Solo Lite

Solo Lite




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Solo Lite

Description


Capacity: 1~2 people
Material: Aluminum


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The Solo Lite is a hard anodizing cookware set made of high grade aluminum. The pot’s lid can be used as a frying pan.



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Backpacking Stoves




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4.6 out of 5 stars

1,242 ratings



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Top reviews



Most recent



Top reviews













As is my experience with ordering from Amazon, my stove arrived promptly and in good condition. My first surprise was that the Solo Stove was not shipped in an oversized box with lots of protective packing. The stove was shipped in a box just large enough for the stove with no extra protective packing. Frankly I was impressed that the manufacturer had enough faith in the quality of construction of the stove to ship without lots of protective packing. After unpacking and inspecting the Solo Stove, I found that the quality of construction exceeded my expectations. We have been able to use the stove backpacking for 2 weekends as well as to make several meals in the back yard. We are very happy with the Solo Stove. The stove is easy to light, burns hot and relatively clean, especially with dry hard wood. Since the stove is very efficient, it is easy even in wet weather to find more than enough dry fuel even in wet weather. We have tried the stove with various camping and backpacking pots and pans, and have found the pot stand to be adequately stable. The only pan we didn't feel comfortable stability wise was our GSI Wok due to its small diameter flat bottom. I will probably fabricate a stainless hardware cloth stand for use with the Wok. The Solo Stove worked well as a pot stand for my soda can alcohol stove and by flipping the soda can stove I can cook with Esbit tabs. I like having alternative sources of fuel for cooking in areas where burning wood is an issue. We are very happy with the Solo Stove and expect it to last many years. I plan to retire our Zip stove and the Solo Stove will be my primary wood burning pack stove. I would definitely recommend the Solo Stove to a friend or relative. Update: Well I am adding a review of my newest and third solo stove since Amazon wont let me add a separate review of the new stove. ------------------------------------------------------- I still am very happy with my first Solo Stove and immediately got one for my son. The subject of this review is actually our third original Solo Stove. We keep a Solo Stove in both my wife's car and my pick-up. I decided a it would be handy to have a third stove so we didn't have to pull one from one of the vehicles when we went somewhere with the bikes, kayaking or backpacking. Having three stoves may sound excessive, but my wife and I are retired, and don't live in the city. Our time is more or less our own and we enjoy being able to stop and brew up a pot or coffee, tea or whip up a meal as we please. The Solo Stoves are preface for us, so on to the review. Upon receiving the new Solo Stove, I decided to compare it to the stove I reviewed April 29, 2012. The first difference I noticed was a much better stuff sack for the stove. The sack with the new stove is of much better construction and appears to be the same construction and material as provided withy the Solo Stove Titan and Solo Pots. After comparison of the stoves, the only difference I could detect was an apparent change in the attachment design of the wire ash grate. The new ash great appears to be every bit as rugged and durable as my first stove. Since only time and use will tell, we decided to take our first Solo Stove and the new Solo Stove on a camping and kayaking outing we had planned. Our outing was planned to be only for one week and weight wasn't a huge issue as everything would be carried in the kayaks with only very short portages. Normally we would have chosen one original Solo Stove and the Solo Stove Titan since we cook real food as opposed to boiling a little water to hydrate a packaged freeze dried meal. We used the new stove as our primary stove and our oldest Solo Stove as a second burner. As expected the newest Solo Stove performed flawlessly. We cooked soups, stews, fried, poached, steamed, stir fried and with our Banks Fry Bake pan and Scorch Buster we even baked a cake, pies, breads and even pizzas. Now that sounds like a lot of food for a week outing and it would be except we were enjoying ourselves so much we did a couple resupply runs to the nearest town and stayed out three weeks. Thinking back I wish I had kept track of how many times we actually sued the new stove but unfortunately didn't think of it. I can only describe the average days use. First thing in the morning make a pot of coffee, cook breakfast, heat water to wash dishes, boil the days drinking water, go play on water or put in some miles, brew pot of tea for lunch and make lunch, heat water for after lunch clean up and if needed boil water to replenish drinking water, back to play, cook supper, heat water for clean up, make an evening snack and cup of cocoa before bed. Probably that sounds like a tremendous amount work and wasted time to the average 21st. century backcountry traveler but my wife and I enjoy our time in the outdoors frankly we are in no hurry to put in as many miles as possible in order to get to our take out and back home. After arriving home we cleaned up the stoves, washed the stuff sacks and inspected the new stove and stuff sack of signs of wear, degradation, or damage. Other than minor discoloration, the stove in our opinion the stove was as good as new as was our oldest Solo Stove. I have no doubts that our Solo Stoves will still be going strong long after my wife and I have passed and will provide many years of service to whoever ends up with them. In closing I would like to add that in my opinion The original Solo Stove is the perfect choice for todays backpacker. It is the preface size for preparing freeze dried meals and when honestly comparing weight of stove and fuel for anything beyond a weekend of power bars and one meal a day of Raman Noodles or a freeze dried meal. I will continue to highly recommend the Solo Stove to anyone interested in hearing my opinion.












