Take a look at this great site which describes how a backpacking stove works (and a lot more!).
After much fiddling with various stove alternatives, I am back to using my Jetboil on a regular basis. No, it is not the ultimate ultralight option, but it sure is convenient. For a longer trip, it may pay off due to fuel economy. The issue of "canister quantization" is an issue though -- you cannot take 1.6 canisters.
I have a Jetboil (now ancient), and like it quite well. (My cost was $65.00) It is not what one would call ultralight, and the whole business of canisters does rub something in me the wrong way. The piezo lighter stopped working the week after I bought it, so I always pack along a lighter. Or two. I replaced the piezo igniter (which is not all that hard to do). It worked for a few days then failed during my next big trip. I should just remove it and save 15 grams. I am not even sure that current models include a piezo igniter, but let's not talk any more about this wretched topic.
The stove and pot rig weighs 14 ounces (excluding fuel) on my scale
Some descriptions claim 12 ounces, maybe there are older models that
saved 2 ounces somehow? Or maybe they are just liars.
One 100 gram fuel canister boils 12 liters of water
The two canisters I have weigh about 6.7 ounces (each)
My stove along with the coffee press and one fuel
canister weighs 22 ounces (1 pound, 6 ounces).
Invented and made in New Hampshire (better than Gary, Indiana, eh?). Like any canister stove it is balky at temperatures near or below freezing and at elevations at or above 12,000 feet, making it somwhat of a fair weather stove.
The competition is the MSR pocket rocket and the Snow Peak GigaPower. Neither of these has the integrated cook pot with heat exchanger. A quick abstract from the "howzone" article below shows the boil times for a liter of water to be 5:45, 5:45 and 5:68 minutes for the jet, rocket, and peak respectively. The kicker is the fuel consumption (in ounces), namely 0.294, 0.489, 0.494. The Jetboil uses about 40 percent less fuel to achieve the same result. This is from a 4 ounce fuel canister, so this verifies the claim that you can boil 12 liters of water with 4 ounces of fuel (about 113 grams).
Compatible with any standard threaded canister.
You can buy a small (4 ounce) or a large (8 ounce) canister. The 4 ounce can fits neatly into the jetboil kit (into my jetboil anyhow). The rub is the cost. You pay $4.99 for the cute little 4 ounce can and $5.99 for the 8 ounce can. That's right! An extra dollar gets you twice as much fuel -- so a cheapskate like me now always buys the 8 ounce cans. I usually buy the MSR brand, they are either the same price or cheaper, and they mark the gross weight on the can, which just earns them my business. For some reason the price on the monster 16 ounce can jumps to $9.99 so just forget that thing.
With an 8 ounce canister I am carrying an extra 4 ounces of fuel, along with an extra 1.6 ounces of metal. Having extra fuel seems like a good idea, but the true ultralight maniac cringes at the thought.
The smart reader will have already realized that you can weigh your canisters and figure out how much fuel is in partly used canisters. I weigh mine, and mark the weight on them with a sharpie. I have a box with around a dozen full and half used cans that I rummage around in before each trip. I shove an extra pair of socks, or something inside with the stove so it doesn't rattle around and get damaged and carry the (possibly partly full) 8 ounce can alongside. I bought a little AWS-1KG digital scale I use to weigh my canisters.
There are two models, the "ultra", which is a special lighter model made for BPL, that you can buy for $115 direct from the maker, or pay $143 for it at the BPL site (your choice). The ultra weighs 5.1 ounces. The regular model weighs 6.5 ounces, and costs $95 purchased direct from Fritz online. This is $95 Canadian, and after I placed the order, the Paypal charges to me (February, 2010) were $91.50 given the present exchange rate. I figured that a somewhat sturdier stove, that weighed only 1.5 ounces more (dimensions are identical) and that saved me $20 (or $51 depending where you buy things) was a good choice.
Alcohol stoves are amazing. You can build one from a couple of soda cans. They will work just fine in sub-freezing temperatures (more than you can say about canister stoves). They are absolutely quiet. They just take a little longer (maybe) to boil water.
There is no end of information online about them, and endless homebrew designs. In fact there seem to be more commercially available stoves than a person can shake a stick at!
