Tin Can Sterno Stove

 by gamer
This is a soup can that I turned into a stove to use with the well known sterno gel fuel. It will heat up soup, tea, ravioli, hot chocolate, and a lot of those other canned/liquid goods. It can be used indoor and outdoor safely. This is my second instructable/ my dads first.
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up

Step 1: Materials And Tools

You will need as follows:
-Can Openers (both like in the picture)
-Knife
-Screw
-Screw Drivers (one for the screw, and one for enlarging the holes)
-Pliers
-Large Can Of Soup
-Container That Can Fit All The Soup
-Sterno
-Coat Hanger
tonyscott says: May 16, 2013. 10:07 AM
great job done mate, thanks tony
OldShotgunYoungShooter says: Dec 8, 2012. 5:50 PM
Good for you to have the patience to use sterno, but I just dont. Good idea though.
Tim Temple says: Apr 4, 2012. 6:08 PM
To have full, one-way flow through a round hole, the minimum height above it would be 1/4 the minimum diameter of the hole. To allow for two-way flow (when using a Sterno can) the minimum height would be 1/2 the diameter of the hole.

Since the coffee can would be too hot to handle, toss the can lid in and poke it into place with the coat hanger. The fire will go out. Ten minutes later, you can take it all apart.
chuckr44 says: Sep 20, 2007. 6:35 AM
Holy crap! I just made one of these 2 weeks ago with the same design: coffee can with 2 thick wires at the top to hold the pan/cup. Except mine is wood powered and works great. I will test it camping in later October. For the wires I used 2 very long pegboard pegs (metal of course). It boiled 10 oz of water in less than 7 minutes. And you don't have to carry fuel if you use wood. (Unless you are in a wood free place like the desert.)
flove101 in reply to chuckr44Nov 16, 2007. 7:51 PM
I think wood powered stoves are great (enough isn't said about the ambiance of fire), but I know that I am not proficient at lighting them with anything but tinder dry wood, something that is in short supply after anything more than light rain. and to carry lighter fluid to me defeats the purpose of carrying a wood stove.
KittyF in reply to flove101Nov 4, 2010. 4:49 AM
search Lint vasaline Fire starter. I saw that guy from Man, woman in the wild had some vasaline lint or vasaline and cotton balls in a foil packet and he used it to light the fire.
mkslocomb in reply to KittyFNov 4, 2011. 10:51 AM
Or look for Char Cloth (very easy to make) and some sort of spark maker. My blacksmith friend provided flint and steel (an old file).
DanYHKim says: Oct 14, 2011. 7:22 AM
You might consider making a wire basket to lower the Sterno can into the stove, so your stove doesn't have to have the bottom removed. You can then light the Sterno and lower it into the can. Dunno if this is of any advantage, but it's another approach.

Thanks for the instructible. Last year we had a 3-day winter power outage, and I used Sterno to heat water. A small stove like this would have been handy.
jshockley1 says: Aug 30, 2011. 3:21 PM
Recommend adding some sort of insulated handle, maybe to the fork- that way you can't remove the can't and snuff the sterno when you're done.
Johnny Bot says: Dec 16, 2009. 12:24 PM
Hey,  You can use almost any size can and custom fit it to your situation, and if you have a Handy Dandy P38 handy it will make it just like making a C-Rat stove, with out the triox tabs
wolfen31 says: Dec 8, 2009. 9:52 PM
It works pretty well.
xboxteen01 says: Sep 22, 2007. 8:37 PM
this is probably a dumb question, but if you were to burn wood in this kind of stove, would you need to cut a side door for the addition of fire wood or would you need to just slide the wood down the sides, in between the cup and stove wall.
junits15 in reply to xboxteen01Oct 25, 2009. 6:11 PM
Are you really an egale scout?  or is that just your picure?
xboxteen01 in reply to junits15Oct 25, 2009. 7:19 PM
im an eagle scout with 1 bronze palm. class of 06
junits15 in reply to xboxteen01Oct 26, 2009. 3:18 PM
Thats awsome!

I hope that one day I can become an egale, right now im just a star scout though. 
bylerfamily in reply to xboxteen01Apr 30, 2009. 10:27 AM
gamer (author) in reply to xboxteen01Sep 23, 2007. 11:34 AM
no, the question isnt dumb. personally, if i were to make it into a wood burning stove, i would make more air holes, leave the bottom on, and make a door\hole to put the wood in. and maybe choose a larger can, like maybe a coffee can, or something. -gamer
HeWantsRevenge in reply to gamerOct 12, 2008. 3:33 PM
absolutely rite
tippymcstagger in reply to gamerFeb 15, 2008. 9:25 AM
I agree with the larger can for wood. Even small sizes of coffee cans seem too small.
ChaseReno says: Oct 15, 2008. 12:07 PM
As far as a survival type stove...we use small cans because they can be easily packed into your day pack. We put survival type stuff in the can as well...tea, broth, hook and line, matches etc. We put a small salsa or mushroom can inside the larger for our drinking cup (we use the skewer method just as you do to keep the can up off the flames). We also use wood to fire them. You can pick small sticks up as you walk along. In case of no dry tinder pack along a few tea light candles. We've roasted marshmallows over tea light candles. Not really a survival skill, but hey, who doesn't like roasted marshmallows?
fungus amungus says: Sep 19, 2007. 8:10 AM
Nice and simple. Good job.
gamer (author) in reply to fungus amungusSep 19, 2007. 9:01 AM
Thanks
Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

PDF Downloads
As a Pro member, you will gain access to download any Instructable in the PDF format. You also have the ability to customize your PDF download.

Upgrade to Pro today!