msomnipotent
06-05-2012, 06:21 AM
We are checking our gear before we head out on our camping trip, and none of the stoves work. My husband has been hiking (actual hiking and not "lodging" according to him), yet I still feel that our lives are in danger. I go into my laundry room, which is the first room attached to our house and our 3 car garage, and I smell some sort of gas. I open the totally enclosed garage and my husband has the Coleman two burner propane stove kinda sorta lit and it is going phft,phft, phft, phft, as if something is blocking the gas from hitting the first burner. The second burner farthest away from the gas acts perfectly fine. I yell useless common sense at him and open the window, yet I am afraid to open the garage doors lest I recreate a scene from the movie Backdraft. I have no clue so I want to play it safe. He opens valves on another can of gas to light something called a whisperlight and my concrete is on fire. He moves the whisperlight and the concrete is still alight. More fumes. I remind him once again, righty tighty lefty loosey. He still insists something is wrong with the stoves as he has clearly followed directions as the pamphlet for such directions are clearly opened and at his feet and not currently on fire.
Question 1: What would cause a Coleman stove using Coleman fuel to go 'phft phft phft" on one burner closest to the gas tank and not the other? The fire level as goes "phft phft phft". I would think a bad line or bad gas would affect both burners.
Question 2: Should my concrete floor on fire ever be considered "normal", because I don't think a 4 foot flame on concrete should ever be considered normal, especially after the 20 year old whisperlight is moved from the area and the concrete floor is still going strong. I have known my husband for 15 years and the fuel he is using for the whisperlight is at least as old as that. The fuel was stored in a cool basement and no noticeable evaporation was present. Oddly, the Coleman stove is only a few years old and the fuel is maybe two years old at worst. Personally, I think it is time for a lot of our equipment to magically disappear and be replaced by something better, if there are any suggestions. We do car camping, but backpacking is hopefully in our future.
Question 1: What would cause a Coleman stove using Coleman fuel to go 'phft phft phft" on one burner closest to the gas tank and not the other? The fire level as goes "phft phft phft". I would think a bad line or bad gas would affect both burners.
Question 2: Should my concrete floor on fire ever be considered "normal", because I don't think a 4 foot flame on concrete should ever be considered normal, especially after the 20 year old whisperlight is moved from the area and the concrete floor is still going strong. I have known my husband for 15 years and the fuel he is using for the whisperlight is at least as old as that. The fuel was stored in a cool basement and no noticeable evaporation was present. Oddly, the Coleman stove is only a few years old and the fuel is maybe two years old at worst. Personally, I think it is time for a lot of our equipment to magically disappear and be replaced by something better, if there are any suggestions. We do car camping, but backpacking is hopefully in our future.