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🔥 Tiny Stove, Mighty Adventures: Cook Anywhere, Impress Everywhere!
The AOTU Portable Camping Stove delivers a robust 3000W output from a featherlight 110g aluminum alloy body. Its wind-resistant honeycomb design and adjustable flame control ensure efficient, reliable cooking in any outdoor setting. Compact enough to fit in your backpack, it’s perfect for solo hikers or small groups craving hot meals on the go.
| ASIN | B07NJYV3NP |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,163 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #6 in Camping Stoves |
| Brand | AOTU |
| Brand Name | AOTU |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 6,501 Reviews |
| Fuel Type | Liquefied Petroleum Gas |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 3.74"L x 2.56"W x 2.95"H |
| Item Weight | 0.24 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | AOTU |
| Material | Aluminum |
| Maximum Energy Output | 3000 Watts |
| Model Number | AL-GHFA STOVE |
| Part Number | 9012978322214 |
| Power Source | Gas Powered |
| Product Dimensions | 3.74"L x 2.56"W x 2.95"H |
E**N
Great stove and value
For the $7.00 that I paid for this stove I wasn’t sure what to expect but I love it. I use it all the time and has always worked well. The engineering is very clever and well designed to fit into a very small case.
S**O
Tiny but Mighty Little Camp Stove
I finally fired this up. It’s a nice little stove. The igniter worked perfectly, and produced a nice, hot flame. It packs down tiny, and stores in a very negligible plastic box. This will disappear into a backpack, which is the plan. So far, so good. Will update as I use it, but I’m happy so far.
A**R
Not bad for the price
I purchased this stove to heat water on my small sailboat for overnight adventures; I needed something compact with a safe fuel source (i.e. butane canister). My other stove is an MSR Whisperlite, which requires liquid white fuel and needs to be primed before use - not safe on a moving sailboat! The portable camp stove is a great deal for the price; the travel container is very compact and will easily tuck into a pocket on a backpack or tucked into a pot. The container is soft plastic and probably won't stand up to much abuse. The stove itself is obviously quite compact and threads easily onto a butane canister. The construction is a bit lightweight so you have to take care when handling it. The three pot support legs rotate from the travel position to the cooking position but there is no positive lock to hold them in place. The supports have tiny fold-out "hands" upon which the pot sits. These hands have metal teeth that would grip a pot with ridges on the bottom. My stainless steel pot is smooth on the bottom, so I basically had to hold it while heating water so the pot didn't slip off the stove. The flame is adjustable and goes from a simmer to blowtorch. I used it to boil water; I didn't measure the volume or time exactly but it boiled water for two travel mugs worth of coffee in about 4 minutes. Overall, I was pleased with the performance of the stove and it will be coming with me on my future sailboat trips. Because of the light construction of the stove, I would prefer a more durable unit like my Whisperlite for extended backcountry use or on trips where access to butane canisters is limited (the Whisperlite can use unleaded gasoline in a pinch). However, for occasional use or as a backup stove, this portable stove really can't be beat.
R**Z
Great stove for a great price!
While I had my doubts about a product like this stove, at this price range, being good enough, I have to admit I am pleasantly surprised. I saw plenty of other options, including the much more expensive JetBoil products, and I decided to take a chance for the less than 15 dollar price. Although I've only used this stove about 3 times, it has been great! Easy to use(no instructions included, though it's as simple as screwing it on a butane/propane canister and slightly opening the regulator, then just giving the igniter a click and that's it!) and it only took 6 minutes to boil 20oz of cold water! While it's not the most sturdy, it's not in any real danger of toppling over so long as you balance whatever you place on it. It does get a bit wedged when you're unfolding the last arm, but a bit of wiggling fixes that. The only reason I'm giving it 4 stars is because I want to put it to the test over the next couple of months. My end goal is to have a reliable, portable, quality stove that I can take with me when I hike into the grand canyon, so expect an update if it holds up from now, until after I return!
K**R
Thru-hiked the Triple Crown and it's still going strong
I've carried this stove over 10,000+ miles of backpacking, and it's great! Sturdy, does well in wind, light, and compact. The only issue after so many miles is the starter button pops out sometime. Highly recommend.
