I heard recently of a Trangia used by the Swedish forces, that is designed specifically for arctic conditions. Can anyone confirm this, and if so, does anyone know anywhere to get hold of one?
Thanks in advance
I heard recently of a Trangia used by the Swedish forces, that is designed specifically for arctic conditions. Can anyone confirm this, and if so, does anyone know anywhere to get hold of one?
Thanks in advance
I dont know about that but I have just heard that they will soon no longer be available - appears the war stocks being sold off are depleteing rapidly!
Try this site
http://www.surplusandoutdoors.com/is...hopscr345.html
Is that what you are after?
They are available on most army surplus sites.
Originally Posted by hootchi
£11-99?? £7-95 here
>>>http://www.surplusandadventure.com/i...hopscr521.html
or try this one >> >> > >
http://www.surplusandadventure.com/i...opscr2630.html
>>> :wave:
Tradition means not picking up the ashes, but passing on the flame.
Thanks! Wish I hadn't bought that £45 standard Trangia now... It's less than suitable for the Arctic. Thanks people :-)
MEN WANTED FOR HAZARDOUS JOURNEY. SMALL WAGES, BITTER COLD, LONG MONTHS OF COMPLETE DARKNESS, CONSTANT DANGER, SAFE RETURN DOUBTFUL. HONOR AND RECOGNITION IN CASE OF SUCCESS.
Reverend "Norwegian Spruce" Arctic Hobo of the Bushcrafti
The standard Trangia, is perfect for the arctic, it´s made for the arctic. But the mess kit is a lot cheaper.Originally Posted by arctic hobo
-The Gateway to Nordic Bushcraft -
Was gonna say the same. The commercial trangia suspends the stove off the ground, insulating it from the freezing floor. The army kit puts the stove onto the floor. I would think in freezing conditions, the commercialm version would be better, though I'm sure both would/could/do work fine.Originally Posted by Viking
"I feel I was denied critical need-to-know information!"
~ Burt Gummer
£10 here and u get a free mess set http://www.surplusandadventure.com/i...hopscr2630.htm in the bargin area .
:biggthump
The framed 35l pack on that Bargian page looks very good too, basic but bombproof (feel another "project" coming on :wink: ).
Neil
The GREEN-CRAFT (keeping you safe in the wilderness........and keeping the wilderness safe from YOU)
my flickr account
Excellent prices at Surplus and Adventure, but they do charge six quid for postage which seems a bit steep.
"We wade in imperfect solutions"
It is very good and it feels a lot bigger then 35 liter. I have used them a lot in the army, just bought me the larger one that is on 70 liters and it only cost me £11.Originally Posted by Neil1
-The Gateway to Nordic Bushcraft -
!! What was I doing wrong?? Mine used to get snow blown through its vent onto the burner, no matter which way I turned it. Also snow used to blow under the pans down onto the burner - when enough does it doesn't melt.Originally Posted by Viking
Sometimes there isn't any proper shelter to put it in!
MEN WANTED FOR HAZARDOUS JOURNEY. SMALL WAGES, BITTER COLD, LONG MONTHS OF COMPLETE DARKNESS, CONSTANT DANGER, SAFE RETURN DOUBTFUL. HONOR AND RECOGNITION IN CASE OF SUCCESS.
Reverend "Norwegian Spruce" Arctic Hobo of the Bushcrafti
Are we talking about the same thing???Originally Posted by arctic hobo
Never ever heard of people having trouble wit these in snow or windy conditions.
Trangia
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-The Gateway to Nordic Bushcraft -
I have used the Trangia shown in Scotland when snow-holing, the only problem I ever encountered was when the rubber seal from the lid stuck to the burner, it was a white-out at the time and I could barely see the stove, this did'nt affect the stoves performance one bit.
I've noticed that no matter how high-tec your companions stoves are it always seems to be the Trang that get used on "brew-stops".
Viking what is the fabric these sacks are made of?
Neil
The GREEN-CRAFT (keeping you safe in the wilderness........and keeping the wilderness safe from YOU)
my flickr account
I have posted a new thread in the kit chatter section with the rucksackOriginally Posted by Neil1
-The Gateway to Nordic Bushcraft -
That's the thing. It was admittedly the in the poorest conditions imaginable - a winter blizzard on the Finnmarksvidda. I guess you know the one, being Swedish. :-) It was fairly late, with biting cold (I had no thermometer with me, but it was keep-moving-before-your-clothes-freeze-up type cold), with thick snow driven very hard over the flat land. :chill: There weren't any rocks or trees to hide it behind, but we eventually managed to dig our snow hole down to hard earth to stand it on. :-)Originally Posted by Viking
MEN WANTED FOR HAZARDOUS JOURNEY. SMALL WAGES, BITTER COLD, LONG MONTHS OF COMPLETE DARKNESS, CONSTANT DANGER, SAFE RETURN DOUBTFUL. HONOR AND RECOGNITION IN CASE OF SUCCESS.
Reverend "Norwegian Spruce" Arctic Hobo of the Bushcrafti
I bought a load of stuff of them a while ago and it still only cost six quid postage.Originally Posted by bigjackbrass
I think they just have a minimum postage charge, should be enough stuff on their website to make up a decent order. :roll:
Tradition means not picking up the ashes, but passing on the flame.
I always bring a wooden board (or ski´s) to stand the trangia on. For windprotection use your rucksack. If the wind would be to hard I would use a windsack and wait it out.
-The Gateway to Nordic Bushcraft -