Very light, stable and efficient. Puts out good heat with very little fuel. Haven't cooked with it yet, but looks like it will perform well. I highly recommend for backpackers where campfires are a problem or prohibited.












I have owned mine for years using it over 150 times. I have bought several as gifts Nandrecommended this dozens of times. I originally was wanting the Titanium Bush Buddy stove, but couldnt wait months for them to make it for a big trip I had coming up. I tried the Solo Stove variation and so glad I did. Besides saving a lot of money and getting it inactive timely manner, it has performed flawlessly. I also keep a Trangia alcohol stove in it in case I cant start a twig fire for what ever reason or sometimes i like to just wake up I'm the morning and not leave my hammock, and just use the Trangia with alcohol to make my coffee so i can stay in my hammock (this also makes for a good backup way to be able to cook and boil from inside your house if there is a power outage). Besides the Trangia, I store this stove in my Keith Titanium pot set which first everything all into one nice neat package. I find the combination of this Solo Stove, the Trangia alcohol as backup, and Keith Titanium Pot set to be a VERY hard solution to beat in price, weight, size, versatility, reliability, etc. Solo stove also has a similar alcohol stove and a pot set, but I prefer the Trangia and Keith solutions for that part of this kit. As for just this Solo Stove, I find being able to have a smokeless fire that doesnt hurt the vegetation below it and efficiently burns from the smallest amount of organic materials (twigs, sticks, paper, leaves, etc) to be a huge selling point to the gasification design. I have had zero warping of the metal shell and it functions as good today over 150 uses later. I find the size to be perfect for a single person (you can do more, but it's really perfect for one). The rack that holds your pot/pan about the flame is adequately sized and stable to handle the amount of food or water a single person would be working with and I really appreciate how simple it takes apart for transporting and stores inside itself (yet very stable when supporting your single pets and pans). The gasification process not only gets as much energy out of your twigs and such, but as an added bonus gives you a stealthy smokeless fire. The results after you use it, is the finest powdered ashes you have ever felt. You have an extremely small foot print with this stove, use less materials, arent broadcasting your location, and leave no trace behind as well as no impact to delicate roots and vegetation where you used it. I cant say enough good things about this stove (especially combined with the other 2 things I mentioned). Besides my knife and titanium canteen, this Solo Stove (and other 2 irems) are the items I want on me, if I'm back packing, canoeing, hiking, bush crafting, etc. Great product!!!






5.0 out of 5 stars

Your most versatile stove to own








By Chris M. Christian on December 4, 2019

















So this is just initial review. We test fired it up using alchohol full and water. Btw we also bought the kettle and alcohol burner. We used very little alcohol to boil a small kettle of water. It did leave soot on the bottom but that was to expected. Everything packed into the kettle nicely and comes with a small bag. When we go on our camping hike I will try and post a video.


