Late 70's for me - same thing, different name. I do remember that they stayed hot for ages afterwards though lol, so perhaps not the thing for a quick brew on a hike.
We made them in Scouts. I used a planters peanut can because it has a plastic lid. I carried one in the Army because it was an easy way to make a cup of coffee anyplace.
@@Deuce_and_a_half you could use a pair of tin snips and a piece of another old can or scrap tin. All the metal is for is to keep your cup from smothering the flame you don't need anything to fancy.
You could make a riser (and wind screen!) with another larger can. Use an old-fashioned can opener to remove extra material and make some breather holes in the side.
@@ChrisKChandlerthis is honestly a better way than the video because it protects against the wind, hides the light of the flame, and holds your cup above the flame all in one. It's also more sturdy and will do a good job of focusing the heat upwards if you don't make too many holes.
When made those in Girl Scouts in 1969 when I was 8. Although we used the coffee can (with air holes punched in) as a stove. You could put several tuna cans in the stove and put the plastic lid on to keep them dry.
friskies Cat food tins are about the same size I think. next to them in the pet food section hanging in the grocery aisle you can buy a pair of plastic tops to fit the can.
@@Scriptorsilentum What I meant is the plastic lid on the coffee can (back when they were metal and had plastic lids to hold the coffee). You could put several tuna-sized cans in the coffee can stove and keep them in there with the coffee can lid.
what are really nice are those frito bean cans, because they come with a resealable plastic lid. let the wax harden up again and no mess. Also those bean tins are just slightly wider but significantly deeper, you get a ton of cooks out of it.
@@escapetherace1943try a pettet/BB tin, it has a metal lid to snuff out fire & it will screw on once cool, slip into ziplock bag & add extra fuel/tea lights/crayons/old birthday candles to zip lock bag too. You can refuel while fire is lit by placing chunk of wax on to fire.. takes practice & trial & error to figure out but easy to do. ( crayon wax will clog cardboard if you keep adding it with out normal wax in the mix.) A almond tin is also good, keep the aluminum seal for snuffing & once cool place plastic lid over tin. Any tin with approximate diameter of tuna can will burn at *approximately* the same rate. One tea light candle that burns for a hour with one tiny wick will only last *approximately* 15 minutes in hobo stove. A small pellet tin will hold 3 tea lights & burn for about 45 minutes. But you can add a chunk of wax every 15 minutes to keep fire going indefinitely, don’t over fill cuz fire will not be as big …you gotta phuck around to find out the happy medium! Best FREE starter car kit imo- A coffee can with lid & a hobo stove. You now have one way to cook/boil water… next up -the coffee can , should hold 3 alternative ways to make a fire & purify water! Add another empty plastic bottle that will fit into coffee can( I like big plastic vitamin jar) pack it with more gear & use it to hold clean water in survival. coffee can should hold dirty water till boiled-then transfer to clean container 🫙… A Coffee can is a stove in itself , just CZcams coffee can stove or hobo stove for hundreds of modifications! ✌️🤟🤙
You should use a real tin can. The aluminum cans could cause a fire! I used my Reveal Cat Food cans to make a bunch of these to keep in my emergency food and essentials prepping.
@@karenandcatz2915 real "tin" isn't and hasn't been used for cans now for a long time. When it is used, it is pretty rare. Almost all cans are aluminum now or an aluminum alloy of varying gauge. Regardless a hobo stove doesn't remotely become hot enough to melt aluminum, even if you made it from a soda can it would be fine. Aluminum melts at 1200 degrees and while actual regular fires can exceed that, it is in their centermost point, and a can is too small for it to ever be near that. Most likely 600 degrees and 800 at the extreme highest.
*Always use a lid when boiling water!* it can help save energy/fuel and makes it boil faster! 🧐🤔🤨🤷🏼 A pot and lid are probably the most important thing in a survival situation!!
THE most important thing? XD In a survival situation you’re likely gonna end up turning to wood for fuel, meaning a proper twig stove will be most relevant. Someone out there in the hiking community has tested the effectiveness of pot lids and found that they’re not worth the weight for tall skinny pots like this, and only so for pots that are wider than they’re taller. That said, an aluminum foil lid never hurt anyone
@@pedroclaro7822 _ive personally tried boiling water at various altitudes and various containers!_ *It makes a HUGE difference!* *_Its no less than 60% faster!!!!_* I majored in college to be a park ranger! (Amongst other things once id finished all their classes*) _And i took 'basic', 'intermediate' and 'advanced' "outdoor skills"!_ We went backpacking in the middle of winter in Yosemite** I lived in the woods(off grid*) for over 6months*
I remember my Dad teaching us this when he would take us on camping and fishing trips when I was really young. Looking back on it he taught us so much, and had a way about it that always made it fun. So the lessons stuck with me. He's gone now, but I think about him often as I teach mine so many of the things he taught me. RIP Dad you were a real one. I was lucky to have had you as my dad.
Wow you figure it out. I thought i was supposed to bring the 300 lbs machine, a generator and an electric stove on the camping trip and make it at the camping ground. 😂
@@jz4057 yea, I saw a lot of hate on the video with people trying to call it out for exactly that. So I made this comment in hopes that people understand you're not supposed to try and make them once you're out there but before hand instead.
@@governedmoth1749 Or just.. y'know buy a portable camping stove.. or bunsen burner or something Unless you already got the angle grinder it'll be far cheaper to just buy portable stove that can be re-used for a lifetime.
Just buy tuna in sunflower oil and once you eat the tuna, just stuff the cardboard in. The sunflower oil will work as the wax. Also if you slightly squeeze the can the lid from the same can can be made into the cross at the top.
@ninefingers7975 no it wouldn't. There was nothing left in his can versus the sun flower oil sitting with fish in it for months to years. Completely different.
@@Icetea-2000Hey Mr Tough Shit, I do plan on trying this concept out. I found the wax. I just asked cuz I have a neighbor from hell who everytime she smells something 'off' coming from my yard she reports it to the City Nuisance Dept. She reported me for weeds and it was an area that I had planted herbs! .She recently moved- what a relief!!! Before she left I found out from a neighbor she turned in 5 households for what was to her 'nuisance issues'. That's how she said Goodbye to us. So I was just hesitant to give this idea a try. I didn't need yet a another notice perpetrated from this 'Karen' Demon next door....
Hope the war can end soon....If Trump had won again in 2020 there'd be no war right now there. All the idiots who voted for Biden ended up unknowingly helping to get a bunch of people killed.
I completely forgot that part till i came back to the video. I mean i got a chainsaw and a sawzall, imma just have my friend hold the pieces while i cut it lol
You don't need anything. you are lucky to have society to hold your hand. You need $5B in equiment to make a real stove, are stoves pointless because you're broke?
@@dontbemean If you have an angle grinder then you can afford to buy an already made camping stove. Only people trying to make this DIY stove wouldn't have the means to make this. This video is pointless.
I mean, exactly. That's why you do it before you go. Awesome for backpacking or just lightweight hammock camping. When I dont need a fire for warmth a 5 second fire for food is amazing. I usually make about 6 at a time.
