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TOAKS Titanium Backpacking Wood Burning Stove (Large)

  • Based on 364 reviews
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Availability: 20 left in stock
Fulfilled by ToaksOutdoor

Arrives May 14 – May 15
Order within 10 hours and 2 minutes
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Size: Large


Features

  • Material: Titanium (no coating)
  • Weight: 7.9 oz (225g)
  • Dimensions: Packed: 4 1/8" (D) x 4 1/8" (H) (105mm x 105mm) Assembled: 4 1/8" (D) x 8" (H) (105mm x 205mm)
  • Origin: Designed by TOAKS in California and made in China
  • Notes: 1. Received Outdoor INDUSTRY AWARD 2015 Friedrichshafen, Germany. 2. TOAKS Titanium Backpacking Wood Burning Stove is compact/light, very easy to light the fire and of high efficiency. 3. The stove comprises of three parts, which can be stacked into each other and packed inside a fine and strong nylon stuff sack. 4. It can nest inside TOAKS 1100ml and 1600ml pots. 5. It can nest TOAKS 450ml Cup from outside.

Description

High quality, compact and lightweight backpacking wood burning stove. Durable and easy to carry – weighs only 7.9oz / 225gr. Made of titanium. Comes with a mesh storage sack. A great product for outdoor cooking, poykes, BBQs and camping. Product of Toaks.


Brand: TOAKS


Fuel Type: Wood


Material: Titanium


Product Dimensions: 4.13"L x 4.13"W x 8"H


Item Weight: 227 Grams


Product Dimensions: 3.94 x 3.94 x 3.94 inches


Item Weight: 8 ounces


Manufacturer: TOAKS


Item model number: FBA_STV-11


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Date First Available: January 15, 2015


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If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: May 14 – May 15

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Not Good AS IS - but quite good when I modified
Size: Large
UPDATE (5/30/18): I have FINALLY figured out best way to light the kindling! First cram a lot of twigs to fill the stove. The more the better but with lots of 1/16" diameter stuff mixed in. Then light a match and insert into one of the side holes and TIP the stove so the flame rises into the pack of twigs. A good wood match should last long enough and reach far enough to allow the twigs to catch. This is FAR better technique than any I've tried before using paper, Vaseline impregnated cotton balls, dried grass/vegetation ... anything. Works almost invariably with one match. Also, I no longer use clips to raise pot above metal rim. I'm just more patient to allow flame to get going first before putting pan/pot atop stove and thus blocking air flow. Further, I made a "platform" to raise base of stove 2". This platform is made out of perforated sheet of steel with 2 legs consisting of 2" bolts (very small diameter). UPDATED: (10/6/16) I just did three 6-7-day Sierra Nevada trips with only the Toaks, as modified. [I even made fires above 10,000 feet by loading up wood from low elevation so as not to violate the ethical consideration of the usual 10,000 foot limit - dry wood in the small quantities needed for a pot or two of boiling water is VERY light!]. It sure is a lot of fun. BUT, something few people seem to acknowledge, it makes really filthy pots and pans. I have dealt with this for decades using small cooking fires (no stove). So that is not a shock. But I just don't see any mention of this serious overhead with, I think, any wood stove. A surprise on my last trip is how sooty the below-mentioned clips get. One touch and your fingers/gloves are black! I wipe with small squares of papertowels before putting everything away. All this talk about "gassification" and the clean-burning implied is crap. The design IS very clever, but wood-burning will still get you and gear dirty. I'm happy to prepare for that. But let's be real, here. Also, I really, really need to make a base stabilizer because I found that I frequently jiggled the top-heavy stove when inserting new sticks. I've not toppled it yet, but it is SO damn top heavy and certainly will tip over some day. UPDATED (9/5/16): I find my Toaks burns VERY smokey if I don't have at least 1/4" gap between the pot and the top of the Toaks. I have added this gap using 3 tiny office paper clips which I have wired together to stay open w/o opening fully. Use the smallest ones you can find but be sure to tie the tops together with some thin wire so the clips don't splay open, thus losing you your gap. See photo below. ESSENTIAL: you absolutely need leather gloves to use such a wood stove or to use fire generally. For one thing, the clips i mention above get extremely sooty as do pots and pans. That's not to mention needing to handle very hot stove components and pots and such at times. UPDATED REVIEW (3/30/16): I have added a 1/4" aluminum rod atop which the innermost cylinder sits. It slides through opposing holes drilled into the bottom outer cylinder and is removable for proper stowing of all parts.That rod elevates the bottom inner cylinder 2" above the ground so when the flames die down the pot bottom is no longer 8" way away from the heat source. As a result, I had to drill out a bunch of holes to maintain the air flow as designed. I also added 3 clips (tiny office supply clips to grip papers) to add a gap between pot bottom and the top of the stove so flame pours out under the pot and smoke is minimal. AS IS, the stove tends to smoke more than I like. As I have modified the stove, I think it works MUCH better. I now like it a lot. It is not ridiculously deep as originally designed but still has tons of capacity for fuel much in excess of the Solo stove I first used, which would require constant feeding of ridiculously small pieces of wood. Now with the modified Toaks, I can feed in some serious sticks that will keep a nice flame going for 5 minutes or so w/o minding the fuel feed though I usually have a few sticks poked into the feed slot all the while. ........................... ORIGINAL REVIEW: I've used a couple other stoves and looked at reviews of almost everything that is out there. I used the Solo last year and felt it had way too small a fuel capacity to be practical. I modified it by taking out the wire sieve thing and bending the three tabs up - thus allowing for sticks about 5" long. Even so, though I liked it, it required constant feeding of tiny bits of wood (cones did not work well at all!). So I tried this Toaks stove. It takes MUCH larger pieces of wood but it is much more wasteful of fuel than the Solo and almost as wasteful of fuel as a small cooking fire would be (I've cooked on tiny fires for over 40 years). And once it gets burning, most of the flame flares out of the abundant holes at the top, not contributing enough to heating of pots, especially small pots. Also, if one fails to keep feeding it, the fire burns down too quickly, albeit not nearly as fast as with the Solo. Then the fire is a long way (5-7 inch gap) from the bottom of pots. So this stove solves the too-small fuel problem of the Solo but then suffers from the too-distant pot problem. I am going to make an adapter that will shut off most of the uppermost vents so once the stove gets going, much more of the flame will be applied to pots instead of just being wasted. I think this stove is maybe 2 inches too tall. The distance from average flame source to bottom of pot is about 8 inches. Too wasteful. I'd be better off, perhaps, just going back to my rock-ring small cooking fires. They are comparably efficient. But I have hopes for this stove. It is barely small enough to fit inside my outside pack pocket and has capacity inside for storing matches and Vaseline-impregnated cotton balls and such. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 22, 2016 by J. S. Radford J. S. Radford

