Sorry team, it's not so much the rest-of-us but rather the festivus of things on board (airing of grievances around the festivus pole) ...the responses I received are not terribly helpful. I'm looking for other H30C owners in the 1978 legacy. There's very little information within the incredibly inept owners manual that came with these boats 30-40 years ago. It is listed as an alcohol stove, but there is clearly a port into which you pour the fuel, a pressure pump valve, very much like the pumps on Coleman stoves, and no igniter. Ill take a picture this weekend when I visit the old (but extremely attractive) girl. Wouldn't the CO emissions from Coleman fluid be more concentrated than burning denatured alcohol? Bare with me please, I'm a learning student of Hunter boats. This is the only picture I took during my walk though...
View attachment 117805
Wayne
Wayne,
you have shown us a photo of the microwave and the pop-up counter space, so why dont you show us a photo of the stove?...
my earlier post was kind of a tongue-in-cheek remark about it doesnt really matter what brand the boat is, who is doing the cooking on it, OR how it came equipped 30-40 years ago, because it probably isnt original anymore....
what is important is that you identify the stove, or let someone help you identify it (no matter what kind of boat they own), because it really does matter what kind of fuel goes into it... as for the safety in the proper use of the stove, that comes after identifying it, because some are much safer than others, but even the "un-safe" types can be used reasonably safely by a knowledgeable and careful person who routinely pays attention to details...
just because the previous owner said its an alcohol stove, doesnt mean it is. its possible that it is, but dont bet your boat or your life on what someone else
thinks.... you need to
know for sure.
the part where you said the stove has a pump up reservoir only tells us that you have a "pressurized" stove, and it could be alcohol, it could be white gas or it could be diesel. if the wrong fuel is put in, could either be explosive at its worst, and at its least, be a contaminate that requires disassembly and cleaning... and any pressurized stove does require more care to use than the non pressurized units...