@@roofcake8951it also says “cheap,” and if you’re looking up ways to DIY a camping stove, odds are you may not be able to afford construction/home improvement equipment like electric saws🙋🏾♀️ Not everyone knows someone with power tools to lend, either🙋🏾♀️ On the other hand, TEMU has the whole shebang for just $10; Amazon, $12.50🤷🏾♀️
@@monopolizedopaminewhy is it that some people think DIY means "absolutely no tools required"? I mean, if you prefer a hack saw that's fine, but anyone doing any amount of metal work is going to need an angle grinder at some point. You can buy one for $20 or less. It's hardly an industrial plasma cutter CNC...
I make torches the same way. I just roll the cardboard till its the size of a soda can and soak it the same way. Cheaper wax works best in the winter Citronella wax goes out a bit easier but repels bugs
One thing... Do *NOT* pour off the "excess." Keep as much wax as will fit into your new "stove" (large fire starter, tent heater, etc.). The more wax you pour back out, the faster the burn and shorter the life of the "stove." I've made a *bunch* of these (sans this type top grid), can portion, only as additions to survival kits, car emergency kits, back packs, etc.. They're great for everything from starting a larger fire and putting it out for next time to cooking to warming a small tent as they give off a lot of heat/light and burn very hot yet last a *very* long time, especially if you just use them for short periods at a stretch. It just takes a little patience to strip down the cardboard and slowly fill the container with wax, letting the bubbles escape until it's filled solid. Trust me... I have them in car road kits, light survival packages, etc.. They're cheap & easy to make and take about as much room as a can of chewing tobacco (or... Tuna fish!) 😉 It's keeping as much wax in there as possible that's the secret. That burns as well but lasts *much* longer than just the wax soaked cardboard, that's key. You want as much fuel in there, as possible. The cardboard just helps an easier start and even burn across the surface while generating more heat than just trying to light the wax, itself, like a giant wick. They'll work with the little folding, Sterno style stoves (which pack flat) but last way longer or, just a piece of uncoated, stainless, wire mesh and a couple of rocks/sticks, etc. to hold the screen that can be easily kept in a light pack or even a pocket, you're glove box or wherever. The windscreen works great and can be flattened out for storage, as well. Just ruff up the top surface of the cardboard with a sharp edge to create a little wax-soaked "fuzz" on the exposed surface, maybe rub a little piece of cotton (ball, scraped lint from cotton socks/shirt, etc.) and drop some sparks on it. Presto. 😊 But, whatever you do and with no disrespect intended, do not pour off any of the wax. Soak in as much as is possible. It will work as well but, for a lot longer, promise. 😉
@@ronheydon117 You're welcome, it was meant with best Intentions as I've made dozens of these, tried several different methods and a full cup with the top "fluffed up" with a knife, etc. is the most efficient, though it does take more wax. But the extra life and even burn makes it worth it. 😀 I'm glad to see people trying/making this kind of stuff because it's so effective and all it costs is some used cardboard and tin and any kind of old candles you can find, it doesn't have to be Gulf paraffin as a necessity. I built my first one after emptying a tuna can and had an epiphany. 😆 I grabbed an old, wilting taper (thin candles you put in a candle stick on a dinner table), ripped a piece of cardboard off a box in the recycle bin and Presto. I knew that I must not have been the first to come up with the idea, it was too good. 😆 I tried several different combos and methods (types of wax, how much wax, how full, etc. just to satisfy my overactive, scientific mind (and I was bored out of my tree after an injury) and the full can (use a chicken can for a larger unit) with any candle wax you have was the trick. The paraffin does seem to be sliiiightly better but not so much that you *need* to go buy some. We're all here to share and help and improve each other and that was my only intent. Have a great one and keep it up!
Hello from Ukrainian 🇨🇦 born in Canada 🇺🇦 Happy to say I haven't supported Ukronazis sincd they started m j f d e r i n g civilians in Donbass in April 2014 aftef Турчинов declared ATO 😢
@@walterbrunswick then why do you live in the decaying west that full of anglosaxes and nazi supporters? Go live in blooming Russia, I even know a couple of especially attractive cities, such as Shebekino and Belhorod lmao
But the most important part of why you'd want to use that is because you have a valid reason to eat Fritos bean dip before you make it 🤤 "Babe, I know I'm on a diet, but if we go camping and don't have any of these, it might be hard to start a fire!!!"
Yeah the method in the video is crap lol. "All you need is a tuna can, $100 in power tools, a source of electricity, some straight thick metal.." You can do the same thing by barely opening the can just enough to get the tuna and juice out Then stuff cotton in and press the lid back down and poke holes in it.. Then you can use some rocks that are taller than the can to surround the can with, and place your pot on top of the rocks. This guy is telling us "this is a survival skill.. but only if you are in your own backyard with working electricity, power tools, and other materials" lol This is the most useless video I've ever seen.
@@jonslg240 uh, I'm pretty sure no one ever suggested that these would be made anywhere other than home. This is a PREPARATION video, not a survival video.
Great idea for outdoors. Everything about the can with rolled cardboard and the melted wax is handy. Thank you. I'll keep this in mind. However, I'll substitute the base with 3 or 4 rocks. I've cooked this way at my Girl Scout adventures.
I agree with you on the rocks. If you look around hard enough you can find some elongated thin rocks that can crisscross on top of the can. OR place a series of rocks thicker than the can width, around the perimeter of the tuna can to prop up your pan or pot.
@@67Pepper I got a wireless, rechargeable Dremel kit for about $150 at overpriced Ace Hardware last year, used it for all kinds of things from recreating this project for storm prepping (power can go out for days) to wall repairs at work to attempting to make chess pieces for funsies. Not a bad investment at all to have on hand, especially if there's a crafter/ cosplayer/ diyer in the family that needs to sand something... with the circular rotating blades smh. Not everyone can have a circular saw in the gargage, but this? Same thing but tiny and portable, like Little Cricket. 👍
@@67Pepperjust use a hand file or something. I’m sure you can figure it out. also isn’t really something you make while out and about lmao. Could also use any number of alternatives that don’t require power tools. It’s literally just metal supporting a cup on a tuna can lmao. Again I’m sure you can figure it out. mfs act helpless about the most trivial things conceivable
about the wind screen, if you cut the can into 2 half-circles, and position them slightly offset, you can create a vortex that will make the fire twirl.
This is an old boy scout thing. We also took an old metal coffee can turned upside down with a few holes drilled in the sides for air flow. The bottom of the can has a natural indentation that will hold some cooking oil and we used to make fried potatoes and ham on it...ahhhh the simple good Ole days
if you don't want to spend a cent. just find three rocks, keep them as a triangle on the ground, put dry leaves and branches and light. congratulations you have a cheap stove now.
