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nobby
25-06-2006, 14:51
I use a Trangia with a gas conversion but like an open fire to which end I made a Nimblewill Nomad stove. Unfortunately the aluminium was a bit thin and it went bendy.
I have just bought a 2.5 pint Kelly kettle (the canoe group buy price was hard to resist) but can't see the fire pan being much use as an open fire pan. I'd guess that it is difficult to feed with wood.
That made me take a fresh look at my Trangia base and windshield. If I cut a circle of aluminium to fill the burner hole I'd have a fire pan raised off the floor and with pot rests already built in. Smoke would get out around the pans, a draught up through the base of the windshield so all it needs is a hole in the side to feed bits of wood in. I could make a flap to close of the hole when using the gas burner.
Before I start with the tinsnips can anybody see, or know of, a flaw with this idea?

PC2K
25-06-2006, 17:36
well depending on what you are burning, alluminium has a low melting point.

nobby
25-06-2006, 17:46
well depending on what you are burning, alluminium has a low melting point.

I was thinking wood

bikething
25-06-2006, 18:11
some woods burn hotter than others. i wouldn't expect it to last long in contact with direct flames / embers without melting / buckling. I've seen saucepans made of thicker aluminium burn through when they've been allowed to boil dry.
if you can, get a piece of similar type scrap aluminium, build a wood fire and chuck it in... see what happens to it.. just an idea before you destroy a relatively expensive trangia

that's my 2p

Steve