-
Advisory Panel
Funny, I always thought the MRE's were bad. Designed that way to create a special breed of mean "***" soldier.
-
-
07-17-2016 04:55 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
Legacy Member
-
-
-
Legacy Member
I've seen plenty of petrol cookers for sale as surplus but don't know if it's something that's still used by the British
Army; personally I wouldn't be brave enough to actually light one myself.
When the British Army was operating in Bosnia, I seem to recall hearing on the news, that a tracked armoured personnel carrier was not used as this would appear heavy handed and so a wheeled monstrosity (Saxon?) was used instead.
-
-
-
Thank You to mrclark303 For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
I've seen plenty of petrol cookers for sale as surplus but don't know if it's something that's still used by the
British
Army; personally I wouldn't be brave enough to actually light one myself.
You don’t have to use petrol. They are like an M1
tank and will also work with Kerosene (what you call paraffin), more or less the same as jet fuel or even diesel.
If you are lucky enough to be around some oil wells, it will burn natural gas condensate, sometimes called "casing head gasoline” or " natural gasoline." Some condensates are odorless and others stink of sulfur, like the exhaust of a Tijuana taxi... so I am told.
-
Thank You to Vincent For This Useful Post:
-
Legacy Member

Originally Posted by
mrclark303
The
German
military in particular is in a terrible under resourced state these days, a faint shadow of its cold war composition!
AND THIS IS A BAD THING?????
-
-

Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
don't know if it's something that's still used by the
British
Army
No.... but Ration Packs still issued with a hexamine cooker, but a lot take or use there own stove, the big thing at present is the jet boil cooker, looks a good bit of kit but your paying for the name, I've just bought a poor mans version for £5.00 from China or Taiwan, yet to try it but will post some pics.
-
-
No petrol cookers are not used now. They couldn't be operated successfully with unleaded fuel due to seal and leakage problems and the very limited availability of petrol in vehicles now. Hexamine cookers are always a good standby. And I have a couple of new/still wrapped for emergency use if needed. Slow or what......... by the time you get a cup of tea or coffee, the power would have come back on!
Geoff and his pals have the idea. Buy your own simple gas cooker. But, alas, if it's bitter cold, they're crap! Geoff will have learned early on, like Tankie and Skippy, the REME don't like the cold and wet. As we used to say '.........anyone can live like a cxxx'
-
-
Contributing Member
Got to love wondering threads, we have gone from new manufacture L85 bodies, to ration packs and cooking in the field
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
But to be honest, the L85A2 was as good as anything else.
If nothing else Peter, I do admire your blind patriotism