Girl scouts we called this a buddy burner, we all had to make them, but we used a larger can with an air window over the top as a cooking surface. We kept the rubber can top to put all our stuff in, burner, lighter, matches and soap to coat the inside to clean out the soot, fit nicely in one package
@@ChaoticIntervention what part don't you understand? We made the burner part like he did, minus the stupid cross thing, we used a larger can (think metal coffee can) that a 2*2 square was removed from the open end on the side as an oxygen window (keep the plastic top) smear some liquid soap all over inside the big can, it makes an easy job of cleaning the soot off with water when you're done cooking, when you lite your burner you turn the big can upside down over your burner (flat bottom side up) you can then use a pan on it, or a small pot, cover it with some foil and cook right on the surface for one burger or eggs ect. When you're done cooking take the flat surface of your big can upside down and place it right on the burner to snuff it out. Take your large can wash it out, real easy if you have soaped it. Then once your burner is cool enough to handle, everything fits in the bigger can, your lighter/matches, small bottle of soap, burner, tin foil squares we used to put on toilet paper rolls in a Ziploc bag, extra square of wax, your fork, knife and spoon put the lid back on and it's altogether. Hope this explains it😊
In my country tuna cans are filled with olive oil or sunflower oil so you can just open a hole with a knife on the tuna can and put a piece of paper, let it soak with the oil and light the paper. You have a nice candle and if you need more power just open more holes and put more paper.
THAT was a more useful tip for me! I was gonna ask how much was the circular saw 🤣. This is hardly an "on the go" emergency stove (to be fair, he never said it was).
Cool I remember these from 1968.. Boy Scouts.. Yeah, Keep the excess wax in it. Lasts longer. Also, While you have the melted wax available... Roll up (to the size you want) some paper towels. Then dip them (soaked) into the wax. These make fabulous, cheap fire starters. After the wax cools off completely, you can cut the finished product to the length you want to use. I usually make mine twice as thick as a good cigar. Carry them in your various kits.. Survival Camping Car Edc etc.
We didn't add the fancy grill made from knives. We just used a kind of can opener that makes triangular cuts to cut a lot of holes in the big can along the top and bottom. Put the cooking pot on the big can over the tuna can in the girl scouts in the 1960's.
I made these in the 60's with cub scouts. Works great... creates some soot, but if you rub the outside bottom of your cooking pot with soap begore using the stove, the soot literslly rinses off.
I still have a few of these, i use them for cooking during power outages. They work very well and burn a long time. If we lose power in the winter i usually have the wood stove burning anyway. 👍
These were called Buddy Burners in the Scouts. If you have a metal coffee can as well you can modify it to be a griddle cooktop that goes over the burner. It's the perfect size for an egg and a slice of summer sausage for breakfast.
link you mean a link of sausage a fully formed uncooked sausage isnt a slice of anything... its a link from a chain of sausages.... did you maybe mean ham? you def slice ham
@@zer0harts Maintenant, dis quoi? It's a summer sausage! It's brown, about a foot long, comes in a paper casing, tastes like meat flavored grease? Surely you know it!
The same method can be used to make an emergency candle. By simply adding a wick in the center, and not pouring out any wax, you can have a candle that can burn for up to 120 hours (that's 5 days straight).
@@timeflow3305this video shows a supper common homemade camping stove that literally people's only complaint about is how he made the support for his cook pot
People in the comments seem to be having a lot of trouble -You're not supposed to do this while camping. This is a project to make at home. -You don't need a workshop filled with tools; an angle grinder can be bought for $50. -You DON'T EVEN NEED AN ANGLE GRINDER. You could do this with A HAND SAW. And lastly, sometimes people just make things because they want to! Yes, a camp stove may be cheaper. Yes, buying one is easier. But some people just make stuff for fun! Why are you all being such fucking weirdos?!
um maybe because when people show things that are supposed to be the CHEAP route they should actually be CHEAP. 😂 if i still have to spend all that money on all the items to make the damn stove i might as well just pay for the damn stove 😂😂
Two reasons: N°1: this is the internet, furthermore, the COMMENTS SECTION for some random, innocuous video more hobby oriented than actual survival or bushcraft content, OF COURSE we're f#(k|π₲ weirdos. You see, normal people will watch and go on, they have lives and mental health. Those commenting? Freaks, creeps, weirdos, spectrum, radicals, geeks and so on, all of us. Hardly any normies arguing on some meaningless thread. N°2: going berserk over meaningless things is fun. I love the video, i think it's a great, easy idea, if anything, i would puncture some wholes around the tin can, above wax level, to favour airflow. But this is THE INTERNET, home of trolls and experts on all. And you too are here, arguing with strangers, and they may no even be real 🤷🏽♂️
It doesn't matter how many times people demonstrate this method of camping stove, it never ceases to entertain and satisfy me. Thank you for your time. 🙏😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
"DIY cheap camp stove" that you can only use once made using expensive power tools and a different camp stove. Bro would *save* money just buying a new camp stove. They're cheap as fuck. Lmfao
It’s only cheap if you have the equipment to make it in the first place, which not everyone has. So this only is effective to save money for a niche population
@@hermestrismegistus3962 don't burn your house down inventing a two bit stove. or spill the flaming wax on a child , THAT would haunt you for a very long time
@@commonconservative7551 Oh, I am super careful when making them. The hobo stove can is right next to the double boiler on the stove about 8 inches away, so it doesn't have far to go into the hobo stove. Then I leave it to cool and set and I don't move it till it is set. I usually do 2 of them at a time and I never have much wax in the pot, because I am usually melting down a bunch of spent tea lights with leftover wax in them, because the wicks inevitably burn our before all the wax is used. lol. So I typically only ever have enough wax for one or two. About 2 inches of wax in the pot, maximum.
Very cool but it'll literally be cheaper and quicker and last longer to just buy a sterno and dont throw out the cap most sterno cans lasts roughly 2 hours and can get them at the $tree😊
A Bunson burner is entirely different, is manufactured, and used for heating lab chemicals in pyrex test tubes. Not the same as a DIY hobo stove at all.
About 70 years ago I belonged to a group of young girls called Campfire girls and we made a burner like this called a buddy burner. Nothing new under the sun.
Some ppl werent in your group 70 years ago and some kids stroll around the internet or ppl that havrnt had the idea. It’s intended for them, the world doesn’t revolve around you stop being a cnt
Ah good times. I remember making one of these back in the day and we put it under one of those giant cans used for something like crushed tomatoes to make your own pasta sauce that had been cleaned up and had a notch cut out of it. We cooked bacon and eggs on top of it the next morning.
@@FingerSpazm surprise, it is for some. idk, i shouldn't have commented that. some people can have things, some can't. i'm not trying to bring down the idea that you can. neither making a boohoo story for those who can't. why do we insist it's either 1 or 0. i'm not even into camping so why am i involved here. alright. my bad. bye
Love the amount of people who utterly missed the point of this comment. E-ray is clearly saying that this "cheap" stove is only cheap _if you have all the expensive crap the guy used to make it_
Yep, I used these as part of my winter survival kit in the car. I put it inside an upside down coffee tin with a section cut in the bottom and small can opener holes around the top rim for air flow. The bottom of the coffee tin functioned as my stove/frying pan to cook on. The wax did have a tendency to smoke though. Other than that it worked like a damn.
Usually like this channel for survival ideas but this is both dumb and definitely not easy for one it requires power tools which are not always available. Can't be be right every time but most of the videos are good this one just proves the creator of the content is human 😅
I remember making these in outdoor school in yhe early 90s they called them a hobo stove.
Late 70's for me - same thing, different name. I do remember that they stayed hot for ages afterwards though lol, so perhaps not the thing for a quick brew on a hike.
I wouldn't want to have to create that stove every single day. Too much work.
