Wednesday, June 27, 2012

My First Project-Edelrid Adapter on a Camping Gaz for a Jetboil

For today's topic, it would be focused on the Edelrid Adaptor for Non-Threaded Valve Type Gas Canisters. I bought 2 pcs from Needlesports.

As a little equipment junkie, I have been eyeing on the Jetboil Personal Flash Kit for quite awhile. Falling for it after reading reviews over and over again on AdventureInsider and Youtube videos. As a personal kit for boiling water and simple cooking, its really efficient. I will leave the specifics out of this as it's the adapter I'm focused on. This post is a troubleshoot/further review from Pedaldamnit's post . His post covers extensively of the various compatibility issues with the Jetboil and offers all the alternatives. You can check it out. It was from his post that I got the Edelrid Adaptor.

In today's coverage, these are the equipment I have with me:

In this picture, I have the following:
1) Ace Camp Cooking Kit - 2 pots, 1 pan
2) Camping Gaz Stove
3) Camping Gaz Non-threaded Gas Canisters 230g & 450g
4) Full Jetboil Flash Kit (I lost the jave press kit, damn!)
5) Edelrid Gas Adapter

A few pictures of the adapter:



The Gas Canisters and the Original Stove:





As threaded valve gas canisters are not available in Singapore, these are the only available alternative. Each of these cost about $3-$5, depending on where you get them. It is impossible to ship gas canisters which are only available in most parts of Europe, Australia & America. In Asia, it is near impossible to get them. Thus, Jetboil owners in SG may not fully utilize them. Upon receiving the valve: 



First up, Putting on the Valve. This is one step that you CANNOT make any mistakes. Reason being that this was the first cause of problems. I will begin by explaining:

Noting that the 2 parts to focus are the legs and the lock. 
Simple steps: Push adapter down, hold legs in place, twist to about 90 degrees to lock
Important to note: 
** Do not move the legs. It will lead to:
** Over Tightening. NEVER EVER Over Tighten. Will cause it to be loose. 
Unlike the normal gas canister to stove when you will feel the "lock-on", this adapter can be over tightened easily for those who are afraid at first. 
Some pictures:

 The adapter will not twist as much independently. Until pushed on to gas valve


Left: Adapter sitting on top the valve. Right: Adapter Screwed on. Yes, there is a gap, but its meant to be that way. Don't Worry.

 Proper Fitting (a)


Proper Fitting (b),(c)
 Final Product!

_______________________________________________________________________

Now, the scary part. Yes, I had 2 not-so-safe starts with the adapter, so let me tell you what to watch out for. The last thing we want is...... KA-BOOOOOOM!!!! 

1) Do not keep tightening the adapter. Once you have the adapter pushed in & twist-locked, STOP. The legs should stay where they are after you've twist-locked it. 

2) Attaching the Stove: The jetboil stove is not the best stove, but for a personal kit, it works fine. Make sure your jetboil flame control valve is OFF. Why? When we keep our jetboil, our valve must turn a little to flip the control valve in. If the valve is ON a little, gas will just keep on coming out. Once you've STARTED screwing on the stove, somewhere near maximum tightness, You will hear a gas release. CONTINUE TIGHTENING TILL TIGHT = no gas leaking.
BUT!!!! Remember, the adapter does NOT move. (look at the legs)
** Incident 1: I ignited the system after tightening so many rounds; till i felt it was tight. wrong move. Once the first spark came, flame surge out right between the adapter and stove. Thank God my hand hair is still there:)

3) Once its all together, wait for awhile, hear for gas leaks/wait for gas to clear. Then ignite the stove. 
You might want to test the flame control to ensure it is connected properly. The last thing you want is a small flame. Incident 2: thought all was done well, until I realize that the flame was constant no matter how much I turned the control valve. Giving me the thought that it was damaged or it doesn't work.

4) When removing, reverse the steps. Gas will leak when removing the adapter from the gas canister. Make sure no naked flame or another lighted stove is near when doing so.

That should sum up the Edelrid Adaptor on Jetboil 101. Hope it helps all and once again, do make sure you dispose of the gas canister properly with Jetboil's Crunch It
Enjoy your next mini expedition or hammock day safely with your Jetboil. 
(people do get jealous..hahaha)

Till Next Time, 
TUB

2 comments:

  1. Any idea if there are opposite adaptors available? I have a brilliant stove (PartyGrill) bought in Europe and designed for CampingGaz cannisters, but I can no longer find them in Canada (perhaps even North-America). I also cannot find a PartyGrill equivalent that works with the threaded connectors *though Coleman seems to make one compatible with the dark green propane tanks, maybe I should just buy that....
    Thanks.

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    Replies
    1. looks like the Coleman RoadTrip PartyGrill may no longer be offered... Yikes....

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