Outdoors

Jetboil's lightest backpacking stove yet weighs just 7.1 oz

Jetboil's lightest backpacking stove yet weighs just 7.1 oz
The Jetboil Stash is available now and priced at US$130
The Jetboil Stash is available now and priced at US$130
View 5 Images
The Jetboil Stash is available now and priced at US$130
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The Jetboil Stash is available now and priced at US$130
Jetboil's portable cooking systems are designed to give backpackers and trekkers a quick and easy way to boil water
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Jetboil's portable cooking systems are designed to give backpackers and trekkers a quick and easy way to boil water
Designed to be not just lightweight but compact too, the Jetboil Stash can store the burner, canister and its folding stand inside its pot with the lid fitted neatly on top
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Designed to be not just lightweight but compact too, the Jetboil Stash can store the burner, canister and its folding stand inside its pot with the lid fitted neatly on top
The Jetboil Stash, disassembled
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The Jetboil Stash, disassembled
The Jetboil Stash can boil water in just minutes
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The Jetboil Stash can boil water in just minutes
View gallery - 5 images

Every ounce counts when you're headed for an extended stay in the wilderness with everything you need on your back, and the arrival of lightweight cooking systems has meant hikers can still reward themselves with a hot meal on the trailside. For two decades, US company Jetboil has specialized in these portable stoves for adventurous souls and has now launched what it calls the lightest backpacking stove ever made, the 7.1-oz (200-g) Jetboil Stash.

Jetboil's portable cooking systems are designed to give backpackers and trekkers a quick and easy way to boil water, consisting of tiny burners that screw into fuel canisters, and then lidded pots that sit on top to bubble away.

The Jetboil Stash can boil water in just minutes
The Jetboil Stash can boil water in just minutes

The Jetboil Flash is cut from the same cloth but undercuts the company's next lightest stove, the Jetboil Flash, by 40 percent. This is despite carrying a cook pot of the same 800 ml (27 oz) capacity, which works with a titanium burner to offer a claimed 2.5 minute boil time.

Designed to be not just lightweight but compact too, the Jetboil Stash can store the burner, canister and its folding stand inside its pot with the lid fitted neatly on top. When packed up in this way, it measures just 4.4 in x 5.1 in (112 mm x 130 mm), a perfectly manageable addition to the pack for hungry hikers, or those that enjoy a coffee before setting off for the day.

The Jetboil Stash, disassembled
The Jetboil Stash, disassembled

The Jetboil Stash is available now and priced at US$130. You can check out the promo video below.

Meet STASH | Lightest Ever Backpacking Stove System

Source: Jetboil

View gallery - 5 images
2 comments
2 comments
Prometheus
And you still can't use it with solid fuel, an alcohol stove, or on a twig stove or campfire. Jetboil needs to find a way to make the flux ring the product. The integrated unit works great if you use it the one way it's designed. I, like many, want gear that is versatile and solves more than one problem. When Jetboil figures that out I'll start giving it serious consideration.
Eddy
Prometheus Why ever would you want a unit designed to screw into a gas canister to work with solid fuel or alcohol. We use a billy with a spout for heating water over a fire in AUS no problems.