@@Simba______ What makes you think you need to make them every day? They last a long time!
Once it is made it will last a long time…
@@Simba______ust like how when you drink a glass of milk then throw the rest of the gallon away every day.
We made them in Scouts. I used a planters peanut can because it has a plastic lid. I carried one in the Army because it was an easy way to make a cup of coffee anyplace.
Can you tell me what you used instead of an angle-grinded pair of tongs please because I don’t have an angle grinder.
@@Deuce_and_a_half you could use a pair of tin snips and a piece of another old can or scrap tin. All the metal is for is to keep your cup from smothering the flame you don't need anything to fancy.
You could make a riser (and wind screen!) with another larger can. Use an old-fashioned can opener to remove extra material and make some breather holes in the side.
Sound stupid
@@ChrisKChandlerthis is honestly a better way than the video because it protects against the wind, hides the light of the flame, and holds your cup above the flame all in one. It's also more sturdy and will do a good job of focusing the heat upwards if you don't make too many holes.
While at the dollar store, you could also pick up some plastic cat food can covers for when it's completely cooled.
Also, pick up some cat food for when you are hungry. - Frank and Charlie
I use peanut cans that come with plastic lids 👍 check out my variations of the stove's 😉
And then go to the diner next door and ask for some hot water
Now that’s using your noodle
When made those in Girl Scouts in 1969 when I was 8. Although we used the coffee can (with air holes punched in) as a stove. You could put several tuna cans in the stove and put the plastic lid on to keep them dry.
Most EXCELLANT comment. And when we actually LEARNED stuff in GirlScouts.
Love from a Boomer!
Yes, it was our hobo stove! Thank you girl scouts! ❤
friskies Cat food tins are about the same size I think. next to them in the pet food section hanging in the grocery aisle you can buy a pair of plastic tops to fit the can.
@@Scriptorsilentum What I meant is the plastic lid on the coffee can (back when they were metal and had plastic lids to hold the coffee). You could put several tuna-sized cans in the coffee can stove and keep them in there with the coffee can lid.
Cubscouts about the same time.
Very cool. Grandma thought it was wierd that i told her i needed one of princess kitty's empty fancy feast cans.
what are really nice are those frito bean cans, because they come with a resealable plastic lid. let the wax harden up again and no mess. Also those bean tins are just slightly wider but significantly deeper, you get a ton of cooks out of it.
@@escapetherace1943great to know !!
@@escapetherace1943try a pettet/BB tin, it has a metal lid to snuff out fire & it will screw on once cool, slip into ziplock bag & add extra fuel/tea lights/crayons/old birthday candles to zip lock bag too.
You can refuel while fire is lit by placing chunk of wax on to fire.. takes practice & trial & error to figure out but easy to do.
( crayon wax will clog cardboard if you keep adding it with out normal wax in the mix.)
A almond tin is also good, keep the aluminum seal for snuffing & once cool place plastic lid over tin.
Any tin with approximate diameter of tuna can will burn at *approximately* the same rate.
One tea light candle that burns for a hour with one tiny wick will only last *approximately* 15 minutes in hobo stove. A small pellet tin will hold 3 tea lights & burn for about 45 minutes. But you can add a chunk of wax every 15 minutes to keep fire going indefinitely, don’t over fill cuz fire will not be as big …you gotta phuck around to find out the happy medium!
Best FREE starter car kit imo- A coffee can with lid & a hobo stove.
You now have one way to cook/boil water… next up -the coffee can , should hold 3 alternative ways to make a fire & purify water!
Add another empty plastic bottle that will fit into coffee can( I like big plastic vitamin jar) pack it with more gear & use it to hold clean water in survival. coffee can should hold dirty water till boiled-then transfer to clean container 🫙…
A Coffee can is a stove in itself , just CZcams coffee can stove or hobo stove for hundreds of modifications!
✌️🤟🤙
You should use a real tin can. The aluminum cans could cause a fire! I used my Reveal Cat Food cans to make a bunch of these to keep in my emergency food and essentials prepping.
@@karenandcatz2915 real "tin" isn't and hasn't been used for cans now for a long time. When it is used, it is pretty rare. Almost all cans are aluminum now or an aluminum alloy of varying gauge. Regardless a hobo stove doesn't remotely become hot enough to melt aluminum, even if you made it from a soda can it would be fine. Aluminum melts at 1200 degrees and while actual regular fires can exceed that, it is in their centermost point, and a can is too small for it to ever be near that. Most likely 600 degrees and 800 at the extreme highest.
LOVE the Wood Thrush singing in the background! They are very shy and hard to see/find!
My favorite bird song
...ok then, I won't suggest a song by the band Canned Heat ...
it's fake
@@cameronduff884 We talking about Owly?
@@installgentoo8561 It was added to sounds "quaint" for the outdoor production and help with ratings.
You can always use birch bark and sap if you run out. Also using a syrup tin allow you to relid it. I edited this comment after a comment below.
Never use a paint tin unless you want to end up poisoned. Smh
@@drewroy22 ok a syrup tin and good point on the poisoning. I might edit my comment.
Syrup tin? Is this a Canadian thing? I've never seen syrup in a tin and I'm in my mid 30s.
@@RTanna89 Tate and Lyle thing. Most definitely British.
*Always use a lid when boiling water!*
it can help save energy/fuel and makes it boil faster!
🧐🤔🤨🤷🏼
A pot and lid are probably the most important thing in a survival situation!!
🎉
THE most important thing? XD
In a survival situation you’re likely gonna end up turning to wood for fuel, meaning a proper twig stove will be most relevant. Someone out there in the hiking community has tested the effectiveness of pot lids and found that they’re not worth the weight for tall skinny pots like this, and only so for pots that are wider than they’re taller. That said, an aluminum foil lid never hurt anyone
@@pedroclaro7822 _ive personally tried boiling water at various altitudes and various containers!_
*It makes a HUGE difference!*
*_Its no less than 60% faster!!!!_*
I majored in college to be a park ranger!
(Amongst other things once id finished all their classes*)
_And i took 'basic', 'intermediate' and 'advanced' "outdoor skills"!_
We went backpacking in the middle of winter in Yosemite**
I lived in the woods(off grid*) for over 6months*
@@pedroclaro7822 *its the most important thing!* _(after the container to boil water itself!!)_
@@LBCB94025 how about
1 shelter
2 fire
3 water
4 container
5 food
And you could even place clothes and a knife above all those
I remember my Dad teaching us this when he would take us on camping and fishing trips when I was really young. Looking back on it he taught us so much, and had a way about it that always made it fun. So the lessons stuck with me. He's gone now, but I think about him often as I teach mine so many of the things he taught me. RIP Dad you were a real one. I was lucky to have had you as my dad.
Your father sounds like a good man, my father was also a good man, i miss him everyday
I’m happy that you had an awesome Dad. Love that you’re spreading the knowledge.
teach it to your kids
What a beautiful comment! 🫶
Hopw yall have a relationship with JESUS our GOD amen
I believe the point is that you can mass produce this for later camping trips. Not once your out there.(I hope)
Oh, i get it. It's the teach a man to fish thing.
How long do you reckon this thing burns for?
