Wonder what they weigh? Some look rather heavy.
Agreed. Remotes typically are heavier.
I suppose MSR is going after those who want “better stability” (although I think the Windburner is reasonably stable if one uses the canister legs provided). The new remote Windburner does not appear to have any type of pre-heat loop that would support inverted operation, so it doesn’t appear that they’re going after the winter crowd.
On the other hand, the new Jetboil entry clearly is going after the winter crowd. This is their third inverted offering, to the best of my recall:
- Helios
- Joule
- MilliJoule
I’m not sure why the Helios didn’t sell well, perhaps the market wasn’t really ready for it, but, as far as I’m aware, the Helios was the first stove system to introduce inverted canister operation. The WindPro used as an inverted canister stove was something that consumers thought up, not MSR, although MSR later embraced the idea and upgraded to the WindPro II — which has a rotating coupler that facilitates inverted operation.
The Joule is kind of kludgey. It’s not very stable and can only support 100/110 g or 220/230 g sized canisters, and even if you use a small 100/110 sized canister, the stove’s “superstructure” is rigid and takes the same amount of space. The Joule is rather large with it’s 2.5 L pot.
The MilliJoule should be able to support any sized canister, although you might have to prop up a 450 g sized canister with your shoes or something. The MJ is far smaller at 1.5 L — which is an interesting size. I would have thought 1.8 L like the Windburner or Sumo would be more suitable or even 2.0 L. It is for snow melting after all. On the plus side, the lack of a superstructure makes the MJ a lot less kludgey and bulky than the original Joule.
I think Jetboil may have a winner with the MJ whereas I think the sales performance of the original Joule was just so-so. We’ll see.
On the other hand, if the new remote Windburner cannot support inverted operation, I think MSR has missed a bet. Maybe if the remote burner version of the Windburner doesn’t have an overly large weight penalty (or an overly large price tag!), it will gain adoption, particularly for those who want a 2.5 or 4.5 L pot (interesting size choices, particularly the 4.5 L pot). The larger pot sizes wouldn’t be stable on the existing, rather tall Windburner burner, even with canister legs.
My experience of MSR is that they are very sophisticated in terms of their market research. Very. They must think that there’s a market out there for an efficient, stable, and windproof group stove — but not that there’s a market for a windproof inverted canister stove (assuming that I’m right that the new remote Windburner can’t support inverted operation).
HJ

