650ml or something of a similar diameter is ideal. I'm not sure what you'd gain by going bigger. I suppose you could up the capacity while retaining the same diameter but increasing volume beyond what you need is generally inefficient.The 22g stove gets a lot of mentions and is obviously light. Tbh, I'm not sure what I really want but saving weight makes sense so to start with I'm thinking of giving it a try. A couple of questions...What type of cup/pot is best with this stove? Looks like 500ml using 20ml meths seems to be what People are using, is best to go for a slightly bigger cup - 650ml?
Sadly, at this moment in time, I can't obtain the bits to make any. The 'benefit' is that it offers a degree of adjustment, the downside is that you need a windshield capable of supporting a pot above the stove.s anyone using the Afterburner? Is this better or rather, what would the benefits be using this?
It works but it is somewhat niche. Usually if people need a burn time of say longer than 12 minutes, then they'd perhaps be better served with something other than an ultralight stove set-up. Little gas stove maybe?How about the system to draw the meths from a bottle to give continuous flame? Do People use this?
A 22g is ideal for the above and you've probably described what most people use them forI'm not being too ambitious with the cooking, one-pot noodles or those pre-packed just add water meals, hot evening drink, porridge in morning with a couple of coffees.