J**S
Nice little stove
It is rather small but works fantastic
L**E
Great little backpack stove, super hot and super fast to hear
The first thing I noticed when opening three packaging is how very tiny the plastic orange box is that the stove is stored in. The box has a lid that fits into the bottom section fairly snuggly, with the stove folded up nicely inside. The stove itself doesn’t look cheap and feels substantial. It is folded up inside this plastic box with a total weight of about 3.52 ounces or about 100 grams. The arms that hold your cooking pan or cup or whatever you are heating fold out, each one has a little tab on it for easier opening and so you just pull each arm out in turn and they will stop at their designated positions via a system of tabs along the bottom. Each one is at 90 degrees to the previous one and when they fold out you have four arms to hold your cooking pan or cup. On the end of the top of each of the arms are little fold-out extended “fingers” that further give the pot or cup stability. The span of these arms is suited for a small pot or pan or cup, not that you couldn’t put a big pot on there but it would be pretty precariously balanced. My thought is that if you’re out camping and you need to heat a bigger pot, then you could put the pot on some stones where it was safer or not liable to tip off and then put the stove in the middle of the stones instead of putting the large pan and balancing it on the four small arms themselves. I also think you could create something out of some foldable wires or something like that, maybe similar to the pot holder I made for my alcohol stove. Or sling your pot over it on some sort of system to hold it suspended, any number of ways could be deployed for this. It’s something I’ll probably give a try. I had a slight issue with one of the arms; the last one to fold out would not go completely into a perfect position. It was only maybe ten degrees or less out of sync with the others and likely would not have affected the stability of the pot or cup being heated very much. But it kind of annoyed me that it would not go completely into place. A quick look at it and I could see the problem – the tab that is supposed to stop that leg at a particular position was misaligned or miss-manufactured. A tiny adjustment with a pair of mini needlenose pliers was able to fix it perfectly. So a bit of an issue there but easily fixed. On the side is an igniter with a red push button, even though the stove is quite small the igniter button is far enough away from anything that is going to be hot or ignite to be fairly safe from burning your fingers when igniting it. On the side is a stiff U-shaped wire that folds out from where it is clipped in onto the tab on the last leg to fold out. This is the adjustment for the fuel/flame/heat level. On the bottom is the part – what I think is called a lindal valve – which screws into the butane tank, with an o-ring around it. I don’t think this o-ring has much of a chance of falling off as it is seated quite well, but you definitely would not want to lose this o-ring or it wouldn’t work. It seems to be on well and after a little messing with it when I got the stove couldn’t produce any chance of it falling off without really tugging at it. The tank screws in easily and securely, up against that o-ring. The construction isn’t titanium or anything like that which some of the higher-end ones are made up of, but it does look really nice quality despite the modest price. It’s made of aluminum, with a honeycombed burner. The size of the plastic box it comes in is around 3.2 inches (8.3 cm) by 2.2 inches (5.5 cm) by 1.5 inches (3.8 cm), the stove itself (when folded up) is slightly smaller (obviously than the box) so I won’t duplicate the measurements here. Unfolded, the stove is around just over 2.5 inches (6.4 cm) wide and with the tips of the arms deployed about 3.5 inches (8.8 cm). The stove also has a 100% satisfaction guarantee from the company, which is kinda nice. After having this stove for a while I have not found anything that is bent or wearing out or anything like that. There is some discoloration around the parts of it that get really hot, but this kind of seems like it should be expected. I did put a little lube on some of the parts of the stove that move. This seemed to make opening up the arms a little easier, not that it was any big deal beforehand. I don’t know what the BTU’s are for this, but the specs mention that it generates 3000 watts at max, a rough estimation maybe make it around 10,000 BTU or so. For reference, most burners on kitchen stovetops range from 7,000 to 11,000 BTUs, and some of the much higher-end mini camping stoves that are nearly identical or very or somewhat similar to this by the best manufacturers have ratings of around 9,000 to 10,000 BTU so likely that’s about what this can generate. Which is pretty mind-blowing for something that costs so little and is so tiny. So to start it – you turn the adjustment for the fuel, until you hear the gas hissing. Then press the igniter, maybe a couple times, maybe just once – depending on how much you have turned up the fuel adjustment. I found that for the quickest ignition, I needed to turn the adjustment up a fair amount for the initial ignition, having it very low made it harder to start. Once ignited I turned it down to what I needed to for whatever I was heating. At high adjustment, it produces a heck of a flame (but usually invisible) and lots of heat, so if you want to heat something fast you certainly can just crank it up, light it and then stick your pot or cup right on. There is no initial warm-up time with this, as I had found that the alcohol stove needed. Of course at any heat setting you want to keep your hands and other things away from it, whether you are using a lot of flame or a small amount, because it will be hot no matter what level you have it adjusted to. This brings me to a very important thing to mention here – the flame is pretty much invisible, especially in bright sunlight. So be very aware of this and very careful. Here’s a night shot so you can see the flame.Night shot The nice thing is that you can hear this running, it is not completely silent like the alcohol stove, and makes a good hissing noise so you know that it is running. I suppose some people might not like this, it’s not loud per se but it is definitely not silent. For my first test, I ran the flame at a fairly medium-low heat, with the water I used having come from an insulated mug with water that had been