Stove manufacturers Q - Z

The Rinnai Mfg. Co., Ltd., Nagoya, Aichi, Japan, made this Model RK-100R
two-burner camp stove for Eaton's of Canada (seen here)
and for Montgomery Ward in the US as part of their WesternField brand.
This stove, in Mike Ogilvie's collection, has a sliding metal panel at the bottom of the mixing chamber
that, when opened, causes the main burner flame to intensify.



RM Manufacturing & Engineering Co. Ltd., Birmingham, UK
made this kerosene fueled, silent burner stove.
This stove and package with prickers is in Jeff Johnson's collection.


The Model M-1950 stove was built by a number of companies
under contract to the U.S. Quartermaster Corps between 1951 and 1987.
It fits in the aluminum case which doubles as a cook kit.
The roarer burner is rated at 5500BTU/hr.
Spare parts are held inside the legs and the pump handle.
This stove was made by Rogers Tool & Die Co., Inc., Akron, Ohio, in 1964.


Metallwarenfabrik Josef Rosenthal, Vienna, Austria,
made this Model 29 stove in their Phoebus brand.
The stove is alcohol fueled;
"Nur fur Spiritus" is printed on the top of the metal label (right).
Dido Scheringa owns this stove.


This Model 625 Phoebus stove
runs on either kerosene or gasoline
with a silent burner.
The legs are folded in for storage.
This stove, in Kevin Darnell's collection,
has a built-in pump.


Metallwarenfabrik Josef Rosenthal also made this Model 725 Phoebus stove.
Paperwork that came with the stove is dated Jan. 1963.
This is a gasoline only fueled model
that is pressurized by preheating.
A preheater ring is below the reflective aluminum plate
that surrounds the burner and windscreen.


The Model CS 56 is possibly the first
post-WWII stove made by Tilley.
The fount is the same as that on the X246 storm lantern
and sold a kit to convert this lantern to a stove.
This camping stove is in Neil McRae's collection.


Tilley made the P100 stove through the 1970's into the 1990's.
In later price lists it is listed as paraffin stove model X246.
This model seems to have been supplied as a special order item.
It is further unusual in having a Primus, rather than Tilley, burner.
This stove is in Neil McRae's collection.


Tito Landi, Paris, France, made this alcohol fueled stove
that operates the same way as this Tito Landi lantern.
Four small flame jets are directed at the central burner (lower image)
that create the necessary heat in the burner to pressurize the appliance.
This stove is in Erwin Schäfer's collection.


Turner Brass Works in Sycamore, Illinois
manufactured this Model 1111 one burner stove.
In operation the tip of the generator has a nut  to attach it to the burner.
The tank stores in the case as the burner can be slid forward in its mount.
This stove works and is in Brien Page's collection.
This stove dates to the 1930's and appears in an ad in 1949.


This British military specification stove was manufactured
by several companies during and after WWII.
The olive green paint has been removed
from the sides of the tank of this paraffin (kerosene) burning stove.
This stove, purchased in Hitchin, England, with "all the bits,"
fits in the tin to the left which doesn't function as a pot.


An unknown model of tripod stove with a lantern conversion
in the Dolphin brand by Watcor Ltd.,
Cape Town, South Africa.
This stove and lantern combination is is Neil McRae's collection.
More information on this stove/lantern combination
can be found on Shinzo Kono's website.


Model 42A Senior stove was made by the Wehrle Co., Newark, Ohio.
Mike Bullis had to repair the tank in a couple of places
before he was able to operate it; the stove is now in Harold Porter's collection.
The controls for the right (master) burner are on the tank.
The tank is pressurized with a separate pump.
The stove frame is cast iron.


Model 43A Senior stove by the Wehrle Company
is a larger three-burner model.
John Britt, whose collection this is in,
cleaned and painted the rusted sheet metal,
matching the original colors as closely as possible.
The 7" diameter cast iron burner grates are missing but the stove works.

 

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