BRS-32 Portable Camping Stove, Foldable, Adjustable Control, and Carrying Case Included – Experience Hassle-Free Outdoor Cooking
Description
- Lightweight and convenient, it can be easily grasped with one hand, occupies a small area and is easy to carry.
- The double star stove has a folding movable windshield, which can effectively prevent wind.
- The design of the preheating tube can effectively accelerate the vaporization of the gas, making the combustion more sufficient, and is not afraid of low temperature and high altitude.
- The combustion is sufficient, and the power of a single burner can reach 1940W.
- The double star furnace has stable support and strong bearing capacity, and can be used for small pots with a diameter of more than 6cm. Dual adjustable fire switch, freely control the use of dual burners.
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Additional information
Brand | ONTOMYO |
---|---|
Fuel Type | Butane |
Material | Stainless Steel, Aluminum, Copper |
Product Dimensions | 16.33"L x 7.36"W x 3.74"H |
Power Source | NO |
Maximum Energy Output | 1940 Watts |
Item Weight | 2.6 pounds |
UPC | 702735831958 |
Country of Origin | China |
Date First Available | August 12, 2022 |
Matt A. –
This stove folds down to fit inside my kitchen box for use with my trailer. It provides enough space for a large skillet and a pot or kettle. It doesn’t provide much in the way of wind protection, but I built in a side wind-wall on my table on the back wall of the trailer, so it works well on isobutane or propane.
It is possible to turn the heat down for a slow simmer or up to a roaring flame for boiling. It isn’t the hottest for boiling, but suits me just fine. I value the range of control.
Erik –
Find this stove to be an excellent value. Was looking at some more expensive models as I like to keep my camping set up small to fit in my Jeep. This stove is awesome, works well with my tailgate table and stores away easily while providing two burners and can fit larger pans. Good fuel options and regulation. Highly recommend for camping, overlanding or at the beach….or even at home if the power goes out.
Placeholder –
Hard boiled eggs, mildly windy, about 7 minutes to boil. The pot can hold a dozen plus eggs easily.
Jeff –
good quality works good
Bearded Hoosier –
The BRS32 is a very unique design. It has two collapsing burners, which is almost nonexistent in light weight camping stoves. Stove comes in a very compact and unusual padded case that zips closed. The stove can run on isobutane or propane. The use of propane requires an adapter that is sold separated.
This stove is extremely stable and collapses easily, but it is important to use the feet to pull it open. It could weigh a bit less with different material, but the quality is excellent. Burners provide a huge amount of power and will allow propane as an option, which is a good thing since it has two burners. It is easy to use, but it would be nice if the valves would be labeled left and right burners and it had an igniter for each of the burners.
We will see how long stove lasts. I am optimistic.
i own two BRS stoves that are very light weight. BRS has quality camping equipment. I have bought and given the backpacking stoves to a number of my friend.
mark –
does a great job and very compact for a 2 burner.
Gary A Woodrow –
This is a truly innovative stove at a great price. It’s amazing that a two burner stove can collapse into such a small package. The case is also innovative and well made. The burners are set at an angle to one another to allow for larger pots and pans. While not the most powerful burners, they pack plenty enough heat for all cooking needs and the controls are sensitive enough to simmer easily. Well worth the money.
Steven –
Smart setup easy to use , nice and compact.
Gary A Woodrow –
not bad
but can bend if forced open.
sometimes gets stuck
Will not work with propane tank and adapter. It’s dangerous. big fan n controllable flames.
Bearded Hoosier –
I have only used it on one chilly 3 day trip so far but I can tell this is a keeper, I’m glad I took the chance on it! I have probably 9 different camp stoves currently ranging from MSR whispers and Jetboil backpacking stoves to 3 burner Coleman suitcase stoves and some cheap Amazon no name stoves. I primarily camp out of my jeep or truck now at rustic or dispersed camp sites. The trip I used this stove on ranged from mid 20s at night to high 30s during the day. Stove worked wonderfully, there was typically a light wind as well when cooking. Its a nice mix between a backpacking stove and a larger car/RV stove. The main reason I wanted it was to hold my heavy Lodge Pro cast iron 2 burner griddle approx. 20″x10″ while replacing a much larger suitcase style stove, and it did that very well, no wiggle or thought the stove would collapse while being large enough to evenly heat the griddle. I also like that it folds down to about 1/4 to 1/3 the size of the smallest two burner propane car camp stove.
My only very minor complaint is you really cant re-light the stove if something is on the burner due to the wind shields when you accidently turn off the gas when one is trying to turn it down to a simmer which it does very well. I might end up drilling a small hole in the shields to circumvent this in the future. Also it would be nice to have an ignitor but at this price point its not necessary.
So in summary, I paired this stove with a small $20 single burner for making coffee/tea while using this stove for main course. It was perfect combo for keeping the food and warm drinks coming to the group on a cold camping trip. Also pick up a $8 propane adapter to diversify your fuel sources. I normally don’t write reviews for equipment but this stove just impressed me so much, its exactly what I have been looking for the past 12 yrs or so, small but big and durable at an affordable price point.
Me –
Works perfectly uses heavy amounts of fuel
Carmen Martinez –
Got it just as I was going camping, tested on the field and works great, so far it wasn’t windy thus didn’t need a separate windshield but I always carry one as any experienced tent camper knows better unless you’re bringing a Coleman style stove with the built in lid/windshield but these are lighter and smaller, a win win for me. I don’t backpack anymore since I’m no spring chicken but still tent camp is my preference. As far as some comments stating not enough BTU personally for me was perfect with the advantage that it can simmer with better control than most stoves I’ve had. Construction is solid in my opinion considering the size and portability, of course you can bend the side walls if you are careless but I didn’t baby it and it was fine. I’m familiar with BRS equipment (40+ years camping here) and it didn’t disappoint. I definitely would recommend this stove specially if you’re doing more serious cooking and you’re not just boiling water for backpacking meals, you have smaller and lighter stoves for that although those can’t control very well for simmering or just lightly warming your food.
Steven –
I didn’t know what to expect when I bought this, I thought it may be on the flimsier side as cheaper collapsible things tend to be but how wrong I was.
This stove is very well constructed, the base is heavy and solid, all gas lines well made and sealed and the flame is nice and powerful. I like the small inline gas control, very smart and works really well. There are a few minor quality control things like edge burs and uneven surfaces but that’s so minor it’s not noticeable but worth mentioning as they don’t affect the functionality.
If you want the convenience of a double burner but want to save space this is the stove for you, it packs away easily nice and small and is robust.
Tip: to avoid bending the top sliding frame, always fold it by holding the heavier base/feet.