Two-Burner Camp Stove Product
Overview
The two-burner camp stove is the standard cooking appliance of car camping, a format that has been stable since Coleman's white-gas suitcase stoves of the mid-20th century and that switched largely to propane in the 1980s. Closed, it is a flat latched steel case with a Carry Handle; opened, the Case Lid stands up as a rear windscreen, two Side Wind Panel sides fold out to meet it, and a Pot Support Grate spans two ring burners. Each burner delivers roughly 2.9 kW with fully independent control, which is the stove's defining capability over single-burner backpacking stoves: one pot can boil hard while the second burner holds a sauce at a simmer.
How it works
Fuel enters at the Cylinder Port, a CGA 600 thread on the case side that holds a 1 lb cartridge horizontally, or through the Bulk Tank Hose Adapter from a 20 lb bulk cylinder. The Pressure Regulator drops the supply, which varies from roughly 5 to 9 bar with ambient temperature, to a constant ~2.8 kPa. Regulation upstream of the manifold is what makes the two burners independent: without it, opening the second valve would starve the first.
The regulated gas runs along the Manifold Tube to two Burner Control Valve needle valves. Needle valves rather than plug valves are used because campers actually simmer; the fine taper gives usable resolution at the bottom of the flow range. Each valve discharges through a Jet Orifice into a horizontal Venturi Tube, where the jet's momentum entrains primary air at about ten times the gas volume flow. The premixed stream rises into the Burner Head and burns as a ring of short blue flames at slotted ports under the Burner Cap. The cap spreads the flame pattern across the pot bottom and, just as importantly, keeps boil-overs from running down into the mixing tube, the most common cause of a yellow, sooty flame in the field.
Lighting is by the Ignition System: a Piezo Igniter button drives a spring hammer into a quartz crystal, and the resulting kilovolt pulse arcs from a Ignition Electrode to the grounded burner ring. There is no battery to die in storage. Spills and grease land in the Burner Bowl reflectors and the removable Drip Tray Liner, which lifts out for washing.
Wind management
Wind is the dominant performance variable for any camp stove. A 15 km/h crosswind can more than double boil times by stripping the hot combustion gases sideways before they transfer heat to the pot, and gusts can blow the flame off the ports entirely. The suitcase format attacks this with its own geometry: the upright lid blocks wind from behind, the fold-out side panels block it from the flanks, and Panel Clip tabs tie the panels to the lid so the assembly forms a rigid three-sided box. The open front faces the cook, who is usually a windbreak as well. The burner bowls double as ground-effect shields, keeping the flame roots in relatively still air. In sustained wind above roughly 25 km/h even this is not enough, and the practical fix is orienting the stove and adding an external screen.
Fuel economics and practical limits
A 465 g propane cartridge contains about 6 kWh; with both burners at full output the stove drains it in roughly an hour, which is why groups camping for more than a weekend usually run a bulk cylinder through the hose adapter at a tenth the per-kilogram fuel cost. Propane's vapor pressure is the cold-weather limit: at −20 °C the cartridge still delivers usable pressure (propane boils at −42 °C), making these stoves far more reliable in winter than butane-mix canister stoves, though sustained high draw chills the cartridge through evaporative cooling and output sags until it warms.
The Grate Panel sets pot standoff height, tuned so the flame tips just lick the pot bottom; too close quenches combustion against the cold metal, too far wastes heat to the air. Stoves of this class are certified to ANSI Z21.72 / CSA 11.2 and are strictly outdoor appliances: two burners at full output produce combustion products and consume oxygen far too fast for tent or vehicle use, and carbon monoxide deaths from stoves used as tent heaters remain a recurring backcountry accident category.
Build & assembly graph
expand / collapse · shared sub-assemblies converge · links to related products · est. labourTap an assembly to expand/collapse · tap a part to open it · use “Open page” for any node · drag to pan, scroll to zoom.
