Snow Peak Titanium 600 Mug with HotLips
Use the ultralight Snow Peak Titanium 600 mug with HotLips to enjoy a steaming cup of coffee, tea or soup on your backpacking trips without worrying about burning your lips or weighing down your pack.
- Place mug directly on stove (sold separately) to heat coffee, tea or soup; then place the HotLips on the mug and start sipping—do not leave HotLips on over an open flame
- Food-grade silicone HotLips stay cool to the touch so you won't burn your lips; silicone won't melt under normal use and is heat resistant to 446°F
- Handles flip out for a secure grip and wrap around the mug for compact storage
- Titanium mug with HotLips weighs only 3 oz., leaves no metallic smell or taste and will not rust; mug holds 20 fl. oz. (0.6 liter)
- Mug is sized to stow a Snow Peak Giga Power or LiteMax stove and a 110g fuel canister, all sold separately
Imported.
View the Snow Peak Titanium Product LineView all Snow Peak Camping MugsBest Use | Backpacking |
---|---|
Liquid Capacity (L) | 0.59 |
Liquid Capacity (fl. oz.) | 20 |
Cap Type | No Cap |
Material(s) | Mug: titanium; HotLips: silicone |
Ultralight | Yes |
Dimensions | 3.9 x 4 inches |
BPA Free | Yes |
Weight | 3 ounces |
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Excellent Multi-Purpose Mug
Just so nobody else gets confused and calls Snow Peak for help, this mug will fit both the GigaPower Auto stove and a 100g fuel canister. That makes it about as capable as the JetBoil Sol but 2.5" shorter: much easier to pack if all you need to do is boil water, and about the same weight. To fit the stove and fuel canister, the stove has to go in first without its plastic carrying case. I find it fits best with the piezo igniter facing down. Then the fuel canister can go in, minus its plastic cap that protects the threads, and upside down. It's a snug fit but once it all goes into the mesh carrying bag everything stays together pretty well. You may want to fit a small absorbent towel around the GigaPower stove to keep it a little more secure, and from scratching up itself or your mug. So far the mug is great. Seems very well built, handles are strong and fold away easily without rattling in either position. I found the hot lips absolutely useless - by the time the liquid in the mug is cool enough for me to drink, the rim of the mug is plenty cool to touch my lips against. That's after boiling 0.5L of water directly in the mug and making tea. The handles are a bigger heat problem than the mug, I needed a pot holder to take the mug off the stove even after waiting a minute for it to cool. By the time my tea had finished steeping though the handles were fine, and it was almost the right temperature to drink. I did not intend to go quite so minimalist in my camping stove setup, but bought these components to try out and help me decide which way to go. I've definitely made up my mind!
Good with Homemade Lid
I got this Snowpeak 600 Mug/pot with my REI dividend last week. I have owned and used an MSR Titan kettle for 7 years now on lightweight trips and find it to be a great to near perfect pot; however, there are times when I want an even smaller size pot to take up even less pack space and weight when I need to carry more gear and/or food in a Granite Gear Vapor pack and the Titan is too bulky to squeeze in well. So, I have been hunting around and comparing, and for the price,(again, I used my dividend)this is what I got. It is very compact and light: 2.8 oz and with the homemade lid weighs 3.35 oz. Warning: Don't cook in a double wall mug. This mug in the review is a SINGLE wall mug/pot.On capacity of the 600 mug: If one wants 2-3 packs of oatmeal and a hot drink in the morning, you will need more capacity than the 20 oz of the 600, and the Titan would be better so as to only have one boil. However, if you are eating cold cereal and want one large hot drink this cup is perfect for breakfast. For dinner: the 20 oz capacity is good if you have two boils-- one for soup and hot drink and one for a freeze dried dinner.On boiling 16-18 oz water: 1--14gram Titanium Esbit stove with 3/4 circumference aluminum foil windscreen:With:1--6.5g Coghlan's tab--10 min. to very low boil1.5--6.5 Coghlan's tabs---8.5 min. to boilSame stove set-up with 20 oz water:1---14g Esbit tab---9 minutes to rolling boilMini .25 oz top jet alcohol stove with well-made aluminum 360 degree windscreen and 20 oz water:3/4 oz Alcohol----8 min to roiling boil.Observations: a wider pot would get better boil times, but the whole point of the 600 is a small set-up that takes up little pack space--it can also be used as a cup with the Hotlips. I plan to make a cozy for it to have an insulated mug/pot too.The handle gets hot when used as pot on a stove but cools quickly to enable one to use it as a cup.HOMEMADE LID FOR SNOWPEAK 600:I made the lid from the bottom of a Archer Farms Mint Cocoa container.How:(Use common sense and safety when using hand tools)1) Go to [...] and get the Cocoa. 2) Drink/use the Cocoa.3) Cut cardboard out of bottom metal plate. The cardboard peels out of the metal inset easily. 4) With needle-nose pliers straighten out rim in very small increments all the way around the rim-carefully, because there is spring pressure on the plate. 5) Use brass polish to remove expiration date and time off bottom. 6) Measure and find and mark center. 7) Get aluminum screw and housing from [...] for .93 cents for pot-lid knob. 8) Clamp plate/lid and drill hole in center to fit makeshift screw knob9) Drill smaller steam release hole.10) Attach screw knob.11) Hand sand off any sharp shards on edges of lid or drill hole/steam hole.12) Make sure you use a cloth or glove to remove lid so as not to burn yourself.13) It's not as tight fitting like the MSR Titan, but it's my first lid and fits and works very well. 14) Weight of lid is .5 oz.16) Dry lid after using to prevent rusting.PS. See picture-This complete setup with mug, lid, stove, and windscreen weighs less than 3.5 oz. I will probably make a better windscreen out of an aluminum cookie sheet that may make the weight of the set-up between 3.5-3.7 oz. The good windscreen in the 2nd pic was made for the MSR Titan Kettle.
