Having experienced Coleman lantern and backpacking stove's propensity for spontaneously igniting things around them on fire (I once almost lit Cohutta on fire with a Coleman backpacking stove), I have no desire at all to go find and buy Coleman fuel, then mess around with these, so I will just sell them "as is".
Grand Forks Herald: DOKKEN: Story of the old Coleman camp stove resonates with readers
It’s amazing to me where stories end up sometimes. Such was the case last week, when I wrote a column about a 50-plus-year-old Coleman camp stove that was rescued from the bowels of a farmhouse ...
When our Coleman stove died an untimely death last summer, and a neighbor offered us his Coleman camp stove as a replacement, we jumped at the freebie. But when he brought down the stove, we wondered ...
I had an old Coleman Scanoe back from the 80's I think. It was the kind that had an aluminum frame and had been used to fish in Alaska. I traded it on Craigslist a few months ago, but missed it, so I bought a new one from Dick's the other day. It doesn't have the aluminum framing. I haven't taken it out yet, but I hope it's as good as the old ones are.
- Does the Coleman Dual Fuel Powerhouse Model run unleaded gas more efficiently than the standard model. - What is the shelf life of the Coleman White gas? (I will probably be running this 99% of the time.) - When you are finished using the lantern on a trip is it best to empty out the white gas or leave it in the tank?