chilled in the refrigerator’s water filter system a short time before, and it was a warm day at the beach. It started to boil at around 3:30 minutes for a good rolling boil that almost popped the cover off the water pot. This was much much faster than the alcohol stove I have been using. This was water for coffee for my wife, who likes her coffee very hot. Unfortunately – and totally my own fault and not the stove’s – I had positioned the tank and stove on top of a bit of sand that was not fully level, and as I was taking the hot pot off I slipped it off the supporting arms before I had a good grip on it and spilled the water. Again, my fault but it does require awareness that the arms aren’t awfully large in contact points. I haven’t had any issues since then in this aspect, being more aware of it I suppose. The second cup boiled much faster as I had turned the heat up a bit, and so after only a few minutes it was ready. I didn’t even time it this time. For my own cup of water – I like my coffee not so hot – so it took barely a few minutes and the third cup was ready for me. I did find that at high heat, on a hot summer day with no wind and such; I needed to use a pot holder to adjust the little heat adjustment on the side as it was pretty warm near the stove. I had a hard time getting my hand too close to it, but other times I have used the stove I did not find it too hot to get my fingers on the adjustment part. I tried windscreen for small stoves with this but the amount of heat this stove generates makes using the windscreen impossible as there is no way to reach down to change the heat adjustment with the windscreen around it, due to the closeness and heat. But in general the windscreen didn’t really reach up far enough to totally enclose this stove, as it sits much higher than the alcohol one. The issue is moot anyway, as the higher heat of this stove allows it to run and run at a good efficiency even in higher wind – I have used it a number of times under various conditions and don’t find that I need the windscreen for it, though it does work more efficiently when there is something for a bit of a wind obstruction though it is not necessary it seems. So positioning it away from the wind does allow it to heat fast, but I have used it in wind high enough to make it sputter and it still heated just fine. You could even use this sucker in the rain and snow, I think. Something for me to try at a later time. When boiling water or other liquids you can really crank it up, but if you’re cooking anything more solid like food then you really really have to keep the heat backed down. Very important here, it’s easy to overestimate how much heat the burner is producing and burn more solid foods. In fact it may seem like you have the heat turned down too much but it will very quickly get your pan hot and it is easy to burn something if you don’t make sure it is not turned up too much. It can take a little trial and error and experimentation to get a good estimation of how much or how little heat you need. That’s why the adjustment for the heat setting is very important – you can really keep it down to a low cook or even a nice low simmer if needed or crank it full blast. You have a pretty fine control here. When finished using the stove, you just turn the heat adjustment completely down, cutting off the gas to the burner and the flame shuts off. Easier than the hard-to-extinguish alcohol stove. After a very short time this Aotu stove cools very quickly after shutting down. Within just minutes you can unscrew it from the tank, slide the arms back closed, snap the adjustment thing up for storage, and slip the whole thing back in the plastic storage box and stow it and be on your way.Large and small tanks I used the smallest tank I could find, and which lasts a long time even after a lot of experimenting on my part. There are a larger tanks that will last you even longer, it’s taller but no wider than the smaller one but I think it’s twice the capacity. You can also get converter adapters that connect between the stove and other sorts of tanks like larger propane tanks for longer running. So all in all it’s a great little stove, and if I were primitive backpacking and didn’t want to carry much weight this would probably be the way to go. Also great for bikepacking or to carry in your car for emergencies, or take have at home or in your go-bag. Even for non-primitive camping it’s a quick easy setup for making coffee or something. Heck, I have stopped in a parking lot and made coffee before. I have to say though – this has become my new favorite portable stove because of its ease of use and quick deployment and quick heating ability. I suppose when you compare this stove to more expensive ones the build quality may not be as high, but for the price it works fine and extremely well. With all the testing and messing around with the Aotu Portable Stove I’ve yet to use up the fuel in just one small container, and a quick shake seems to indicate that the liquid butane mixture inside has quite an amount left in the tank. So, so far so good with this stove. It’s cheap, the fuel container’s cheap and fairly small, it’s easy and quick to deploy and cools off quickly, it’s relatively safe as long as you keep in mind that the flame is nearly invisible or totally invisible in bright sunlight and that it is very very hot. You might even find that you can use it in places where something like the alcohol stove might be frowned upon and open flames are discouraged or unsafe or not legal, and you may be able to use it in places where you wouldn’t normally be able to cook something perhaps – of course, all within reason and keeping mind safety and rules as to where you are. How long will it hold up, I don’t know. I mean, there’s not a whole lot to it so if it hasn’t broken or burned up on an initial use then it’s probably not going to just fall apart or break or burn up over time, necessarily.
D**L
A great little stove, for the money.
I purchased this stove in 2019, and I am still using it to this day. The auto igniter stopped working years ago, but the stove has not skipped a beat. It is a great way to warm up some water for any instance food, coffee, etc. I have used this stove from sea level to 13,500 ft and it just keeps trucking along. Works will all major brands of canisters as well. It isn't the most steady thing, but if you don't mess with the pot of water and find some level area with a rock or stick you're good to go.
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