Wow you figure it out. I thought i was supposed to bring the 300 lbs machine, a generator and an electric stove on the camping trip and make it at the camping ground. 😂
@@jz4057 yea, I saw a lot of hate on the video with people trying to call it out for exactly that. So I made this comment in hopes that people understand you're not supposed to try and make them once you're out there but before hand instead.
@@governedmoth1749 Or just.. y'know
buy a portable camping stove.. or bunsen burner or something
Unless you already got the angle grinder it'll be far cheaper to just buy portable stove that can be re-used for a lifetime.
Just buy tuna in sunflower oil and once you eat the tuna, just stuff the cardboard in. The sunflower oil will work as the wax. Also if you slightly squeeze the can the lid from the same can can be made into the cross at the top.
Wouldn't that have a stinky fish smell ?
@lynnodonnell4764 if that's the case then the salmon can he used in the video would have the same smell
@ninefingers7975 no it wouldn't. There was nothing left in his can versus the sun flower oil sitting with fish in it for months to years. Completely different.
@@lynnodonnell4764Tough shit
@@Icetea-2000Hey Mr Tough Shit, I do plan on trying this concept out. I found the wax.
I just asked cuz I have a neighbor from hell who everytime she smells something 'off' coming from my yard she reports it to the City Nuisance Dept. She reported me for weeds and it was an area that I had planted herbs!
.She recently moved- what a relief!!! Before she left I found out from a neighbor she turned in 5 households for what was to her 'nuisance issues'. That's how she said Goodbye to us.
So I was just hesitant to give this idea a try. I didn't need yet a another notice perpetrated from this 'Karen' Demon next door....
We call it “Trench candle” in Ukraine. It’s widely used on the front line to cook and to dry clothes
Slava ukraine you heroes
Hope the war can end soon....If Trump had won again in 2020 there'd be no war right now there. All the idiots who voted for Biden ended up unknowingly helping to get a bunch of people killed.
With the billions of dollars sent to your country it's strange to read something like that.
I'm kidding, i know, corruption.
Little Russia belongs to Great Russia. Stop fighting a civil war for the West.
Slava Ukraine, stay in the fight. We are with you to the end. Love from America
To create a cheap camping stove you need an angle grinder and another stove
😂😂😂
😂😂😂 as soon as he said grind 3 notches in your grill tongs is where he got me. I was like “my man, HOW?”
You make these BEFORE you go camping.
I completely forgot that part till i came back to the video. I mean i got a chainsaw and a sawzall, imma just have my friend hold the pieces while i cut it lol
You just gotta improvise ive made stuff like this with just a knife and some pliers.
So I need a stove to make a stove?
As someone else pointed out, he uses an angle grinder as well. So you probably would make the hobo stove ahead of time and take it with you.
To make a stove you can bring in your pocket
No you can heat up the wax on a fire
You don't need anything. you are lucky to have society to hold your hand.
You need $5B in equiment to make a real stove, are stoves pointless because you're broke?
@@dontbemean If you have an angle grinder then you can afford to buy an already made camping stove. Only people trying to make this DIY stove wouldn't have the means to make this. This video is pointless.
Ah yes, the classic camping equipment, a mf saw
I mean, exactly. That's why you do it before you go. Awesome for backpacking or just lightweight hammock camping. When I dont need a fire for warmth a 5 second fire for food is amazing.
I usually make about 6 at a time.
It says "DIY." Not "make this in a survival situation."
@@roofcake8951it also says “cheap,” and if you’re looking up ways to DIY a camping stove, odds are you may not be able to afford construction/home improvement equipment like electric saws🙋🏾♀️
Not everyone knows someone with power tools to lend, either🙋🏾♀️
On the other hand, TEMU has the whole shebang for just $10; Amazon, $12.50🤷🏾♀️
Who said it was to make when camping? If you wanna make joke at someone else expense at least use your brain
@@squidport_ The tile is "DIY cheap CAMP stove" You use your brain
You didn’t need to ruin the tongs, just put a rock or 2 on top of the tuna stove
or you know, scavange on a junkyard for metal
cut the top and bottom off another tuna can and bend it slightly and notch the edges so it sits on top of the stove can
Yeah that was such an unnecessary part.
@@deejay5954 it's annoying that he marketed this as DIY and the only method he could come up with included a damn angle grinder.
@@monopolizedopaminewhy is it that some people think DIY means "absolutely no tools required"? I mean, if you prefer a hack saw that's fine, but anyone doing any amount of metal work is going to need an angle grinder at some point. You can buy one for $20 or less. It's hardly an industrial plasma cutter CNC...
_"Aaah! My steak's cooked to perfection! Now, where's my tongs?"_
Hilarious!
real men use thier bare hands
Success, but at what cost
@@old5929real men also put out wax fires with water
@@old5929 Are there fake men?
I make torches the same way. I just roll the cardboard till its the size of a soda can and soak it the same way.
Cheaper wax works best in the winter
Citronella wax goes out a bit easier but repels bugs
Thank you!
@@battleofarmageddon1366 anytime 🍻
🥰🥰🥰
One thing... Do *NOT* pour off the "excess." Keep as much wax as will fit into your new "stove" (large fire starter, tent heater, etc.). The more wax you pour back out, the faster the burn and shorter the life of the "stove."
I've made a *bunch* of these (sans this type top grid), can portion, only as additions to survival kits, car emergency kits, back packs, etc.. They're great for everything from starting a larger fire and putting it out for next time to cooking to warming a small tent as they give off a lot of heat/light and burn very hot yet last a *very* long time, especially if you just use them for short periods at a stretch. It just takes a little patience to strip down the cardboard and slowly fill the container with wax, letting the bubbles escape until it's filled solid.
Trust me...
I have them in car road kits, light survival packages, etc.. They're cheap & easy to make and take about as much room as a can of chewing tobacco (or... Tuna fish!) 😉
It's keeping as much wax in there as possible that's the secret. That burns as well but lasts *much* longer than just the wax soaked cardboard, that's key. You want as much fuel in there, as possible. The cardboard just helps an easier start and even burn across the surface while generating more heat than just trying to light the wax, itself, like a giant wick.
They'll work with the little folding, Sterno style stoves (which pack flat) but last way longer or, just a piece of uncoated, stainless, wire mesh and a couple of rocks/sticks, etc. to hold the screen that can be easily kept in a light pack or even a pocket, you're glove box or wherever. The windscreen works great and can be flattened out for storage, as well.
Just ruff up the top surface of the cardboard with a sharp edge to create a little wax-soaked "fuzz" on the exposed surface, maybe rub a little piece of cotton (ball, scraped lint from cotton socks/shirt, etc.) and drop some sparks on it. Presto. 😊 But, whatever you do and with no disrespect intended, do not pour off any of the wax. Soak in as much as is possible. It will work as well but, for a lot longer, promise. 😉
Those are some good advices, thank you.
Ok, thank you for your input.
Belo testamento!
