Alcohol Stove Efficiency
Posted: Sun Mar 29, 2009 10:10 pm
I have been busy lately building and comparing Alcohol stoves. In particular the Penny stove made with Heineken cans and..well, a penny.
I have been trying to figure out if the 4 oz weight of my store bought Mini Trangia(Made by fellow Swede's for 150 years) is worth it's weight over a "beer" can stove.
What I found:
Weight wise it is no comparison.
The Mini Trangia is 4 OZ with a dry wick... period.
The Penny stove does not even register on my kitchen scale.
But being an amateur physicist I wanted to know the total efficiency of each to compare their respective fuel/weight burdens over time.
What I found is admittedly not the final word or even objective. I welcome any comments or suggestions. If anyone has a different experience I would love to hear it.. indeed that is the point of my posting!
So, here goes:
The Trangia, dry, given 1 fluid oz of Denatured alcohol at 60 degrees F(fuel and stove) will boil 2 cups of 56 F water in 9 minutes with fuel to spare. The stove was extinguished, allowed to cool, capped and put into the freezer(simulate overnight).
The Penny stove given 1 fluid oz of denatured Alcohol at 60 degrees will boil 2 cups of 56 F water in 8 minutes. Water was poured out and 1 cup of 56 degree water was added immediately. The Penny burned for 2 more minutes heating the "third" cup to 140 degrees. The Penny had totally expended it's fuel.
The Trangia was now retrieved from the freezer and relit. 1 cup of 56 F water is placed on it. It reaches boil in 5 1/2 minutes. The cup is dumped and a fresh cup of 56 F water is placed on the stove. The Trangia runs dry after 2 minutes with the second(actually fourth!) cup of water reaching 140 F.
Interesting.
I cannot conclude anything for certain due to the VERY subjective nature of the construction of the "pop" can stove. But I did find some facts useful.
Practical Things:
The Penny stove required 1 minute of priming before it began to burn smoothly.
The Mini Trangia required 25 seconds.
The Penny stove has no way to contain unburned fuel.
The Trangia can be screwed shut to save any fuel remaining indefinitely.
Subjective Things:
That last point is what I am getting around to. The 4 ounce weight penalty appears to net a real world advantage. In that, for 1 fluid ounce of fuel, The Trangia 28 can boil 2 cups of water for dinner and have enough fuel left over to boil 1 cup in the morning for breakfast.
The Penny stove expends it's 1 fluid ounce of fuel boiling 2 cups for dinner, the remaining fuel would not be enough for breakfast, therefore more would have to be added creating more evaporative losses.
The effect of Heat Capacity:
I am thinking that the heavier Trangia conserves the heat of combustion better than the aluminum can. The saved heat evaporates more fuel and aides the efficiency of the burn.
Ideally all the heat associated with combustion would be put into the water.
Of course the heavier construction exacts a greater amount of energy upon startup.
Yet the Penny stove requires more priming time. Perhaps the presence of the wick inside the Trangia accounts for it's quicker preheat time. Or perhaps the much lower degree of heat capacity of the tin can Penny stove boils the alcohol faster or loses much more latent heat to it's surroundings.
Weight Savings/Fuel Savings
At 3 cups of boiling water per ounce VS 2 cups, I would be saving 1/3 fluid ounce of Alcohol per day using the Trangia. That's three ounces in ten days.
During the entire planned PCT hike, if I cooked every day for 150 days, that would be about 50 fluid ounces saved.
It's kinda weird, but I would carry 4 (weight) ounces of Trangia stove everyday but It would amount to only 1 (weight) ounce after 10 days due to fuel/weight savings over the Penny, but only if i carry less fuel to begin with!
It really only amounts to a direct weight savings if you have to carry more than 11 days of fuel. My longest time between resupplies is 10 days.
So in effect I would be carrying 1 extra ounce of stove around, all the time, for the sake of not burning the 50 extra fluid ounces of denatured alcohol in 5 1/2 months.