Cook in eat, eat and drink out of it.
This cup is light and I mean light. No cup of the same size is lighter. I use it with gas stoves and wood burning stoves. If you want to go light and need a container that can boil water or give you that hot cup of coffee, this is it.
Have a proper pint wherever you travel.
I was thrilled to find this cup can actually hold a pint's worth of liquid with ease. It's nice and light, plenty stout and does what a mug aught to, but it made me feel excited to know of it's functional capacity. I didn't really bother with the "hot lips" thing beyond making awkward MASH references on occasion, but I understand the purpose. I think graduation marks stamped into this mug would've made it more useful for back-country cookery, but it's nothing to get upset over. The biggest problem is 21st Ammendment Brewery doesn't sell pint cans of Back in Black to properly fill this thing on a short backpacking trip. One can dream...
High expectations - Perfect delivery
Titanium sourced from Japan used by Snow Peak is the industry standard. Simply said, you will not be disappointed if this is what you're looking for. Through my own experience, my 600, 700, 900, and 1500 ml cups/pots have held up well under direct and indirect heat. My favorite feature of the single walled cups is the ability to apply heat directly rather than retain them in the double walled cups.
The humble mug, elevated.
Great MUG. Not a trekking cook kit, but absolutely works as a quick boil pot. I bought it specifically because it is the perfect jack of all trades sort of item. Not too big that it looks like you are drinking out of a tankard, and not so small that you couldn't boil enough water for a 2-person freeze-dried dinner or afternoon tea. Which really isn't enough water to really warrant a lid unless you are way up in the alpine zone. Diameter is perfect for the backup stove kit, but I also find its large enough to stuff with other stuff & the bag holds it all in. I also appreciate the note of the previous reviewer–holds a FULL 16oz of sudsy camping liquid with ease (dude, sixpoint!). Its single walled, and titanium, so a thermos it ain't (although surprisingly effective). Hot lips: great idea. Bottom line: if you are one of those people (like myself) that simply rinse out the same cup all day, everyday, this is for you.
Great All-Rounder
Excellent all-rounder Ti cup. I don't care for the hotlips, but that's easily tossed. Great size for a proper mug-sized beverage. To be clear, this will NOT nest in the Snow Peak 700, the bindings for the handles push it out too far by a few millimeters. You could manhandle it if you don't mind severely denting both cups, but I wasn't about to do that on an expensive cup. Go up a size to the Snow Peak 750 for proper nesting.
Not as wide as advertised
I bought one today with the intention of putting a 4oz isopro can in it and the titanium snow peak stove. The mug is advertised as 3.9" wide. The fuel can is a hair over 3.5", but would not fit inside. Will be returning it for the 700ml or a different brand.
Multi purpose, super light
Great mug. I clip it to the outside of my backpack with my spork and it works like a bear bell when they clang together. I LOVE the capacity of this mug, holds enough for a huge cup of tea, or 2.5 cups of water to boil for a meal (more than enough). The HotLips tends to fall off easily so I keep that detached and stored in a pocket, and also keep a spare HotLips so I don't burn my face off if I lose the other one.
One more....
Having had the use of a Snow Peak 600 Titanium cup for the past five years, it has been such a great cup, it prompted me to purchase a number of other size Snow Peak cups, cook sets and gear. All along the way, I have found it to be the perfect size, not too large, yet none too small. I have cooked meals in it, purified too many cups of stream water to count, and stow my trekking meals inside it prior to packing my gear, or my Snow Peak stove....Now, I don't have to pack and unpack, when I select my Haversack for a short day hike, while foraging or out taking photos of the local hillsides. Add the Hot Lips....and that hot cup of cocoa never tasted better! (One has not to wait while the cup is cooling down, and you want that sweet, hot beverage) I highly recommend this to anyone, wether just starting out, or experienced. So good, my purchase of this second cup was without hesitation.