I ordered a Gram Weenie Pro for $13.00 plus $3.00 shipping. That price fetches a windscreen and a little (6 ounce) fuel bottle with squirt nozzle. Seemed hard to beat. The stove is made from some kind of aluminum bottle with fairly thick walls, and seems decently sturdy. My trials (warm weather) have been entirely satisfactory, but I read some reviews after buying it that indicate that it won't bring really cold water to a boil. For Arizona summer use it is fine. The windscreen weighs more than the stove. The stove is 16 grams, windscreen is 27 grams, together they are 43 grams (1.5 ounces). The fuel bottle full is 4.5 ounces, so along with a lighter and my 1 liter stainless steel pot ($2.50 at a thrift store), the rig is 13.3 ounces, saving me about 10 ounces over my jetboil setup. However it doesn't have a french press option! When and if I someday upgrade to a titanium pot, I will be saving close to a full pound over the jetboil, with perhaps greater benefits on longer trips when more fuel must be carried. 1 ounce of fuel is just about right to boil 0.5 liters of water in about 12 minutes.
You don't want any water in your fuel (apart from some hazards while burning, you are carrying dead weight). Note that alcohol can be carried in almost any container (unlike white gas).
The "system" is the stove and cone (along with fuel bottle and some other goodies) and costs $35 for the pot about to be mentioned, and weighs 1.7 ounces. The pot that I might choose would be the Evernew Titanium Ultra Light 0.9 liter pot ECA252 (uncoated!) weighing 4.2 ounces.
I can't figure out if AGG and TD are the same outfit or what. The Ti Tri is a caldera cone set up to also burn wood! (or esbit tabs, hence the "tri" for 3 types of fuel). Titanium Goat sells the whole package, pot and all. ( I would probably go for a 0.9 liter setup (12.1 ounces) $125. If you already have a pot (I like the looks of the Evernew 0.9 liter) you can buy a ti tri setup for it from Trail Designs for $80.Another choice is to save some money and get the Caldera Keg. In this system you are using a recycled beer can in lieu of a titanium pot (which as you might imagine is lighter and cheaper). The whole thing sells for $60 and the stove, cone, and pot weigh 2.7 ounces. Including all the goodies they sell as a kit, it weights 6.3 ounces.
Esbit tablets are little white bricks of some substance that can be ignited with a match. A tablet weighs 0.5 ounce, and costs about 50 cents. One tablet will burn for 12-15 minutes, and it is claimed can boil a pint of water in 8 minutes.
There is also a "bushbuddy" woodburning stove available at BPL. It is designed to work with the Firelite SUL-1100 pot (1.15 liters, 3.03 ounces). The bushbuddy weighs 5.1 ounces and fits inside of the pot. The stove costs about $140 and the pot costs $70. There is also a Caldera cone available for this pot for $35.00.
Another option is to make your own Bushwacker stove using the plans at Trail Gear.
I used aluminum for many years and was entirely satisfied. It seems that every aluminum pot I find these days has a non-stick coating, which I won't buy due to toxicity issues that the big corporations lie about. There used to be worries about aluminum and health (in particular an alzheimers connection that now seems discredited). Also, you can melt a hole in an aluminum pan with a stove if you let it run without contents (don't ask how I know).
Titanium has a huge "I am a cool dude" factor, but you pay through the nose for it. Titanium does have an amazing strength to weight ratio (so my mechanical engineer friends tell me). You won't melt it with any conventional stove. Titanium is similar in weight to aluminum, typically just a bit heavier for the same item. In other words, if you have issues with aluminum and don't want to carry the extra weight of stainless, you pony up the cash and go with titanium.
An interesting article compared two titanium 0.9 liter pots. One was a tall and thin snow peak, the other a short and squat evernew. The conclusion was that the short and squat pot was a lot more efficient (water boiled in 4 minutes rather than 8.25 in one test). The reason being that the large bottom surface of the pot allowed much better heat transfer from the flame to the pot and contents.
Here is a good deal on a pot/stove combo: Evernew 1.3L pot
Tom's hiking pages / tom@mmto.org