Middlejake
New member
Just joined the site and thought I'd show a stove idea I used back in 09. While staying a winter at the Slabs, I noticed there was a surplus of old coffee cans lying around. Started cooking on a hobo stove every night. I wanted to take one with but they seemed to much of a pain to pack.
It fits into the large BDU pocket of the long sleeve fatigue.
Those are the four sections of the stove. And a kitty cat. Cat not required for the stove to function, but I hear they taste good.
Each section has a tab cut on the top and the bottom so the pieces slide together. I then used a piece of a hanger that I bent into a small right angle to slide into holes that I punched through both tabs once it was together(just used a hammer and a nail). Without the pieces of hanger, my pot of water would flatten the stove and put out my fire
.
So. Hope everyone gets the idea of how it was made. You can see the tabs on the top and bottom some. This little sucker didn't work too bad. Lasted me a year I think before the metal started to go. Don't know if this is an original idea, but I hope it helps someone out there.
It fits into the large BDU pocket of the long sleeve fatigue.
Those are the four sections of the stove. And a kitty cat. Cat not required for the stove to function, but I hear they taste good.
Each section has a tab cut on the top and the bottom so the pieces slide together. I then used a piece of a hanger that I bent into a small right angle to slide into holes that I punched through both tabs once it was together(just used a hammer and a nail). Without the pieces of hanger, my pot of water would flatten the stove and put out my fire
So. Hope everyone gets the idea of how it was made. You can see the tabs on the top and bottom some. This little sucker didn't work too bad. Lasted me a year I think before the metal started to go. Don't know if this is an original idea, but I hope it helps someone out there.