  • An extremely simple and easy to use stove.
Size: Small
I bought this for both camping and one day adventures. Some cold days when out kayaking I just like to get on shore and make a fire for warmth or something warm to eat or drink. This little stove is easy to light with just grass or available tinder. Highly recommend for something simple, easy, and very portable. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 14, 2023 by Amazon Customer

  • Good quality product
Size: Large
I will recommend
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 28, 2023 by Krasimir Tolev

  • Nice but a bit fuel hungry
Size: Large
I am happy with this product but you really need a couple of metal rod style tent stakes to help prevent skinny containers from falling in. I carry four: 2 run through the holes at the top of the stove to hold small metal bottles and pots. The other 2 are staked into the ground to steady the stove when I place a frying pan on it. This thing produces a lot of heat really fast but you have to feed it constantly. And the temperature drops fast when you don't feed it -- so it take some practice getting used to how to cook with it. Still, it is super light weight and the titanium is easy to clean. If you just want to make some coffee, or sanitize water, or make a pot of oatmeal, this thing works great. It takes about 5 feet of 2" diameter wood to boil 32 oz of water. Also, there's open space in it when packed in its stuff bag, so you can use it to carry spices or whatever inside the stove. This product is much easier to use than the fold-up stove I bought. When your fingers are cold, its hard to assemble that other brand. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on October 29, 2020 by Lowell Boggs

  • A good compromise.
Size: Small
It sits a bit tall so the thing needs to be pretty full to get the full heat up on the pot, and it is tipper than other wood stoves I have. It stays together well and it is relatively easy to feed. Ventilation is good also. I find it very easy to take apart and stuff away with out getting as completely dirty as the Emberlit makes me, and it stays together better than the Vargo Hexagon. In the case of the Vargo, it not staying together well really makes it something you want to be careful using, Not good. With the Emberlit, the soot on your hands is not a serious problem, as the stove is otherwise amazing, but it is enough to make me less inclined to use it, when I am out walking and just wanting to make some tea. The Toaks is not quite as compact as those stoves, but it still nests well inside the Toaks 750 bail handle pot, with a liiiiitle bit of room to spare to put in something else. I did a Chinese style tea cup, as it is mostly a tea set up for me, but you could do a small supply of fire stuff or some other golf ball sized things and still keep them clean. If you are willing to get your stuff all sooty, there is a bunch more room inside the bag with the stove. I think one small improvement would be a slightly longer bag so that you could stuff it deeper into the stove to make more clean internal space. I think you could use just part of it as a stand for an alcohol stove, but I think that you would have a harder time with fuel tablets or gel. All in all a good stove, and I will have fun with it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 19, 2018 by ZenViking

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