QUALIALL via Amazon has QUALIALL Single Burner Portable Foldable Camping Stove w/ Piezo Ignition on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter ItsSoCheap for finding this deal.
Features:
3~5mins to boil 34-Oz of water
Backpacking stove fueled by 1/2~2/3 cheaper, heat value 32.2% higher BUTANE GAS (than propane)
Piezo ignition and knob flame control
Foldable, compact and light weighted, with a handy pouch for carrying and storage
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QUALIALL via Amazon has QUALIALL Single Burner Portable Foldable Camping Stove w/ Piezo Ignition on sale for $9.99. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Thanks to Deal Hunter ItsSoCheap for finding this deal.
Features:
3~5mins to boil 34-Oz of water
Backpacking stove fueled by 1/2~2/3 cheaper, heat value 32.2% higher BUTANE GAS (than propane)
Piezo ignition and knob flame control
Foldable, compact and light weighted, with a handy pouch for carrying and storage
Model: Camping Stove, Backpacking Stove, Foldable, Portable, Lightweight, Piezo Ignition, Single Burner Adjustable, Premium Mini Powerful and Stable Camp Stove for Hiking Picnic, 1+2+1+1pcs
Deal HistoryÂ
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Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
I bought exactly almost a year ago at $14 and used it at higher elevation (~10k ft altitude) to boil some water for some soup while in the snow. Worked pretty well and I'd recommend it for a little neat car camping stove or a day hike. It's pretty heavy and bulky so I wouldn't recommend it for backpacking when there are much better alternatives. But for $10 it's fine for car camping, although the typical camping stove will be much more sturdy and effective
11.64 oz jesus christ thats like putting a car on your back. A cheap 'backpacking' iso stove is 3.5 oz and they do indeed get smaller than that and so compact they are about the size of your thumb when folded up. Naturally this will only make a difference in the most extreme of backpacking situations, so for almost everyone even doing a weekend backpack trip this stove would do fine, provided the fuel is also compact. That brings me to the most important point, this runs off of butane cans which just arent as energy dense as isobutane, another reason why for short trips this is ok but would not be ideal for say a weeklong excursion where a single iso can could make it, you would need multiple butane cans and they would be larger.
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I bought exactly almost a year ago at $14 and used it at higher elevation (~10k ft altitude) to boil some water for some soup while in the snow. Worked pretty well and I'd recommend it for a little neat car camping stove or a day hike. It's pretty heavy and bulky so I wouldn't recommend it for backpacking when there are much better alternatives. But for $10 it's fine for car camping, although the typical camping stove will be much more sturdy and effective
I bought exactly almost a year ago at $14 and used it at higher elevation (~10k ft altitude) to boil some water for some soup while in the snow. Worked pretty well and I'd recommend it for a little neat car camping stove or a day hike. It's pretty heavy and bulky so I wouldn't recommend it for backpacking when there are much better alternatives. But for $10 it's fine for car camping, although the typical camping stove will be much more sturdy and effective
It's the size of your hand, and 11.64 ounces heavy.
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from SplendidPocket588
:
It's the size of your hand, and 11.64 ounces heavy.
11.64 oz jesus christ thats like putting a car on your back. A cheap 'backpacking' iso stove is 3.5 oz and they do indeed get smaller than that and so compact they are about the size of your thumb when folded up. Naturally this will only make a difference in the most extreme of backpacking situations, so for almost everyone even doing a weekend backpack trip this stove would do fine, provided the fuel is also compact. That brings me to the most important point, this runs off of butane cans which just arent as energy dense as isobutane, another reason why for short trips this is ok but would not be ideal for say a weeklong excursion where a single iso can could make it, you would need multiple butane cans and they would be larger.
It's the size of your hand, and 11.64 ounces heavy.
Backpacking stoves and fuel are much lighter than this+butane canisters(which often are 1lb each). When you are backpacking you generally want to have lighter weight items if possible, esp the longer your trip is (40miles trip vs 3 mile day hike)
A BRS stove, which is a MUCH lighter stove and proven design is like $15. I would stick with that if I wanted a backpacking stove. The sideways canister on this is weird, I've really only seen that in stoves designed for extreme cold.
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I have multiple camping stoves including compact backpacking ones that use the fuel blend canisters. This one staff posted doesn't apply to anyone really imo.
Don't even remember who makes mine but it's similar to the MSR PocketRocket
Last edited by clinteastwood March 20, 2026 at 09:14 AM.
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank PringlesRGud
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank joebob2000
Backpacking stoves and fuel are much lighter than this+butane canisters(which often are 1lb each). When you are backpacking you generally want to have lighter weight items if possible, esp the longer your trip is (40miles trip vs 3 mile day hike)
This guy backpacks, while splendidpocket588 does not
This guy backpacks, while splendidpocket588 does not
What are the prices of your smaller solutions?
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Don't even remember who makes mine but it's similar to the MSR PocketRocket
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