Can you cook with msr reactor
Once cream of the crop for boiling water in harsh climates, the MSR Reactor was crafted to provide quality performance in all conditions for one to three people. Unfortunately, it functions poorly on low, lacking the ability to simmer. The Reactor is a great tool for boiling water very fast and will stand up to all kinds of weather.
However, it lacks some of the conveniences of the other integrated canister stoves. Only backpackers who are also serious about alpine climbing, mountaineering, or backcountry ski trips should consider this stove. Compare to Similar Products. Soto Windmaster. JetBoil MiniMo. MSR Whisperlite Universal. Show full specification details Hide full specification details. Performance Comparison Dinner with a view and the Reactor. MSR says, put fire here. A Thermal Trip Mechanism shuts this stove down if it overheats to prevent a nasty canister explosion.
This is not a common occurrence, but once it's happened, the stove is simply rendered inoperable - leaving you without a functioning stove. Shield the burner with the pot when lighting in windy conditions.
The only way to get a fuel can and the burner into the Reactor pot is to place the fuel can in first upside down, then carefully put the burner in, also upside down, with the valve by the pot spout. Trying to do more than boil water is tricky with this stove. When it comes to precise pouring, the Reactor is the best integrated canister stove.
This warning tag is wired to the stove, you'll need a sturdy tool to remove it. The built-in heat exchanger is part of the Reactor's secret sauce.
Getting ready to launch the Reactor on a shoulder season trip. Learn More. Check Price at Backcountry Compare at 3 sellers. Fast boil time, storm-proof, easy to use. Lightweight, works in the wind, great piezo lighter, very stable for small canister stove. Light, fairly fuel efficient, piezoelectric lighter, can simmer. Versatile, stable, simmers easily with canister. Heavy, pot does not attach to stove, does not simmer, expensive.
Not the most fuel efficient, pot supports pack up separately from stove. Small burner head, poor wind performance. Heavy, takes time to switch fuel types, more expensive than other Whisperlites. Still a great choice for boiling water in harsh conditions above the treeline, but other stoves are more versatile. Our favorite small canister stove, providing the best performance for most backpackers. A great system for backpackers and alpine climbers relying on dehydrated, simple meals.
A shockingly small and lightweight inexpensive model. You'll learn to put the pot on and off to regulate it and you'll have a few boil overs before you get it right. As with any new gear practice at home several times first. I've cooked rice in mine without burning the bottom. I love the stove and have gotten rid of every other stove I have except a pocket rocket. That said, it is at its best when just cooking water. It is so fuel efficient that on some shorter trips I don't take a water filter or anything and just treat anything I drink with the stove.
Holy cow! I thought I had paragraphs when I typed this on my iPod but it didn't transfer. Try this again, hopefully make for easier reading.
Sounds doable, especially if you were able to cook rice and more so if you were at high altitude! Hats off to you. Something else I thought of - Powdered eggs. How would this fare? Best as I can imagine, you'd get something like an "egg cake". Scotland is always very wet, windy, and remote, with few opportunities to resupply. But that was really a secondary benefit as far as I was concerned. However, it never ceased to amaze my companions, especially when I made a brew out in the open on a windy day!
While you can use the pot with another stove, the stove has a special shape that will only work with 1. If you already own a Reactor system you can buy the different sized pots separately. The stove part of the Reactor is compatible with any size or make Isobutane fuel canister as long as it mates to the stove using screw-on threads.
This is normally not an issue in the US, but it can be a showstopper in the UK and Europe if you buy fuel canisters with a bayonet-style connector like the ones from Camping Gaz.
When lit, the stove fits into a recessed cavity on the bottom of the specially designed Reactor pots at an optimal distance for efficient heat transfer, eliminating the need for a separate windscreen. If you do it though, make sure you have a good breeze blowing through your shelter. To light the Reactor stove, you need to open the gas valve and use a match or firesteel to ignite the fuel vapor.
Although you can regulate how much gas the stove gets, the Reactor is primarily designed for boiling water or melting snow.
Simmering is difficult because the Reactor stove goes out when you try to turn the gas down low. Why is the pot so much more efficient than a regular backpacking pot?
It all boils har har down to the way the pot is made, with an integrated windscreen at the bottom, which acts as a double wall around the base of the inner pot.
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