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Have a fold up sheep herder stove that heats a 12 x 14 wall tent with temps down into the -20's. Light weight material and it throws out heat within minutes of lighting. So far, we have about 30 seasons out of it. Super for horse packing, as it's about the size of maybe two encyclopedias. Have been in camps with much heavier units, and it takes 15 to 20 minutes for those to heat up and start emitting warmth. Actually, with a lantern, the stove, and a couple cooking burners running, we usually need to open the doors to get things down to a reasonable temp. Can't find a xerox copy, but the following link has some close approximations. L Fold Up Stoves Link^^^^This^^^^ I've been using a Sims folding stove in my 12x14 with no complaints. As 1minute said, cooking and a lantern and it gets warm enough to open a door flap.
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Have the three dog stove with water heater in Davis biggest tent works perfect.
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OP
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I looked on their website today https://fourdog.com and all they have listed are the titanium stoves. Tried calling them and never got an answer. Wonder what's up?
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Joined: Nov 2015
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Campfire Tracker
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1minute has the right idea. Good advice!
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Campfire Regular
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Campfire Regular
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A question from a non-wall tenter...
Since you arer driving/trucking in to the campsite area (ability to carry supplies "easily"), is kerosene heater an option for a wall tent?
"Behavior accepted is behavior repeated."
"Strive to be underestimated."
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Joined: Feb 2010
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Campfire Tracker
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Have a fold up sheep herder stove that heats a 12 x 14 wall tent with temps down into the -20's. Light weight material and it throws out heat within minutes of lighting. So far, we have about 30 seasons out of it. Super for horse packing, as it's about the size of maybe two encyclopedias. Have been in camps with much heavier units, and it takes 15 to 20 minutes for those to heat up and start emitting warmth. Actually, with a lantern, the stove, and a couple cooking burners running, we usually need to open the doors to get things down to a reasonable temp. Can't find a xerox copy, but the following link has some close approximations. L Fold Up Stoves Link^^^^This^^^^ I've been using a Sims folding stove in my 12x14 with no complaints. As 1minute said, cooking and a lantern and it gets warm enough to open a door flap. I have a heavy(50+ pounds) stove and wish I had got something that weighed less and was collapsible. This place has a few worth looking at: https://www.walltentshop.com/collections/lightweight-camping-stoves
Quando omni flunkus moritati
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 29,882 Likes: 6
Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 29,882 Likes: 6 |
buttstock: is kerosene heater an option for a wall tent? Anything will work, but if one wants to seriously crank things up, it should be vented to the outside. If flame is involved, one always wants a vented unit. Same with propane. Many years back 3 guys seriously tightened down the skirts, ridgepole holes, and doors of their wall tent, and shut their propane unit down for the night. Two were using cots, and the third rolled out on a pad on the floor. AM the first two got up feeling like crap and rushed out to do an in the dark climb to peek over rock figuring their partner was sleeping in. With propane being heavier than air, the third guy never woke up. Seems the burner was off but the unit was still leaking gas. Cookie and I will sometimes use propane to knock the chill off if bunking in small tents. Usually just a 5-minute run though and we shut off both the heater and propane tank before tucking in.
1Minute
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OP
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A question from a non-wall tenter...
Since you arer driving/trucking in to the campsite area (ability to carry supplies "easily"), is kerosene heater an option for a wall tent? They may work okay but I've been around enough of them in other peoples homes that it wouldn't be something I'd use. They always give me a headache. A wood stove never has.
Last edited by Jim1611; 12/20/21.
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Like coal, I can't imagine Elk are fond of the Kerosene smell
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Campfire Outfitter
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Like coal, I can't imagine Elk are fond of the Kerosene smell Like everything else you have to use your brain a bit and not camp near where the elk are.
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Do elk get affected / notice wood stove smoke?
"Behavior accepted is behavior repeated."
"Strive to be underestimated."
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Campfire Regular
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Like coal, I can't imagine Elk are fond of the Kerosene smell Like everything else you have to use your brain a bit and not camp near where the elk are. You bring the smell with you...
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Joined: Feb 2005
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
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Like coal, I can't imagine Elk are fond of the Kerosene smell Like everything else you have to use your brain a bit and not camp near where the elk are. You bring the smell with you... Which matters not. You have to play the wind regardless.
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Campfire Kahuna
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Campfire Kahuna
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 69,396 Likes: 4 |
Wood, kerosene, coal, whatever. What elk smell and avoid is MAN. If you set up camp in the middle of your hunting area, they'll smell YOU and avoid YOU. Your stove won't bother them because they'll be gone before you get it set up.
“In a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” ― George Orwell
It's not over when you lose. It's over when you quit.
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All our camps were set up in the middle of our hunting area, for years. We all smelled like bacon , eggs and coffee, every day. The horses we rode must have thrown the elk off their game!
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Campfire Outfitter
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Wood, kerosene, coal, whatever. What elk smell and avoid is MAN. If you set up camp in the middle of your hunting area, they'll smell YOU and avoid YOU. Your stove won't bother them because they'll be gone before you get it set up. Exactly.
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This doesn't address the smoke / smell issue. I found this link and thought it was an interesting way to heat a tent. Who knows? It may come in handy as a back up plan. All you need is some piping. If you are driving in to your campsite, the pipes neither weigh much, nor take up much room. FWIW. Just thought it was interesting and thought I'd share it. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QeHGDr81XwM
"Behavior accepted is behavior repeated."
"Strive to be underestimated."
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Afternoon, some company (name)??? Make a propane stove or burner that goes outside the tent and has a blower on it that blows the heat into the tent through two 4" hoses. Like a dryer vent hose, won't use oxygen from tent or leak propane inside. Can't cook on it though. I think it's the same company that makes the instant hot shower deal. Never seen the heater but one camp had the shower deal, really great after a long day. I'm going to buy the shower deal, maybe the heater but would like to see how it worked first. I'm sure camping with the better half and having the shower along would work wonders for the relationship. Nothing like the heat from wood though!!! I wonder if you had a tarp out in front for a kitchen if you could rig up an oven sort of deal with a 12 volt fan and dryer hose to blow in the hot air from it??? Hmm. If your interested in the shower deal buy the double burner, the single one doesn't get hot enough. Bill. 👣🐾👣🐾🇨🇦
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we have always just used a 55 gallon barrel stove, we made an expanded metal top for it to heat bath water in, Vogelzang is the kit we used. We heat an army GP medium tent, coldest so far has been 2 degrees.
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