JWolf, your stove is light, but you left out the cannister of fuel.
Have a look at what I use and Bob R mentions above:
> The Firelight Esbit Wing Stove weighs only 0.4 oz, and two 0.5 oz fuel tabs will boil a quart of water. Add an aluminum or titanium mug/pot, and your total system weighs in at less than 4 ounces.
Click on the image to see the Backpacking Light info:
JWolf, your stove is light, but you left out the cannister of fuel.
Have a look at what I use and Bob R mentions above:
> The Firelight Esbit Wing Stove weighs only 0.4 oz, and two 0.5 oz fuel tabs will boil a quart of water. Add an aluminum or titanium mug/pot, and your total system weighs in at less than 4 ounces.
Click on the image to see the Backpacking Light info:
That's a sweet stove and I would probably use that if I did PCT or JMT. Rangers in So. Nevada like to give crap about alcohol or esbit stoves being "open flames" with fire restrictions though.
I forgot about this thread. The 2.2 ounce pad was no good and would not hold it's shape even if you just pressed your hand into it, got holes in it very easy and over all would never last weeks in the back country.
It has worked flawlessly. There is one thing that you have to get used to though with an alcohol burning stove. You can't rest the pot on the top of the stove until the flames blossom out of the jet holes on the side. Seeing those jets is easy at night, but is nearly impossible in the daylight. For that reason, experience and practice is pretty helpful, but with experience you can hear a little "whoof" to let you know that the jets have blossomed. Once you learn how to use this stove, it is a champ.