Hi all,
Long time no speak, been a busy few months for me; applying
for teacher training, interviews etc, a period during which I haven’t been out
much at all.
On the plus side; here’s a review of the Trekmates Flameless
Cook System (FCS).
RRP £20/£30
Begrudingly I conceded it’s time
to replace my helmet having had it for 5 years now, it’s certainly served me
well. I headed over to Go Outdoors to buy a Petzl Meteor 3+ (fancied one for a
while, and combination of deals in GoOutdoors meant that they were available
for £51 – jackpot). While browsing round the store I came across the Trekmates
Flameless Cook System section. When I first saw the FCS it peaked my interest,
a means of heating food and drink that doesn’t need gas....sounds good. I was
faced with 2 options; £18 bought me the Flameless Cook Flask (360ml) http://www.trekmates.co.uk/online-shop/flameless-cook-system/flameless-cook-flask,
which came with 3 heat packs, alternatively £27 bought the Flameless Cook Box,
which came with 4 heat packs (2 of each size). I opted for the flask, reasoning
with myself that if the FCS proved to be a good addition I would return for the
box.
Stove in packaging |
The system works by using water
activated heat packs, which are available in 2 sizes (high power and super
power), these are available for £10 (pack of 7 high power packs) or £10 (pack
of 5 super power packs). The super power packs are only useable in the
Flameless box and not in the flask. Each stove comes with a measuring bottle to
ensure you add the right amount of water to activate the heat pack (depending
on the size). Each stove or heat pack comes with “loyalty points” you can use
on www.flamelesscook.com to buy more
heat packs, and other goodies. This is great because it reduces the overall
cost of the fuel for the stove as you get freebies every so often.
Good so far…..
So time to test one; the concept is fairly simple:
Stage 1: Separate the plastic outer stove from the metal
inner container. Put food/water into the inner metal section
Stage 2: Fill the plastic measuring bottle to the indicated
level for high or super (depending on the size of pack you are using.
Stage 3: Add the heat pack into the bottom of the plastic
outer stove, add the water from the measuring bottle, and then put the metal
inner and plastic outer back together, secure the lid with the clips and wait.
Measure bottle, plastic outer, metal inner, and lid. |
I followed the instructions and after a bit of a funny smell
initially, coupled with a bit of audible fizzing, and 7 minutes of time, I had
1 piping hot brew. The water was very hot indeed. I immediately emptied the
water out into a mug and refilled the stove. Worth noting at this point that I
displaced the metal inner section when pouring the water out, took a bit of
fiddling to get it back in given how hot it was, but I did it no problem and
resealed the stove. After 7 minutes the water was still cold….not good in my opinion,
would hope that given the cost of the packs that there should be more than 1
brew per pack. I resealed the container for an additional 5 minutes (13 minutes
in total) but still cold….maybe I did something wrong.
Well all in all, the stove is good, it can make a brew, or
cook a meal without the need for flames or leaving your tent. Great. Also great
idea for group leaders who want have concerns over their groups behaviour
around stoves (special needs groups perhaps?). It’s small, light, and does make
a good brew with minimal fuss, and whilst it doesn’t seem to be able to make 2
brews, it can keep 1 brew warm for longer. Which brings me on to the negative
aspect of the stove, 5 heat packs for £10 = £2 per brew, not ideal. But look at
it this way, as an item you don’t use every single trip, or as a convenience
item it’s a great piece of kit to have, and there’s not much that can go wrong
with it.
I am looking forward to my first morning brew in the tent
with the rain tipping down outside, something tells me that when I’m sitting in
my sleeping bag, warm and dry, that I will appreciate this item much more.
Sorry but this reminds me of the look of fear on your face when I was cooking with my jetboil in my tent with you on ML assessment.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised my tent hasn't yet gone up in flames!
You are wrong in your "negative aspects 5 heat packs for £10 = £2 per brew" quote,you only need to use the smaller heat pack, 20g each, for a brew, which are around about £9 for 7 making it only about £1.30 a brew.
ReplyDeleteAt time of writing (year and a half ago) the prices were correct.
ReplyDeleteI also like the Lifesystems First Aid Kit layout because it splits the sections of the kit down into usable areas like “breaks and fractures” and “Bleeding” which means anyone can know where the items in your kit are stored in the event you are incapacitated, or need someone else to use it.
ReplyDeleteemergency first aid at work