Primus Moja Single-Burner Camp Stove
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Streamlined and easy to transport, the Primus Moja single-burner camp stove comes in clutch whether you need an ultracompact kitchen for car camping or an extra burner for your backyard BBQ.
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- Powerful 3000W burner with precise flame control
- Removable lid ensures the stove can be used with a 360° cooking surface and can hold a larger pot
- Powder-coated steel lid for durability and aluminum sides to lighten the load
- Wood-trimmed handle locks the stove closed while carrying; spring-action locking mechanism keeps the regulator in place
- Removable, enameled-steel pot supports and stainless-steel drip tray for easy cleaning
- Propane or butane adapter included
- Fuel not included
Imported.
View all Primus Camp StovesBest Use | Camping |
---|---|
Fuel Type | Canister |
Fuel | Propane |
Heat Output (per burner) | 10,200 british thermal units |
Number of Burners | 1 Burner |
Burn Time (Max Flame) | 130 minutes |
Average Boil Time (1L) | 4.2 minutes |
Dimensions | 13.1 x 11.6 x 10.5 inches |
Weight | 5 lbs. 1 oz. |
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Perfect Camping/Overlanding stove!
I picked up this stove because it is high quality, versatile, and easy to pack. It was always a pain to lug a 2 burner stove camping but I do like to cook actual meals at camp. I was worried that limiting myself to 1 burner would be an issue but I found that I only used 1 burner anyways! I'm always on the move to the next camp site or activity so having something packable that you can actually cook on is great. I love that you can take the lid off for a larger pan and that it easily comes apart for cleaning. The locking handle is a great feature as well, you do need to make sure you have it fully unlocked before trying to open it!
Please Don’t Buy This Stove!
I’ve tried three times to get this stove to work. Two times with propane, one with butane. Maybe I got a defective product, but the flame on the stove is so finicky. Every time I turn the dial on the stove, the flame will get bigger, but slowly die back down until it sputters out. Sometimes, I’ll crank the dial only for it to immediately die down and out again. I’ve tried babying the flame and just keep slowly turning the dial up to try and counter what the flame does, but I can’t get it just right. I’ve never worked with such a useless stove. I threw this out and bought another Coleman stove. Much more reliable and worth your money.
Versatile 1-burner, albeit pricey
Solid stove with flexibility to use both Lindal valve gas canisters and propane bottles, with a tool to change connectors. Flexible hose and spring-gated regulator storage nook makes this a game-changer for compact car-camping. Works beautifully with a 5-lb propane tank (whose name has initials F.K.), or, with an inexpensive adapter, with $3-$4 8-oz butane canisters. Completely removable drip-pan makes cleaning possible in places where other stoves just collect burnt trophies of meals past. Burner is slightly smaller and underpowered compared to say Camp Chef Everest, but boils fine, cooks eggs perfectly on carbon steel, and simmers like you're in your fancy foodie uncle's kitchen. Compact enough not to take too much room in a Prius, but sturdy enough to hold cast iron. Comes with a removable lid, but no windscreens ... however, a couple aluminum pans or pie plates work just fine. With practice, lights easily with a handheld push button piezo igniter (like made by MSR) ... My only complaint is that Primus should really supply this with such a thing. Car-camping for one, I almost never need more than one burner. The only downside is that, when changing out the propane connector for the Lindal connector, it's a little fiddly trying to removed the rubber washer. I keep a safety pin attached to the included tool to help with that. All in all, this is pretty much the Primus Kinjia's smaller, quieter, sexier sibling. Worth the price.