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Nice example of how reviving an old thread can be a good thing. I had never heard of these until today and they look really great.

I am super tempted to buy one, but it seems like 9 times out of 10 there are fire restrictions in effect, certainly here in Arizona. I hate carting propane around for my thirsty gas firepit, but can’t justify taking another 20 lb accessory I can rarely use either.

Super jealous of that beautiful fire in the OP, though!

I heard good things about the solo stove but decided against a purchase due to cost and not see a real advantage to having one.  But it looks like you can get a nice fire using less wood.  Is that correct?  Considering the cost of fire wood at campgrounds (and even from locals selling in front of their homes), it may pay off pretty quick.  Do they use less wood than a traditional fire pit for the same campfire experience?  If so, how much less? 

It's the King of Combustion (I should register that as a trademark!) and once at operating temperature there's little smoke. Think about this, smoke = particulates. I sit around soooo many camp fires I see complete combustion as a health benefit! I'm not really joking about that either.

@TSR Campers posted:

Solo Stove keeps coming out with accessories.  I'm addicted.  Bonfire w stand, spark screen, now lid in December, now handle to pick it up in May.  What's next?  Doesn't matter, I'll buy it.

Ha! (i have three: 2 Bonfires and a Yukon for the yard!)

Nice example of how reviving an old thread can be a good thing. I had never heard of these until today and they look really great.

I am super tempted to buy one, but it seems like 9 times out of 10 there are fire restrictions in effect, certainly here in Arizona. I hate carting propane around for my thirsty gas firepit, but can’t justify taking another 20 lb accessory I can rarely use either.

Super jealous of that beautiful fire in the OP, though!

This is why I converted our travel Bonfire to dual fuel. We were in AZ and NM this winter so I added a propane ring to the Bonfire. To convert to propane I pop on the plate mounted double propane ring (a 12" and a 6") fed from under the plate. I drilled a hole thru the side of the Bonfire at the bottom and fed the metal tube out thru the hole. I feed it propane from a spare 20 lb bottle via a high pressure regulator. Used it all winter on our 2 month trip. It all fits in the original Bonfire carry bag.

SmartSelect_20210116-183206_Video Player

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Last edited by VigII

They are indeed ceramic logs and I will follow up with pictures of my propane modifications to my Bonfire pit with their screen. Until I get the chance to take some pictures, here's the materials I used. It's straight forward to me and everything goes together in a few minutes. The only mod to the pit was to cut the hole through the side of the pit so the bottom of the hole was nearly flush with the top of the perforated pit floor. The mod wasn't inexpensive the purpose was to have a Bonfire flame with propane. I'd recommend reading up on risks of building DIY propane fire pits and accumulate returned parts a cheaper prices.

No, just a glow is all I see. The hole transects the double wall side of the pit just above the perforated interior base. This space produces the superheated air that spontaneously ignites any escaping smoke at the top of the pit, where one sees thee secondary burn in the op. The pit design produces so much draft the hole feeds air. However I do plug the hole with a electrical box knockout cover. I use a S-type  cover because it's easy on/off. https://www.morrisproducts.com...43E3B7209EE61602D773

Here is a picture of the pit burning wood without the hole covered.

SmartSelect_20210226-201036_Gallery

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Last edited by VigII

Speaking of Solo Stove accessories... A nice new one is available... A cast-iron grill:

https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-b5b4c/product_images/uploaded_images/cooktop-desktop-hb-noppl.jpg?t=1624465811

The picture above is from the solostove.com website.  They just started shipping the pre-orders.  I pre-ordered a while back, and mine arrived this week.  I haven't had a chance to use yet, but it looks pretty good.  The casting has some little bit rough areas that I'll sand on to smooth out. Then I want to season up the cast-iron before I cook on it.

As was said earlier, I'll state once again, pricey, but very cool stuff.  I think this will add some cool versatility for the campsite.

Les found this thread for me because I was telling him about my new Solo Stove "Campfire" (that's the model name). I travel alone and I LOVE a campfire...best part of camping for me! Anyway, in the past, by the time I get a regular wood campfire going good, I'm ready for bed - waste of wood and time!

Over the years, I've had a Little Red (propane) Campfire and a Flame Genie (built exactly like the Solo, except uses pellets). Little Red - on the heavier and bulky side and you have to schlepp an extra propane tank (heavy). Flame Genie - burns through pellets really fast; pellets are heavy; non-cooking pellets are difficult to find on the road.

Now I'm giving this Solo Stove Campfire a try - the largest of the stoves, but nowhere near close to the largest of the campfires. It weighs in at 2.2 lbs! It's meant to burn with twigs and sticks and leaves. I bought wood chunks online and the pic below was using 1 Weber fire starter cube, 2 fatwood sticks, and 2 pieces of chunk hardwood. So far, so good - perfect for me, as a Solo (pun intended) traveler! (the black thing is the Flame Genie). Happy Camper here in NW TN. Real World experience to follow!

Alternate product idea here.

Before I knew about the Solo product (my brother has a Solo Yukon in his backyard and that bad boy does a great job of completely burning wood mostly smoke free), I picked up a Pop Up Firepit from Fireside Outdoor, also mostly smoke free. Kind of like one of those collapsible chairs you travel with or use around the campfire.

With the heat shield and ember mat, it's a  great lightweight, ground safe firepit that fully burns wood, manufactured logs, and charcoal (they have available cooking grates sized to fit).

I'm not sure if the BLM or US Forest Service officially weighed in on it, but at the time I bought ours the claim was that they are BLM and USFS approved.

They have occasional sales, the best usually before the Christmas season. Here's a link: https://firesideoutdoor.com/co.../products/pop-up-pit

Note: While I love our pop up firepit, I am not associated with the company and I do not sell the product or profit in any way from them except from the enjoyment of an excellent campfire.

Last edited by Hoppy Camper

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