5.0 out of 5 stars









Light Weight Quality












Purchased this when on sale at £49.99. as I like the concept of free fuel I usually carry an mkettle to boil water for a brew and rehydrating freeze dried meals. Wanting to cook on a wood stove I opted for this after watching reviews on youtube. The stove arrived in very strong packaging and when weighed including bag came out at 265 grams. I have twinned this with an Alpkit 900ml mytipot, 100 grams and £4.99 cheaper than the solo pot. In practical use the stove quickly boils a pot full of water (see youtube for top down burn and practice a few times to get the hang of it). The pot will soot despite the manufactures claim of a clean burn but if you use wood frequently as a fuel source this won't bother you. I also carry a Trail Designs alcohol stove (16 grams) and simmer ring (4 grams) which work fine sat inside the stove for bad weather or if I'm in a hurry. This stove is fantastic for cooking burning wood, a quality item that I would have been happy to pay full price for. If all you want to do however is boil water I would opt for the mkettle (418 grams with bag) as the soot is confined to the chimey and therefore less of a mess. If you use an alcohol stove as your primary cook method but like the idea of wood as a back up opt for the Vargo Hexagon Wood stove (137 grams with bag), this is a pot stand and wind shield with wood stove which flat packs. I have no connection to any business or supplier, these product reviews are based only on practical applications, the items being purchased with my own hard earned cash. I


5.0 out of 5 stars









Great little cooking system.












Super impressed with this. Using an additional solo alcohol burner: https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B008VZ91WO/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o07_s02?ie=UTF8&psc=1 Just 100ml of methylated spirit boiled about 2.5 litres of water or a cooking flame that will burn for 20-25mins, with 900ml (the supplied pots capacity) of water coming to a rolling boil in about 6-8mins depending on weather conditions, I would definitely recommend some kind of wind shield for best results and not wasting fuel. Once the gasification kicks in it really is a roaring little jet flame, so it is more suited to just boiling water in the supplied pot as you will only be able to have any kind of temperature control for food cooking by holding a cooking pot slightly off direct contact with the flame, otherwise food will burn very easily. For cooking of food I would seriously consider getting yourself an additional lower, wider pot, as the tall one that comes with the stove is really only suitable for having a ready supply of boiling water. I have also used it, albeit only twice, with dead wood and pine cones for fuel, and provided you follow the sensible, common sense way of getting such material burning, i.e starting with very small dry(ish) kindling and building up to thumb sized pieces of fuel, it's performance was every bit as good, even damp wood burnt without issue once the gasification process has started. The trick with using solid fuel is to prepare ahead, collect the fuel that you will need as you go during the day, and have some guaranteed way of getting the fire started, I take cotton balls smeared with Vaseline, which will get a flame going in even the wettest of conditions. But overall, any downsides are far outweighed by the performance of it when it gets going. For the coming zombie apocalypse, it's an essential 'off grid' piece of equipment :).


5.0 out of 5 stars









Lightweight and efficient












I've just finished a seven-day trip through the lower parts of the Scottish Highlands using this stove for all my cooking. It performed superbly throughout the trip and the time taken in gathering wood and the slow boil time was a small price to pay for not having to carry meths, gas or solid fuel with me. I also like the principle of using naturally occurring fuel and not creating the waste disposal problems associated with yet more empty gas canisters. Thanks to the dual wall construction, the base of the stove remains cool, so, with care, you can use it in areas where open fires are forbidden due to fire risk. Of course, there is a small amount of ash produced, and you must ensure that this is completely cold before emptying it, in order to avoid the risk of starting a fire. It takes a little bit of practice to get the best performance out of this stove, and the quality and type of fuel available to you will determine how hot it gets. Soft woods burn fast, and produce less heat than hard woods. If you are using soft woods, then be prepared to spend much of your cooking time poking additional fuel in through the gap in the top ring. Be aware that this stove will take longer to boil water than a meths / alcohol stove, and much, much longer than a jetboil or other gas stove. You will also have to factor in the time taken to gather fuel as part of your evening routine, though if you are camping near forestry blocks and other wooded areas this is not too arduous. The stove can be top heavy so it pays to take a little extra time to make sure it is secure and level before starting.


5.0 out of 5 stars









I love that it's so eco friendly












I've had this four months now and it is fab! I work as bushcraft and forest schools teacher, and used it on days and short stays in the woods and I has never let me down. I recently went camping for three weeks and took no stove other than this - it truly came into its own! We had freshly cooked trout, fresh veg curries, and many other cooked from scratch meals, not to mention copious cups of tea! I love that it's so eco friendly, no gas canisters or chemical fuels. Practice with it to truly become experienced with it. Love, love love it!












This is great fun while camping out of a car in the dry but I wouldnt use it as a substitute for a gas/alcohol/solid fuel stove if youre expecting wet weather as it takes some time to get going and requires a lot of nurturing. Well made and nests together nicely


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