http://trailersailerplace.com.au/forum/ ... php?t=3825
Ian and I have put our $0.02 in and the post has had a fairly polarised response. Members might want to follow the links in the thread its informative stuff. For the record I used a Maxie twin burner marine metho jobbie on my old Swiftcraft for 14 years without incident other than some singed arm hair from flare ups during the preheating stage. On Spritzig II however I have one of the ubiquitous $20 canister cookers. These work well and I was not knocking the product or the users when I posted. As someone pointed out they are standard equipment on many new vessels coming on the market. I keep only one cylinder on the boat and that is removed and stored in a screw top plastic jar. Also if cooking in the cockpit I move the fuel tank into the anchor well or the tender
There have been sufficient accidents with these things to warrant at least for me second thoughts on using them inside a boat, indeed on boats at all. Those of us concerned on the TSP forum seemed to have been collectively branded as doomsayers

Heres the rub. When I worked in road design I would say to people trying to find loopholes in the standards.......
"You could stick a light pole in the middle of a two lane highway right on the double lines and nobody would probably hit it .........for a while. That does not mean its a good idea"
I think these stoves are great but after reading the info in the TSP thread I have decided to join Ian B
in the joys of the metho burner. As per my statement above I think if these things do fail you could be looking at horrific injuries maybe blindness, I might risk that for myself but not for my family.
If you dont want to troll TSP try this link I credit this photo to the author
http://chemaxx.com/butane_explosion.htm
Comments??