
 Alcohol 


 1995 E. Michael Smith


 
There are two major kinds of alcohol used as fuel. Methanol is the most 
common. This is sometimes called Wood Alcohol or Fully Denatured Alcohol. 
Ethanol is less common as a fuel, mostly due to legal and tax issues, 
even though it is a better stove fuel and less toxic. Methanol causes 
severe health problems if you consume it or absorb or inhale too much of 
it. This includes blindness and deafness. Just don't soak your hands in 
it for a long time or breath it recreationally, OK. In my opinion, 
ethanol should be the fuel of choice, not methanol as it is today. 


The use of alcohol as stove fuel is common on sailboats. Fires can be 
extinguished with water and the fumes rise out of the boat (unlike 
gasoline vapors which accumulate in the bilge until the boat can explode. 
I have a very elegant alcohol stove with no moving parts that is great, 
except for being slow to heat and very poor in the wind. This is a 
function of the nonpressurized design of that particular stove rather 
than the fuel. My sailboat stove was fast and hot, being of the 
pressurized design. 


One major advantage of alcohol as a stove fuel is that you can use it by 
just pouring it into a metal pan and lighting it. You don't really need a 
stove, per se, but one does help regulate things and increase heat 
output. In a pinch, pouring alcohol into an empty Sterno can and using a 
Sterno stove is a good expedient. Be very careful not to spill it when 
trying to put it out! 


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