@@ronheydon117 You're welcome, it was meant with best Intentions as I've made dozens of these, tried several different methods and a full cup with the top "fluffed up" with a knife, etc. is the most efficient, though it does take more wax. But the extra life and even burn makes it worth it. 😀 I'm glad to see people trying/making this kind of stuff because it's so effective and all it costs is some used cardboard and tin and any kind of old candles you can find, it doesn't have to be Gulf paraffin as a necessity. I built my first one after emptying a tuna can and had an epiphany. 😆 I grabbed an old, wilting taper (thin candles you put in a candle stick on a dinner table), ripped a piece of cardboard off a box in the recycle bin and Presto. I knew that I must not have been the first to come up with the idea, it was too good. 😆
I tried several different combos and methods (types of wax, how much wax, how full, etc. just to satisfy my overactive, scientific mind (and I was bored out of my tree after an injury) and the full can (use a chicken can for a larger unit) with any candle wax you have was the trick. The paraffin does seem to be sliiiightly better but not so much that you *need* to go buy some.
We're all here to share and help and improve each other and that was my only intent. Have a great one and keep it up!
So wait, are you saying we should pour off the extra wax or???
This thing also known as “Trench candle” - became very popular at Ukrainian frontlines this winter
and then the Russian artillery blew everything into bits and pieces
Hello from Ukrainian 🇨🇦 born in Canada 🇺🇦
Happy to say I haven't supported Ukronazis sincd they started m j f d e r i n g civilians in Donbass in April 2014 aftef Турчинов declared ATO 😢
@@walterbrunswick then why do you live in the decaying west that full of anglosaxes and nazi supporters? Go live in blooming Russia, I even know a couple of especially attractive cities, such as Shebekino and Belhorod lmao
@@walterbrunswick then the russian artillery was annihilated by a HIMARs. your little putler’s on his last legs, buddy
God bless you!!
Wouldn’t buying a sterno be easier and cheaper?
This was in the girl scout handbook in the 1930s/40s
I like using a Fritos bean dip can because it comes with a lid that you can put on after it cools down.
But the most important part of why you'd want to use that is because you have a valid reason to eat Fritos bean dip before you make it 🤤
"Babe, I know I'm on a diet, but if we go camping and don't have any of these, it might be hard to start a fire!!!"
@@since1876 yessiree
Yeah the method in the video is crap lol.
"All you need is a tuna can, $100 in power tools, a source of electricity, some straight thick metal.."
You can do the same thing by barely opening the can just enough to get the tuna and juice out
Then stuff cotton in and press the lid back down and poke holes in it..
Then you can use some rocks that are taller than the can to surround the can with, and place your pot on top of the rocks.
This guy is telling us "this is a survival skill.. but only if you are in your own backyard with working electricity, power tools, and other materials" lol
This is the most useless video I've ever seen.
@@jonslg240 uh, I'm pretty sure no one ever suggested that these would be made anywhere other than home. This is a PREPARATION video, not a survival video.
@@jonslg240 😂 what a modern human you are!!!
Great idea for outdoors. Everything about the can with rolled cardboard and the melted wax is handy. Thank you. I'll keep this in mind. However, I'll substitute the base with 3 or 4 rocks. I've cooked this way at my Girl Scout adventures.
Just use the bottom of the coffee can so you can have a windscreen and grill in one piece
I agree with you on the rocks. If you look around hard enough you can find some elongated thin rocks that can crisscross on top of the can. OR place a series of rocks thicker than the can width, around the perimeter of the tuna can to prop up your pan or pot.
Or just use the stove you used to melt the wax
@@gg-ct3foyou bring your kitchen stove with you camping? Please upload a vid!
@@Tactics_Actual no I was referring to the one the stove the guy in the video used to make his DIY stove
Aw dang it, all I have are catfood cans
Once he said angle grinder he lost me I’ll order a stove off Amazon
What a smart and clever way to reuse common items!
What about the circular saw? Everyone packs one with their camping gear? And a generator to run it?
@@67Pepperjust befriend carpenter or mechanic. those job is not rare for a man.
@@67Pepperlol i think the idea is that you'd make this before you head out on the trail, not in the middle of it😂
@@67Pepper I got a wireless, rechargeable Dremel kit for about $150 at overpriced Ace Hardware last year, used it for all kinds of things from recreating this project for storm prepping (power can go out for days) to wall repairs at work to attempting to make chess pieces for funsies. Not a bad investment at all to have on hand, especially if there's a crafter/ cosplayer/ diyer in the family that needs to sand something... with the circular rotating blades smh. Not everyone can have a circular saw in the gargage, but this? Same thing but tiny and portable, like Little Cricket. 👍
@@67Pepperjust use a hand file or something. I’m sure you can figure it out. also isn’t really something you make while out and about lmao. Could also use any number of alternatives that don’t require power tools. It’s literally just metal supporting a cup on a tuna can lmao. Again I’m sure you can figure it out. mfs act helpless about the most trivial things conceivable
We made these in 7 th grade for our overnight hike and made our dinner on them. Thanks for the memory
I will just use the propane stove.
Can you cook crack on that
Yes, Hunter.
Buying tongs for this would cost more than a disposable camp stove
😂
He said he bought it at dollar tree
If you're smart enough to do the math and figure that out- then you're smart enough to make this without the tongs- right? Problem solved.
I'm like are disposal camp stoves really this expensive
Where are you getting a $1 camp stove?
Love how he conveniently forgot to mention you'd need to be able to afford a grinder after saying making the stove is cheap
or just use a hacksaw?
@@alexastbury1081 Yes I have a hacksaw in my tiny apartment ready
I never leave for a camping trip without my angle grinder
Faça antes então
It's a prep. You don't make these on site. 🙄
@@arphod “achtually it’s a prep you don’t make these on site” 🤓
@@ExplodingBlocksdamn dude 😂 my stomach hurts from laughter 😂
Right🤣
I know this was meant for outside, but, if wanting to use this inside, would the plastic coating in the can be toxic?
Duh since inflation hit, probably shouldn't be destroying stuff then genius, stupid and not practical, use scrap metal or broken items...
about the wind screen, if you cut the can into 2 half-circles, and position them slightly offset, you can create a vortex that will make the fire twirl.
Advantage?
@@Rotorhead1651 heat. More oxygen= more heat
Won’t all the wax melt and drip out though?
@@digus Only the windscreen, not the candle stove.
@@Rotorhead1651 cool factor and easier to store away 2 halves of a can
Melting the wax in a double boiler eliminates the danger of a flashover.
I've made them before couple years ago they do last for a long time and you can cook some meets over if you use a thin pan
Replace camp with trailer park
Because of course the tongs..
made these back in the late 70's, they work great!
Much Love and God Bless
How long do they last? From the size of the can and the amount of wax used I'd estimate 2-3 hours but i dont really know as ive never used one.
@@tmoney1487 weeks
In girl scouts yesssssss 😇🤣🙆♀️🙆♀️🙆♀️🔥🔥🔥💥
@@zoezzzarko1117 beavers haha
God Bless and Much Love
This is an old boy scout thing. We also took an old metal coffee can turned upside down with a few holes drilled in the sides for air flow. The bottom of the can has a natural indentation that will hold some cooking oil and we used to make fried potatoes and ham on it...ahhhh the simple good Ole days
Somebody didn't like doing dishes 😂 We'd bring pots and pans. I seem to recall I always did dishes.
