Buy Coleman Camping Coffee Maker Now
This coffee maker will make you feel you are home. I use it with a two burner propane stove and after finding the spot where the carafe should sit (the handle must align with two dots market in the surface) is like brewing with a regular coffee maker. Furthermore I did buy it on sale 50% off regular price, at $22.00, I couldn''t get a percolator that good. This coffee maker will be perfect for a family camping, not so for backwood camping when you don''t need bulky stuff, and won''t have to worry of breaking the carafe.Read Best Reviews of Coleman Camping Coffee Maker Here
I am a boy scout leader and I camp from 20-30 nights per year. The troop purchased one of these and used it daily for several weekend campouts and week-long summer camp, for a total of about 10 days with an average of 3-4 coffee drinkers. We drink about 2 pots a day (not each).Durability:
The pot broke right away. We purchased a steel pot.
Plastic around the filter area seems to be brittle...it cracked and a piece broke off.
Cleaning:
The filter basket needs to be easily removable for cleanup. You have to carry the whole unit to your water source to rinse it out. You can take it out, but it requires a multi-tool to do so.
Quality of brew:
Good cup of coffee; just like your drip pot at home.
Speed:
For three consecutive mornings, we conducted a side-by-side field test with an old-fashioned steel percolator pot. Both the Coleman product and the perculator pot had the same amounts of water. Both the Coleman and percolator were lit on the same stove at the same time with the same burner setting. The percolator pot was brought to a boil and perc''ed for 8 minutes. Bottom line, the Coleman product took twice as long to make a pot of coffee.
Overall:
A percolator pot is a better option for camp settings. The Coleman stove drip pot takes longer, is not that durable and takes up more space than an old-fashioned steel percolator pot. Also, the hot surface area (burn potential) is greater for the Coleman product, as the entire bottom section gets hot, as you might expect.It''s simple...we need coffee while camping especially in the cold mornings. I''ve tried a bunch of different devices to make real brewed coffee (percolators, presses, I even designed and built one that ended up costing twice what this maker costs), but this is simply the best I''ve ever seen. It works just like your maker at home, but instead of plugging it in you put it on a camp stove. It''s perhaps a LITTLE slower than a plug-in maker. But it makes a perfect pot every time. One thing I did notice is that after 2 days of near-constant coffee-making, the bottom metal surface got pretty charred and even bubbled. I think I had my camp stove on too high and it began melting the metal a little (I probably figured that higher heat would mean faster coffee, but I don''t really think that is the case anyway). For how expensive camping gadgets usually are, I was blown away by how great this item was for the price. I would have expected to see this for at least twice what it cost. A must-have in my opinion.
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