Bill of materials
8 top-level lines · 35 rows shown · 43 parts total · indented to 3 levels| # | Item / sub-assembly | Part no. | Qty/assy | Ext. qty | Parts | Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Case Assembly 6 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-case | 1× | 1 | 7 | assembly |
| 1.1 | Case Base | two-burner-camp-stove-case-base | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 1.2 | Case Lid | two-burner-camp-stove-case-lid | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 1.3 | Lid Hinge | two-burner-camp-stove-lid-hinge | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 1.4 | Case Latch | two-burner-camp-stove-latch | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 1.5 | Carry Handle | two-burner-camp-stove-handle | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 1.6 | Drip Tray Liner | two-burner-camp-stove-drip-tray | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 2 | Burner Assembly 4 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-burner | 2× | 2 | 4 | assembly |
| 2.1 | Burner Head | two-burner-camp-stove-burner-head | 1× | 2 | — | part |
| 2.2 | Burner Cap | two-burner-camp-stove-burner-cap | 1× | 2 | — | part |
| 2.3 | Venturi Tube | two-burner-camp-stove-venturi-tube | 1× | 2 | — | part |
| 2.4 | Burner Bowl | two-burner-camp-stove-burner-bowl | 1× | 2 | — | part |
| 3 | Manifold and Valve Assembly 5 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-manifold | 1× | 1 | 8 | assembly |
| 3.1 | Manifold Tube | two-burner-camp-stove-manifold-tube | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 3.2 | Burner Control Valve | two-burner-camp-stove-control-valve | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 3.3 | Valve Knob | two-burner-camp-stove-valve-knob | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 3.4 | Jet Orifice | two-burner-camp-stove-jet-orifice | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 3.5 | O-Ring Set | oring-set | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 4 | Ignition System 3 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-ignition | 1× | 1 | 4 | assembly |
| 4.1 | Piezo Igniter | two-burner-camp-stove-piezo | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 4.2 | Ignition Electrode | two-burner-camp-stove-electrode | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 4.3 | Wire Bundle | wire-bundle | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5 | Fuel Supply System 4 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-fuel-system | 1× | 1 | 4 | assembly |
| 5.1 | Pressure Regulator | two-burner-camp-stove-regulator | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.2 | Cylinder Port | two-burner-camp-stove-cylinder-port | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.3 | Bulk Tank Hose Adapter | two-burner-camp-stove-hose-adapter | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 5.4 | O-Ring Set | oring-set | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6 | Pot Support Grate 2 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-grate | 1× | 1 | 5 | assembly |
| 6.1 | Grate Panel | two-burner-camp-stove-grate-panel | 1× | 1 | — | part |
| 6.2 | Grate Foot | two-burner-camp-stove-grate-foot | 4× | 4 | — | part |
| 7 | Windscreen Panels 3 parts | two-burner-camp-stove-windscreen | 1× | 1 | 6 | assembly |
| 7.1 | Side Wind Panel | two-burner-camp-stove-wind-panel | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 7.2 | Panel Hinge | two-burner-camp-stove-panel-hinge | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 7.3 | Panel Clip | two-burner-camp-stove-panel-clip | 2× | 2 | — | part |
| 8 | Fastener Set | fastener-set | 1× | 1 | — | part |
Sourcing — likely vendors
Companies that make this · indicative price $20–$2k · MOQ & lead are typical| Vendor | HQ | Specialty | MOQ | Lead time |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸Coleman coleman.com ↗ | Chicago, US | Camping gear | 1,000 units | 6–10 wks |
| thenorthface.com ↗ | Denver, US | Outdoor apparel & gear | 1,000 units | 6–10 wks |
| 🇺🇸YETI yeti.com ↗ | Austin, US | Coolers & drinkware | 1,000 units | 6–10 wks |
| decathlon.com ↗ | Villeneuve-d'Ascq, FR | Sporting goods | 1,000 units | 6–10 wks |
| 🇺🇸Garmin garmin.com ↗ | Olathe, US | GPS & wearables | 1,000 units | 6–10 wks |
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