
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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Mess kits aren't clanky if packed right. Ranger bands outside and cotten wool or a bandana inside (if needed) to keep everything snug, slip it into a gallon ziplock to keep everyhing dry, then dump it into a spare watch cap pad it.
Put it in your pouch, and knock your pouch off the table. I bet the mess tin won't clank. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#68029 - 06/24/06 03:48 PM
Re: Boiling Water - container - 1 qt pot?
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Old Hand
Registered: 12/14/05
Posts: 988
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Has anyone considered packing their survival kit IN a 1 qt/ 1 liter pot? I'd hate to have to boil water (for drinking) in my 16 oz mug. Over and over and...
What does an aluminum pot weigh?
tro
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#68031 - 06/25/06 03:04 AM
Re: Boiling Water - containers?
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Member
Registered: 05/31/06
Posts: 178
Loc: Florida
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Some of the Pepsi can alcohol stove crowd use stainless steel canisters to cook in. You can find them in WalMart, Target, etc. made for storing things from toothbrushes to kitchen spatulas. Just about any stainless steel container would work well for cooking. A lot better than uncoated aluminum like the Walmart grease pot. Don't use a double-walled or insulated container. Drill two holes and you can make a decent handle from a coat hanger or other wire.
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#68034 - 06/29/06 11:34 AM
Re: Boiling Water - containers?
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Paranoid?
Veteran
Registered: 10/30/05
Posts: 1341
Loc: Virginia, US
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When boiling water with hot rocks, if you're using a plastic bag set into a hole in the ground, both the ground on the outside of and the water inside of the plastic bag tend to become insulators against the heat of the rocks. So generally, you won't have to worry about burning through the plastic unless you've got too little water inside the bag, the hole is too shallow outside, or the bag is making direct contact with the hot rocks with no insulation between them.
Still, I've seen people line the bottoms of bags with a few cold stones, bark, and even a few sticks when using this method to boil water, so I could have been misled regarding the insulation.
Has anyone else heard this?
Perhaps I've just been lucky! <img src="/images/graemlins/laugh.gif" alt="" />
You can also hold the hot rocks in the water using sticks as "tongs".
_________________________
"Learn survival skills when your life doesn't depend on it."
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#68036 - 06/29/06 11:38 PM
Re: Boiling Water - containers?
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Sultan of Spiffy
Enthusiast
Registered: 05/12/01
Posts: 271
Loc: Louisiana
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OK, it's not quite a mess kit, but my solution is.... the CLIFFstove (copyright CLIFF 2006, or patent pending, or some such thing). I took a US one quart canteed cup, turned it upside down, cut the bottom out and cut it into a windscreen / stand, placed a Natick stove/stand on that (making the whole contraption look hour-glass shaped, to focus the heat up the side of your cooking vessel), and put a small Trangia stove under it all. Then you put your cooking vessel (A US Army canteen cup) on top of the windscreen / stand, light off the Trangia, and in about five minutes you have 500ml of water at a rolling boil. Take the Natick stove off, and you can use the windscreen / stand alone with a mess kit, pot, or frying pan. And it all breaks doan and packs up in a MOLLE canteen / utility pouch, with a 1-quart canteen!
If anyone can host the images, I will be happy to post them.
.....CLIFF (like, who else?)
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