We also just wrapped meat and potatoes in tinfoil and put it right in the fire. Mmmm
I made these when I was in Boy Scouts back in the mid to late 50s. Memories …
Old Girl Scout thing too. LOL
But you already have a stove
...or find a three stones and bring a candle....
It was 1958 or 1959 when I started making cardboard and paraffin stoves. Used a great many of them for weekend hiking and camping.
Well done grand pa
@@maxquanchi: THANKS! I was in Cub Scouts then. Now my youngest grandchild is 11 and oldest grandchild is 23.
@@Tool-Meister Noie, that's awesome. How time flies. Great stuff to teach the younglings.
"here's how to do a cheap DIY camp stove. First what we need is a store-bought camp stove..."
“DIY” are you homeless do you not have a stove he didn’t say make a stove out of natural resources
“Thinking quickly, Dave made an improvised camping stove out of a squirrel, a piece of string, and a camping stove.”
@@daetonspicer7728 well I dont have a grinder, pretty sure that way more costly DIY than a portable stove.
@@naz6james570nobody is telling you to buy an angle grinder for the sole purpose of making this stove lmao it's for people who already have one
if you don't want to spend a cent. just find three rocks, keep them as a triangle on the ground, put dry leaves and branches and light. congratulations you have a cheap stove now.
We made those in girl scouts
You heat up the wax on a stove? To make another stove? Lol
Girl scouts we called this a buddy burner, we all had to make them, but we used a larger can with an air window over the top as a cooking surface. We kept the rubber can top to put all our stuff in, burner, lighter, matches and soap to coat the inside to clean out the soot, fit nicely in one package
I’m a little confused on your instructions. But sounds like a good idea would you be able to explain these steps a little better?
@@ChaoticIntervention what part don't you understand?
We made the burner part like he did, minus the stupid cross thing, we used a larger can (think metal coffee can) that a 2*2 square was removed from the open end on the side as an oxygen window (keep the plastic top) smear some liquid soap all over inside the big can, it makes an easy job of cleaning the soot off with water when you're done cooking, when you lite your burner you turn the big can upside down over your burner (flat bottom side up) you can then use a pan on it, or a small pot, cover it with some foil and cook right on the surface for one burger or eggs ect.
When you're done cooking take the flat surface of your big can upside down and place it right on the burner to snuff it out. Take your large can wash it out, real easy if you have soaped it.
Then once your burner is cool enough to handle, everything fits in the bigger can, your lighter/matches, small bottle of soap, burner, tin foil squares we used to put on toilet paper rolls in a Ziploc bag, extra square of wax, your fork, knife and spoon put the lid back on and it's altogether.
Hope this explains it😊
@@patriciatoomingtheplantpar2558καταπληκτική περιγραφή σε ευχαριστούμε 🙏❤🇬🇷
Same in scouts! Same name too. We baked small cakes in our commercial pizza sauce can "ovens"
Yep, was doing this 60 yrs ago in girl scouts. Amazing how this generation thinks they are so clever.
You can use paper towels (as wick). And rocks for a stand.
"Only cost a few bucks"
**Pulls out a grinder that costs well over $100**
This Would Be Useful In A Campfire With Some Friends!
In my country tuna cans are filled with olive oil or sunflower oil so you can just open a hole with a knife on the tuna can and put a piece of paper, let it soak with the oil and light the paper. You have a nice candle and if you need more power just open more holes and put more paper.
THAT was a more useful tip for me! I was gonna ask how much was the circular saw 🤣. This is hardly an "on the go" emergency stove (to be fair, he never said it was).
Cool
I remember these from 1968..
Boy Scouts..
Yeah,
Keep the excess wax in it.
Lasts longer.
Also,
While you have the melted wax available...
Roll up (to the size you want) some paper towels. Then dip them (soaked) into the wax.
These make fabulous, cheap fire starters.
After the wax cools off completely, you can cut the finished product to the length you want to use.
I usually make mine twice as thick as a good cigar. Carry them in your various kits..
Survival
Camping
Car
Edc etc.
We used newspaper in the Girl Scouts back in the 1960s. LOL
Ive been trying to make this for three days but can not find a source for the 1 inch wide card board strip things.
What company did you buy them from?
Find scrap cardboard, just cut them out. Easy
How convenient 😂
You should try to get the plastic off of the inside of the coffee can so you don't breath fumes from burning plastic.
How do you get high then? It's not like joints are lying around everywhere
We made a version of this in Girl Scouts back in the 50s made with a tuna can and a large tomato juice can.
Buddy burner lol
@@pamelaleone2926 yes! Buddy Burners! We were still making them in the 80s!
Would be nice if we could still train kids on survival skills without having to worry about Molester Lester
We didn't add the fancy grill made from knives. We just used a kind of can opener that makes triangular cuts to cut a lot of holes in the big can along the top and bottom. Put the cooking pot on the big can over the tuna can in the girl scouts in the 1960's.
@@pumpkinmaster8044 I can what?
Excellent tip. Terrific video 👏👏😀🇭🇲👏👏👏
#Ukraine #militaryStove
So glad I spent an hour and paid $5 to make this instead of buying that 20 pack for $2 each online.
Capitalism is one hell of a drug
I know. He is idiot😅
Link?
What how much is a can of Sterno?
But you did something. Buying stuff is way lamer.
I made these in the 60's with cub scouts. Works great... creates some soot, but if you rub the outside bottom of your cooking pot with soap begore using the stove, the soot literslly rinses off.
Thanks for that tip 👍
Could it be used to cook food?
Instead of using wax can I use lighter fluid or ethanol instead
They evaporate too quickly at room temperature. Use something that'll solidify and stay solid instead of evaporating
I still have a few of these, i use them for cooking during power outages. They work very well and burn a long time. If we lose power in the winter i usually have the wood stove burning anyway. 👍
How long do you find they usually burn for?
@@claires3562I'd like to know too ^^
So you don’t use them since your wood is burning.,? So yes the POS are a waste of fucking time., just burn wood
Good video for a few dollars more I could just buy a little bottle of ice of butane or propane😅
Works even better if you can find single wall cardboard.
These were called Buddy Burners in the Scouts. If you have a metal coffee can as well you can modify it to be a griddle cooktop that goes over the burner. It's the perfect size for an egg and a slice of summer sausage for breakfast.
link
you mean a link of sausage
a fully formed uncooked sausage isnt a slice of anything...
its a link from a chain of sausages....
did you maybe mean ham?
you def slice ham
@@zer0harts Maintenant, dis quoi? It's a summer sausage! It's brown, about a foot long, comes in a paper casing, tastes like meat flavored grease? Surely you know it!
The same method can be used to make an emergency candle. By simply adding a wick in the center, and not pouring out any wax, you can have a candle that can burn for up to 120 hours (that's 5 days straight).
Do I need a bought candle to build that candle, if yes this idea is as bad as this video.
Angle grinder and another stove to make a cheap stove smh
@@timeflow3305this video shows a supper common homemade camping stove that literally people's only complaint about is how he made the support for his cook pot
@@timeflow3305
You do fucking realize you’re supposed to make this ahead of time, right? Not in the goddamn woods!
👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 awesome info
How is it cheap when you have to buy a $200 tool to cut the metal?
People in the comments seem to be having a lot of trouble
-You're not supposed to do this while camping. This is a project to make at home.
