now before everyone goes off in a panic lets take a look what many folks consider a good quality UL stove … the snow peak litemax
here we have a BPLer having a port support fall off …
I had a Litemax, one of the rivets for the fold-out pot support extensions was the 1st point of failure in my case.
Dave
and another with a strip of the aluminum threads …
I enjoyed my Litemax while it worked but I can attest to a failure on the threads. Maybe I accidentally overtightened at some point. I switched to the Micro Light and have no complaints.
https://backpackinglight.com/forums/topic/89800/page/2/
and heres another thread strip of the threads (determined by snow peak after she sent it in) which led to some fireworks ..
I have had a Snow Peak LiteMax stove for several years and used it on numerous trips. Great little canister stove, weighs just 2 ounces, and has never given me any trouble until this last trip.
On this trip I noticed that every time I threaded the stove onto the canister a bit of gas escaped. I think that has happened before, but this time it was more noticeable. Other than that it seemed fine.
The last night of my trip as I threaded the stove onto the canister even more gas seemed to escape and yet, foolishly, I lit the stove. Big mistake. The gas was not only coming out in controlled amounts where it was supposed to, it was also escaping in large amounts around the base of the stove. The stove was in flames and would remain so until all the gas from the canister was consumed. I watched in horror. Tried to put it out by dousing it in water, but the water did nothing. I had placed the stove on a sandy surface with nothing flammable close by. But I was worried that the canister would explode, and spread the fire. Luckily it did not.
https://backpackinglight.com/forums/topic/96209/
and heres a few issues with port supports on the litemax bending from their REI reviews … at least 2 are claimed to be under lightish loads
Didn’t even make it thru 10 mins
The “titanium” arms on this baby buckled after one use. Was boiling a small pan of water on it – not super heavy. Medium flame. When I took the pan off, I saw that the arms were distorted and bucking inwards. Super disappointing.
Too fragile and unstable
We just used this stove on a ski trip up Rock Creek to climb Bear Creek Spire(May 20-23). The first night at 10,700 ft., on flat snow(stability is a big issue), and in no wind, it performed well. The second night at 12,500 ft., at 25 degrees F and in wind, it did not want to melt snow(even using MSR’s heat exchanger) so we had to use it in the tent. On a somewhat rough snow floor, you felt you had to hold on to the pot to not dump it. Stability is a big problem and we were using MSR’s cannister stand.
We also found the stove’s pot support arms to be fragile and when hot would bend under the weight of a pot of water.
warped pot support arm
We like the size, weight and overall performance of the stove, which we have used for 7 days (breakfast and dinner), never more than about 20 minutes/meal nor at the highest flame adjustment. The maximum weight in a pot was just over a liter of water. Near the end of the trip, we noticed that one of the pot support arms has warped slightly (though it still holds the pot). Hoping this is a production (not design) flaw, we have returned the stove in exchange for another one. We have used an angled piece of aluminum as a wind screen, but it does not surround the stove (shields about half the area around the stove) and does not sit close to the canister. Perhaps we need to be more careful in setting up the screen, but backcountry winds in Colorado and Wyoming require some wind protection.
https://www.rei.com/product/768603/snow-peak-litemax-stove
note that these issues are with a stove thats over twice the weight, around 6 times the price and produced by one of the best stove manufacturers
are we to then conclude that the litemax is a crap stove? … NO
plenty of folks im sure use their litemax just fine … as with any stove there may be issues and dud …
and the lighter the stove the less durable it tends to be … there are tradoffs such as aluminum threads or port supports that are exactly “bomber”
most folks on BPL understand this for other gear such as 0.5 cuben shelters, 70D packs, 5 oz rain jackets ….
the same holds true for stoves
;)