by rucksack » Tue 26 Jul, 2011 10:26 am
I would forget about the MSR Simmerlite stove, if you want reliable simmering. There are three currently available liquid fuel stoves in Australia which will simmer without resorting to arcane 'stove rituals': the Primus OmniFuel, Optimus Nova/Nova+ and the MSR Dragonfly. All have 2 control valves, one at the fuel bottle/pump and the other at the stove. Dual control valves are a prerequisite for reliable, predictable and, dare I say, successful simmering with a liquid fuel stove. The Simmerlite is a single control valve stove. It can simmer, but not simply or easily. I have used the Primus OmniFuel, Optimus Nova and the MSR Dragonfly and all have simmered relatively easily and consistently and can be used for cooking as compared to simply 'nuking' water or melting snow. The attraction of the MSR Simmerlite is its relative weight, (as compared with the MSR Dragonfly), but if simmering ability is what you are after, and you want an MSR, it's the Dragonfly. I use an OmniFuel, because it can also handle LPG canisters, but we all know where the empty, non-refillable LPG canisters end up - as landfill. And yes, it does bother me. If you want a stove that reliably simmers, well, any LPG canister stove will do that. If you want a liquid fuel stove that can simmer, the choices are limited. Personally, I wouldn't count the Simmerlite as being amongst those limited choices. To seriously misquote Orwell: two valves good, one valve bad.
rucksack