-You don't need a workshop filled with tools; an angle grinder can be bought for $50.
-You DON'T EVEN NEED AN ANGLE GRINDER. You could do this with A HAND SAW.
And lastly, sometimes people just make things because they want to! Yes, a camp stove may be cheaper. Yes, buying one is easier. But some people just make stuff for fun! Why are you all being such fucking weirdos?!
They really are struggling.
Bro you sound trigger trying to defend a video from a person that made it and doesnt know you.
Why are you so upset? Are you new to the internet?
um maybe because when people show things that are supposed to be the CHEAP route they should actually be CHEAP. 😂 if i still have to spend all that money on all the items to make the damn stove i might as well just pay for the damn stove 😂😂
Two reasons:
N°1: this is the internet, furthermore, the COMMENTS SECTION for some random, innocuous video more hobby oriented than actual survival or bushcraft content, OF COURSE we're f#(k|π₲ weirdos. You see, normal people will watch and go on, they have lives and mental health. Those commenting? Freaks, creeps, weirdos, spectrum, radicals, geeks and so on, all of us. Hardly any normies arguing on some meaningless thread.
N°2: going berserk over meaningless things is fun.
I love the video, i think it's a great, easy idea, if anything, i would puncture some wholes around the tin can, above wax level, to favour airflow. But this is THE INTERNET, home of trolls and experts on all. And you too are here, arguing with strangers, and they may no even be real 🤷🏽♂️
Kool😮😮😅
It doesn't matter how many times people demonstrate this method of camping stove, it never ceases to entertain and satisfy me. Thank you for your time. 🙏😊❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
So at camping you need to ruin a tongue, and need a grinder and electricity all that to make a great little camping stove ? Genius
You make them to store easily for when you end up needing them
That flimsy metal can and will break off easily and I'm sure you can cut the grooves with a good pocket knife and big rock
Tuna in oil is a good stove by itself.
Doesn't it smell bad while burning?
Coffee can rocket stove is still better. Because sticks are generally free and everywhere. And that block of waxes and isn't.
Its Funny because inflation hit harder than we thought so we are searching how to cook food the cheapest way possible
"DIY cheap camp stove" that you can only use once made using expensive power tools and a different camp stove. Bro would *save* money just buying a new camp stove. They're cheap as fuck. Lmfao
It’s only cheap if you have the equipment to make it in the first place, which not everyone has. So this only is effective to save money for a niche population
@@cameronschyuder9034 K? Is that supposed to refute me or are you just repeating what I said with more words? Lol
You don’t need power tools to do this…
@@sonnyg960 Okay?
@@cameronschyuder9034 Angle grinder is just easier, you can get the same results with a metal file.
Paraffin can catch fire if you melt it without using a double boiler
I make these Hobo stoves all the time and always us a double boiler. You can however, do it with just a pot, just don't put it over high heat.
Lol I only came to the comments section to find people telling him he's doing something wrong 😂
@@MrBilld75 or don't spill it, accidents happen when "being careful"
@@hermestrismegistus3962 don't burn your house down inventing a two bit stove. or spill the flaming wax on a child , THAT would haunt you for a very long time
@@commonconservative7551 Oh, I am super careful when making them. The hobo stove can is right next to the double boiler on the stove about 8 inches away, so it doesn't have far to go into the hobo stove. Then I leave it to cool and set and I don't move it till it is set. I usually do 2 of them at a time and I never have much wax in the pot, because I am usually melting down a bunch of spent tea lights with leftover wax in them, because the wicks inevitably burn our before all the wax is used. lol. So I typically only ever have enough wax for one or two. About 2 inches of wax in the pot, maximum.
Wow, how easy
or you know, just buy an actual camping stove for $20
Wow thats awesome. I like that. Need to try this. Nice.
Thank god I brought my angle grinder to this survival situation (joking this is an awesome idea)
😂
If your gonna say it then mean it with the joking part
Ah yes I always bring a dremel when I'm camping
Very cool but it'll literally be cheaper and quicker and last longer to just buy a sterno and dont throw out the cap most sterno cans lasts roughly 2 hours and can get them at the $tree😊
We did this in Boy Scouts for the earthquake victims in Juneau, 1964
We called them Bunson Burners
A Bunson burner is entirely different, is manufactured, and used for heating lab chemicals in pyrex test tubes.
Not the same as a DIY hobo stove at all.
I'm not debating that your Scout leader may have them that; just pointing out that it is inaccurate. Great little stoves; regardless.
Enjoy your day!
About 70 years ago I belonged to a group of young girls called Campfire girls and we made a burner like this called a buddy burner. Nothing new under the sun.
Some ppl werent in your group 70 years ago and some kids stroll around the internet or ppl that havrnt had the idea. It’s intended for them, the world doesn’t revolve around you stop being a cnt
Remember folls, take a grinder (and generator) with you, camping.
Use the can lid instead of cutup tongs.
Ah good times. I remember making one of these back in the day and we put it under one of those giant cans used for something like crushed tomatoes to make your own pasta sauce that had been cleaned up and had a notch cut out of it. We cooked bacon and eggs on top of it the next morning.
Was that a Scouts thing? I did that when I was in the GS. We cooked slices of summer sausage and eggs on them.
@@randybugger3006 not quite, but sort of? It was a church thing called Royal Ambassadors if I recall correctly.
Yeah easy to make for those who have the tools. No one has.
If you don't have any tools, you don't deserve camping
yea guys, so if indeed you have the tools, then leave this comment alone, this comment "isn't for you" 😂
@@FingerSpazm surprise, it is for some. idk, i shouldn't have commented that. some people can have things, some can't. i'm not trying to bring down the idea that you can. neither making a boohoo story for those who can't. why do we insist it's either 1 or 0. i'm not even into camping so why am i involved here. alright. my bad. bye
Love the amount of people who utterly missed the point of this comment. E-ray is clearly saying that this "cheap" stove is only cheap _if you have all the expensive crap the guy used to make it_
Cut notches wuth grinder.....will a cutting torch work 😂😂😂😂
Too much effort for a humble coffe or whatsoever!
how much does the cardboard cost?
Step one buy a grinder for 120$
Nothing, the packaging from your cereal box
@SugarBreakyes
Yep, I used these as part of my winter survival kit in the car. I put it inside an upside down coffee tin with a section cut in the bottom and small can opener holes around the top rim for air flow. The bottom of the coffee tin functioned as my stove/frying pan to cook on. The wax did have a tendency to smoke though. Other than that it worked like a damn.
Usually like this channel for survival ideas but this is both dumb and definitely not easy for one it requires power tools which are not always available. Can't be be right every time but most of the videos are good this one just proves the creator of the content is human 😅
I get the new set for couple of bucks without destroying anything.
So you need a stove to make an emergency stove. Am I seeing that correctly?
YES LMFAO. Dumbest video shorts
You are. Beware the fangirls
😂😂
I thought I was too high, but yeah like why in the world would you do all this stuff if you have a stove already, I love CZcams 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@qdukez to go outside, you know? That place behind the window where you dont have kitchen appliances
The irony of having to use a stove to melt the wax to make a stove. Just use the stove you used to heat your coffee.😂