Galley alcohol, gas, diesel and induction cookers/ovens

  • 02 Feb 2013 21:47
    Reply # 1196688 on 1195343
    Deleted user

    I have had burner spares from a company in Littlehampton in the south of England - Base-Camp .  Not the best website but they are quite helpful.

  • 02 Feb 2013 19:55
    Reply # 1196623 on 1196592
    Deleted user
    Paul Thompson wrote:
    Robert Groves wrote: The stove is not gimballed but is located close to the centre of effort so cooking is not a great challenge in most weather conditions.
    Hi Bob,

    Unless you have a rather unusual rig or your cooker is a few meters above your deck.... I suspect your cooker is not to near your CE. I think you mean the RC which is the roll centre of the boat and the position of least movement. :-)
    Yes that is a better description and the stove still really works well. We couldn't really find a good way to mount the stove with the gimbals this worked very well. I think Annie's stove in Badger was located in pretty well the same place. Made the correction to the wording.
  • 02 Feb 2013 19:08
    Reply # 1196592 on 1196091
    Robert Groves wrote: The stove is not gimballed but is located close to the centre of effort so cooking is not a great challenge in most weather conditions.
    Hi Bob,

    Unless you have a rather unusual rig or your cooker is a few meters above your deck.... I suspect your cooker is not to near your CE. I think you mean the RC which is the roll centre of the boat and the position of least movement. :-)
  • 02 Feb 2013 17:21
    Reply # 1196524 on 1195343
    Deleted user
    ok Annie will dig the fold up cooker out of the deep locker tomorrow and post the vitals. Meantime, for those having trouble sourcing Taylors parts try John Gardner in Southampton UK   taylorsheatersandcookers.co.uk   TONY
  • 02 Feb 2013 12:06
    Reply # 1196370 on 1195343

    There are some pictures/discussion/drawings for stove gimbles  here.  Although he's using a kerosene stove, perhaps it would be suitable.

    Peter

  • 02 Feb 2013 00:40
    Reply # 1196091 on 1195343
    Deleted user
    Over the years I have had a number of stoves. The Coleman in both white gas and propane were very good. An Optimus pressure alcohol stove was an accident waiting to happen. Our two burner Origo stove was excellent but when we had it we had difficulty finding alcohol outside of North America and during one cruise pretty well had to quit cooking when we had only one gallon left for three months of travel.  Thought rum might work but never gave it a try. Traded the Origo for a fisherman's anchor that we get more use from.The past eight years have been with a Taylors and the parts are expensive and getting harder to find. We have a store of parts for a number of years to come and find getting fuel not to be a problem at all. We have used kerosene, Jet A and minerla spirits with no problems. We do enjoy the oven and use it regularly. The stove is not gimballed but is located close to the roll centre (thanks Paul) so cooking is not a great challenge in most weather conditions. The oven racks are adjustable to compensate for the heel of the boat and more than once Kathy has asked to go on the other tack so she could bake easier. I have found some really interesting alcohol inserts at http://www.marinestove.com/Accessories.htm that will likely fit in the burner holes in the casting when the day comes that we need to make a choice of stoves again.
    Last modified: 02 Feb 2013 19:57 | Deleted user
  • 01 Feb 2013 20:50
    Reply # 1195901 on 1195343
    I fitted my own gimbals with the pivot point 50mm above the top of the cooker, and added a very large lead weight underneath. Doing both these things makes the gimballing acceptable, though it can never be perfect, as the tank is off the pivot line and its weight will vary with the level of fuel.

    One very good thing about the Maxie is that the pan supports are surrounded by a very high rail, and there has never been any tendency for pans to leap off in lively weather. I rarely use the pan clamps. The Origo seems to rely solely on pan clamps.
  • 01 Feb 2013 20:09
    Reply # 1195876 on 1195343
    I have a two burner Maxie that friends gave me when they upgraded. I had always heard that they were slow but I find it works just fine. As for the gimbaling I find if the tank is not near full it's fairly useless. I put Nyloc nuts on gimbal bolts and just tighten them up a bit to take the swing out of  it.
  • 01 Feb 2013 19:28
    Reply # 1195838 on 1195343
    When I saw David's Maxie stove in action, I quite fell in love with it and bought one for myself.  It is more expensive to use than a propane one, but I have found a source that sells bulk alcohol which brings the cost down  to about $8 a week.  That's a bit under four quid and I do a lot of cooking.  I've not had David's problem with icky fingers, but then I tend to fill the cooker directly from a 1 litre bottle via a funnel and don't usually have any spillages.  My only real bitch with the Maxie is that the gimballing' system is pretty useless, even with the addition of a lead weight.  It is much more a pendulum than a pivot and coming back from Mahurangi recently, in a bit of a wild sea, I really couldn't use it.  Another more minor gripe is that the pan supports are too far apart: one of my pans tends to tip up on it and I only dare to use my espresso coffee jug in flat calm conditions.

    The camp oven is a good idea and I would like to have an oven for various different recipes that I miss cooking, and also to bake a loaf-shaped loaf.  (My frying pan is just too small to contain any of the loaf tins I can find.)  I once had a folding oven and I recall finding a problem with it, insofar as it completely tied up one burner (where do you put a red-hot oven down?) and only allowed room for a small pan on the other.  I looked up the specs of the Coleman, but could only find approximate dimensions - the 10 in square rack adjusts to 3 cooking heights.  Could you give me the genuine dimensions, please, Tony.  It might just fit between my fiddle rails and I would give it serious consideration in that case.
  • 01 Feb 2013 16:53
    Reply # 1195700 on 1195343
    Deleted user
    We have a Colemans fold up oven which we used to use on our campervan, which only had two burners .Its a great bit of kit, will bake a big loaf, roast a whole chicken , even has a themometer built into the door. Folds flat for stowing and only costs 50 quid.it will sit on one burner or across two for high temperature cooking.irrespective of your heat source, tony
    Last modified: 01 Feb 2013 16:55 | Deleted user
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