T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
554.1 | Cooking with Gas! | PACKER::GIBSON | DTN225-5193 | Thu Nov 09 1989 08:56 | 20 |
| I'm not familier with that brand name. The stove I have one my boat is
a two burner Alcohol type and I'm real pleased with it. It cooks
quickly and efficently with no smell. Approx one gallon of Alcohol will
last me all season, but I don't cook that much with it. Maybe on the
average I boil about 10 to 12 lobsters twice a week and make coffee or
soup on it. The biggest meals have consisted of Bacon,Eggs,Pancakes,
Burgers,Dogs,Fish Ect.... For long cooking things like Chili or potroast I
bring a crockpot to the boat and plug it in shorepower at the dock.
All in All I really like it. I don't think I would bother buy the
Electric Combo type as I don't like the way an electric stove cooks
anyway. The Alcohol is much closer to have a LP or Natural Gas Stove.
I would also stay away from Propane or LP Gas on a boat due to its'
fire and explosion potential. They are both heavier than air and will
settle in the bilge if the system leaks. One spark and you get the "Big
Boom" affect. I'd rather just fill my little Al stove by hand and know
its safe.
Walt
|
554.2 | | SQPUFF::HASKELL | | Thu Nov 09 1989 10:37 | 8 |
| I have a two burner Origo and the wife and I are more than satisfied
with it and with the speed that it cooks.
Have used it one season and would not consider any other stove.
Paul
|
554.3 | kerosene, propane, or CNG, not alcohol | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu Nov 09 1989 12:17 | 21 |
| re .1:
Alcohol stoves as a class (pressurized and non-pressurized) cause more boat
fires than anything else. Properly installed propane and compressed natural
gas stoves are quite safe -- certainly much safer (in my view) than gasoline
engines. (My insurance is not higher because we have a propane stove. It would
be higher if we had a gasoline engine, I think.) We've had a propane stove for
ten years with nary a leak or problem.
re .1 and .2:
Alcohol flames are much less hot than propane, kerosene, or CNG flames and
therefore will heat water and cook more slowly. We had a pressurized alcohol
stove on our first boat -- what a wretched device. The alcohol smell (fumes)
made me seasick (as they do many people) , and the stove was abysmally slow to
cook anything. Our propane stove will heat water several times as fast (both a
hotter flame and a bigger flame). Nobody I've ever talked to would willing buy
an alcohol stove after using a propane or CNG stove. True, the Origo alcohol
stoves are the best of the type and are much cheaper than a good propane stove
properly installed. For occasional use an Origo is fine. For serious cruising
or living aboard, the unanimous choice is not alcohol.
|
554.4 | I don't like them | MAMTS3::WFIGANIAK | YEAH..GET THE RED ONE | Thu Nov 09 1989 15:04 | 6 |
| I have a pump type two burner alchol stove on my boat. Used it once
and never again. It is to hard to get going no less regulate. I
went a bought a Coleman propane camp stove set it on a small table
in the cockpit when I want and it cooks fast. the nice thing is
the way it packs up so I never leave it on board. If I had any other
choice I'd have a micro wave.
|
554.5 | alcohol is a good example of a bad example | TYCOBB::J_BORZUMATO | | Fri Nov 10 1989 11:41 | 15 |
| re: .3 and .4 I COULDN'T AGREE MORE. This is my 4th boat and
my second propane stove. (boat 3 had alchy, boat 4
had the combo set-up) There was an article on
cooking sources last spring, 3 percent of the
fires were caused by propane, 97% BY ALCOHOL.
Stay the hell away from it, besides your ins. will
go up, and you will not add any value, or maintain
it when you sell it.Someone might insist you
remove it.
Jim. (who likes his coffee soon ater he's up)
|
554.6 | Alcohol is for internal use Only! | BIZNIS::CADMUS | | Fri Nov 10 1989 12:01 | 34 |
|
I've seen two boat fires where the boat burned to the and was
destroyed- both
from alcohol stoves and leaking alcohol catching fire.
One was fairly new sailboat in Bristol Harbor in Bristol RI. - the
alcohol leaked and since it is a clear lioquid, it wasn't seen until it
caught fire. In the dailight the flames are even sometimes tough to
see. The result was the galley had a good blazwe before it was noticed.
the guy and his wife went over the side- burned pretty good. The, boat
got twed to sure burning like the blazes. It burned on the shore until
all that was left was the keel and the engine.
THe second boat belonged to my father and Uncle. My uncle was a skilled
boatbuilder/carpenter who built wooden prototype boats for soem of the
yard on the Jersey coast. He and my dad spent all their $ and time for
three years and built a beatiful mahagony 29' Cruiser.
When the boat was a year old, the alcohol stove leaked and the burning
alcohol leaked down between the cabinets in the galley. The curtans
caught on fire and away she went. They got the fire out, but the
boat was prety well gone- they managed to contain the fire nd the
engines were good- The boat was declared a total loss.
A properly installed propane stove is my choice- for all the reasons
mentioned previously- and propane can also be used for refrigeration.
If you smell gas with propane- you have a leak. If you smell alcohol
with an alcohol stiove- there is a leak, the stove is on, or both.
|
554.7 | Related question | DNEAST::OKERHOLM_PAU | | Mon Nov 13 1989 11:21 | 5 |
| How about carbon monoxide? Do alcohol or propane give off enough
CO to cause a problem?
Just Curious
Paul
|
554.8 | 16/below w/ chill factor & thinkin' about a barbecue | HAZEL::YELINEK | WITHIN 10 | Mon Dec 04 1989 10:05 | 16 |
| I'm still assembling my list of boating paraphernalia for the upcoming
group marine purchase. I'd like to order one of those marine barbecues
advertised in just about every marine equip. magazine I've ever
seen...I belive the brandname is 'Magma', the unit is round, stainless
steel and can be ordered for use with charcoal or propane. I'm leaning
towards the propane....so I don't have to lug charcoal around and
propane seems ideal to heat up a pot of coffee. No need to light
charcoal and wait a half hour for the coals to turn grey.
Anyone have any experience/comments about this grill? I also don't
know which mount to select for use with the grill....the one that
attaches to a rail ---OR___ the one that sticks into a rod holder.
Anyone have any experience w/ either/or?
/MArk
|