:retard:
I am thinking I need to put a wick in the Penny stove and do the experiment over.
Any thoughts?
I have been trying to figure out if the 4 oz weight of my store bought Mini Trangia(Made by fellow Swede's for 150 years) is worth it's weight over a "beer" can stove.
What I found:
Weight wise it is no comparison.
The Mini Trangia is 4 OZ with a dry wick... period.
The Penny stove does not even register on my kitchen scale.
But being an amateur physicist I wanted to know the total efficiency of each to compare their respective fuel/weight burdens over time.
What I found is admittedly not the final word or even objective. I welcome any comments or suggestions. If anyone has a different experience I would love to hear it.. indeed that is the point of my posting!
So, here goes:
The Trangia, dry, given 1 fluid oz of Denatured alcohol at 60 degrees F(fuel and stove) will boil 2 cups of 56 F water in 9 minutes with fuel to spare. The stove was extinguished, allowed to cool, capped and put into the freezer(simulate overnight).
The Penny stove given 1 fluid oz of denatured Alcohol at 60 degrees will boil 2 cups of 56 F water in 8 minutes. Water was poured out and 1 cup of 56 degree water was added immediately. The Penny burned for 2 more minutes heating the "third" cup to 140 degrees. The Penny had totally expended it's fuel.
The Trangia was now retrieved from the freezer and relit. 1 cup of 56 F water is placed on it. It reaches boil in 5 1/2 minutes. The cup is dumped and a fresh cup of 56 F water is placed on the stove. The Trangia runs dry after 2 minutes with the second(actually fourth!) cup of water reaching 140 F.
Interesting.
I cannot conclude anything for certain due to the VERY subjective nature of the construction of the "pop" can stove. But I did find some facts useful.
Practical Things:
The Penny stove required 1 minute of priming before it began to burn smoothly.
The Mini Trangia required 25 seconds.
The Penny stove has no way to contain unburned fuel.
The Trangia can be screwed shut to save any fuel remaining indefinitely.
Subjective Things:
That last point is what I am getting around to. The 4 ounce weight penalty appears to net a real world advantage. In that, for 1 fluid ounce of fuel, The Trangia 28 can boil 2 cups of water for dinner and have enough fuel left over to boil 1 cup in the morning for breakfast.
The Penny stove expends it's 1 fluid ounce of fuel boiling 2 cups for dinner, the remaining fuel would not be enough for breakfast, therefore more would have to be added creating more evaporative losses.
The effect of Heat Capacity:
I am thinking that the heavier Trangia conserves the heat of combustion better than the aluminum can. The saved heat evaporates more fuel and aides the efficiency of the burn.
Ideally all the heat associated with combustion would be put into the water.
Of course the heavier construction exacts a greater amount of energy upon startup.
Yet the Penny stove requires more priming time. Perhaps the presence of the wick inside the Trangia accounts for it's quicker preheat time. Or perhaps the much lower degree of heat capacity of the tin can Penny stove boils the alcohol faster or loses much more latent heat to it's surroundings.
Weight Savings/Fuel Savings
At 3 cups of boiling water per ounce VS 2 cups, I would be saving 1/3 fluid ounce of Alcohol per day using the Trangia. That's three ounces in ten days.
During the entire planned PCT hike, if I cooked every day for 150 days, that would be about 50 fluid ounces saved.
It's kinda weird, but I would carry 4 (weight) ounces of Trangia stove everyday but It would amount to only 1 (weight) ounce after 10 days due to fuel/weight savings over the Penny, but only if i carry less fuel to begin with!
It really only amounts to a direct weight savings if you have to carry more than 11 days of fuel. My longest time between resupplies is 10 days.
So in effect I would be carrying 1 extra ounce of stove around, all the time, for the sake of not burning the 50 extra fluid ounces of denatured alcohol in 5 1/2 months.
:retard:
I am thinking I need to put a wick in the Penny stove and do the experiment over.
Any thoughts?