

Made by Titanium
Low weight, great strength, high temperature resistance, and corrosion resistance, with all these features, this is the stove for you next adventure.

ULTRA LIGHTWEIGHT & PORTABLE
It is exceptionally lightweight, weighs only 45 grams(1.6 oz), and therefore can be very easily stored, carried, and used.

HIGHYLY EFFICIENT
Combined with a collection of subtle engineering refinements to increase overall efficiency, the 300-T Titanium stove boiling 1 liter of water in 3.5 minutes!

STABLE AND RELIABLE
Design to be used with small stove pan, but can spread the fire over a large area and heats very evenly.
Let customers speak for us
from 681 reviewsIt works great! You can actually simmer with it which is a huge plus for me, it’s super light and fits in my pot along with a fuel can and lighter. The stand is a little stiff but not a deal breaker.

This stove works great for boiling water very quickly. It took about 4-5 minutes to bring about 2 quarts of water to a rapid boil. This stove is so lightweight and compact that from now on I'll use it when I need a quick boil, and use the 116-T for sautéing and wider flame distribution. It is a great stove to have in a go bag, lightweight camping gear, or anything you want to save space and not weigh down with heavy portable cooking gear. Came with a rip stop style protective bag that you can tuck away nearly anywhere! Highly recommend.

Everybody compares this to the BRS-3000T so I'll start there. At first glance they look extremely similar and the BRS is a few grams lighter coming in just under an ounce. The Fire Maple is actually the original and if you pay attention to the pictures you'll notices some brass and steel parts in there. That accounts for the weight difference and also the quality difference between the two stoves. The BRS model is known to have a tricky valve that sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. I can attest because I have 2 and both exhibit this issue. It's very frustrating when you can't control the flame or even get your stove to shut off. There have been times I just had to unscrew it from the gas because I couldn't get it stop. This has never happened to me with the Fire Maple. It has a higher quality valve that works in a predictable and repeatable manner. I also think it's designed to manage heat better in the stove stem which keeps the valve and its seals cooler. I think that may be part of the problem with the BRS. The other key difference is the burner top and pot holders. The BRS has a louvred like flame spreader on the burner that the Fire Maple doesn't have. While in theory this would seem a good idea, in practice is actually concentrates a good bit of that flame onto the titanium pot holders which in turn overheat and can sag or even bend completely with the stove on full blast. I've seen mine sag when I have extended boil times dues to altitude or weather. The Fire Maple lacks the louver and also uses thicker stainless pot holders instead of thin Ti ones. They get plenty hot, but nowhere near the deformation point like on the BRS. You might mistake that design flaw for extra heat that would mean faster boil times, but in fact, the boils times are indiscernible as is the gas usage. I still take the BRS out occasionally, but when I'm on an extended hike and need to know my stove is bullet proof, I take the Fire Maple.
Now for actual usage. You have to keep in mind with the tiny size of these that they are minimalist backpacking stoves really intended for boiling water in mug size pots (400-750mL size range) to rehydrate meals. They aren't really ideal or intended for heavy camp cooking like making bacon and eggs for breakfast or a steak and potato dinner. The burner is about the size of a quarter and generates a concentrated hot spot about 2 1/2" around. That's fine for boiling water or making coffee, but will quickly scorch something like oatmeal or powdered eggs. The pot holders are also only around 3" in diameter so if you are using any thing much larger than 4", stability is going to be an issue. I have done a 1.6L Mors pot worth of soup, but you have to be very careful and it's much safer to stabilize the pot with a few rocks or even just suspend it over the stove from a hasty tripod. The other thing is these stoves are highly affected by the wind. I highly recommend also getting a titanium foil windscreen. This will greatly reduce boil time and gas usage. In fact, with the wind screen you can turn the flame way down without compromising boil time and we all like to stretch that gas as far as possible. Within its intended usage profile this is the best ultralight backpacking stove out there. I think it hits the practical limit of how light a gas stove can be and still be durable and reliable. If you're more a luxury or car camper then there are definitely much better and more practical stove options out there than this one. If you are looking to go far and fast with a compact ultralight kit, then this might be the ideal stove for you.

Fire-Maple designed a stable compact burner with dual fuel capability. In combination with their (Z1) handy little adapter, the burner can use either butane or propane. The burner employs a short hose to connect the fuel canister to the burner. This is superior to the burners that attach directly on the fuel canister, and allows for positioning the burner in a more stable location to support containers for cooking. It all collapses nicely into the included drawstring bag. This all fits right into my stainless steel heating cup. Perfect.

This is the second stove I have from Fire-Maple. Yes the first one is still working perfect. I have probably around 15 different stoves but this is the one I take when I am planning on cooking at lower and broader pattern of the flame( frying fish, cooking pancakes, using the frying pan). Also works perfect for just boiling water. Very light weight and sturdy. If you are only looking for one stove, then this is the one. Best all around.

I love this stove. My BRS stove kept buckling under weights over 1l of water. This stove can handle much more weight and the pot is much more stable. The broader flame allows you to simmer foods without burning and allows me to be able to cook more foods like quesadillas and eggs in my titanium pot without burning. It's a bit more expensive but still a lot cheaper than MSR stoves and SOTO stoves.

This stove is very light, lighter than the GSI Bugaboo cup that I boiled in (55 grams.)

I just finished hiking the long trail and used this twice a day for 28 days. At first I wasn't sure how it was going to hold up, but It held my 1.8l pot with no issues. The flame was solid even with a couple boil overs, No rusting at all. The carry case was nice even though I didn't use it because it made it to big to pack inside my pot with a tank of gas. It is a just tiny bit bigger and might not fold down like some others, but the trade off of it being able to hold a bigger pot was worth it. The price point was Acceptable at first, and in my opinion definitely worth it after no issues with the hike.
