AntiGravityGear 3 cup pot & cozy
Owner Review by André Corterier
Date: January 2006
Personal Biographical Information:
Name: André Corterier
Gender: M
Age: 34
Height: 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)
Weight: 80 kg (175 lb)
Email: andreDOTcorterierATfreenetDOTde
Home: Bonn, Germany
Backpacking Background:
I started out with backpackgeartest slowly – single-day 24 km (15 mi) jaunts
by myself or even shorter hikes in the company of my little daughter. I am getting started on longer (overnight)
hikes, as a lightweight packer and hammock-camper. I’ve begun upgrading my old gear and am now shooting for a
dry FSO weight (everything carried From the Skin Out except food, fuel and water)
of about 10 kg (22 lb) for three-season camping. Not quite there yet.
Note: These items were received in conjunction with a test of the
blue cozy cover
by the same manufacturer.
Item: AntiGravityGear 3 cup pot & cozy
Year of manufacture: 2005
Manufacturer: AntiGravityGear
URL: http://www.antigravitygear.com/
MSRP: 12.00 USD for the 3 cup hard anodized pot w/ lid
MSRP: 8.00 USD for the 3 cup cozy
MSRP: 2.15 USD for the pot lifter
Weight Comparisons - scale accurate to 5 g (0.2 oz)
(weights were "given" in oz and converted to g, "measured" in g and converted to oz)
3 cup pot cozy listed weight: 1.0 oz (28 g)
3 cup pot cozy measured weight: 23 g (0.8 oz), lid: 4 g (0.1 oz), total: 27 g (1.0 oz)
3 cup pot with lid listed weight: 3.8 oz (108 g)
3 cup pot measured weight: 76 g (2.7 oz), lid: 35 g (1.2 oz), total: 111 g (3.9 oz)
aluminum pot lifter listed weight: 1.4 oz (40 g)
aluminum pot lifter measured weight: 36 g (1.3 oz)
total listed weight: 6.2 oz (176 g)
total measured weight: 175 g (6.2 oz)
The Products in Detail:
The Pot Cozy:
The Pot Cozy consists of some cleverly glued together pieces of aluminized bubble wrap which fit
(tightly) around the pot, and a separate round section for the lid. The pot part has a section
which is cut so that it can be peeled away from the pot, which allows inserting the pot into the
cozy with the
pot lifter. That section can then be smoothed back up against the pot. It appears to me as
though it would be very easy to elongate the cuts by about an inch (2.5 cm) or so which would
allow the use of the pot cozy with an Evernew 0.9 l Ti pot (though this appears to make for an
even tighter fit of the pot cozy). I have not made this modification, however. Extracting and even
more so inserting the pot is a wee bit difficult as it is, because the cozy fits tightly. In addition,
the pot is generally full of boiling water when I insert it.
So I felt that a tighter fit would subtract from the
usefulness of the pot cozy. The upright part of the
pot cozy extends above the height of the pot's sidewall, although this section of aluminum foil
does not include bubbles. This allows the foil to be smoothed over the lid once it's on the pot,
tightly surrounding the closed pot on all sides (this additional length would also allow a pot
with slightly higher sidewalls to be covered - up to a guesstimated 8.5 cm/ 3.5 in.
The lid
section of the pot cozy features a small
slit in the middle, through which the handle of the pot lid fits. The lid cozy then sticks nicely
to the lid. Attached to the cozy is a sticker which reads:
DO NOT EXPOSE TO FLAME OR DIRECT STOVE HEAT. This cozy is only an insulator and will
melt if exposed to flame. To use: Place pot with hot food in cozy. Put lid and top disk in place.
Seal in heat py pressing top edge inward over top disk. Protect from abraision (sic) and sharp
objects in pack.
Pictures of the pot cozy can also be seen at the
manufacturer's website.
The 3 Cup (Hard Anodized Aluminum) Pot (with Lid):
This is a small (boy, it's small) black pot with a silver lid (I take this to indicate that the
lid did not suffer the anodization treatment - seems like saving money at the right place). The
pot's sidewall turns out at the top, the lid rests on the flat level section created thereby.
This flat section is only about 2 mm (about 1/8 in) wide. The listed diameter of the pot of 137 mm
(5 3/8 in) was apparently measured at this (widest) section, the inside diameter of the volume used
to cook is thus about 5 mm (about 1/4 in) less. The pot arrived without any scratches and has only
acquired very few in the course of a lot of use. Again, additional pictures can be
seen at the manufacturer's website.
The Aluminum Pot Lifter:
This pot lifter consists of two pieces of aluminum fitted together (they do not come apart). It is
just shy of 5 in (12.5 cm) long and easily allows gripping of the pot.
Field Experience:
I have been using this pot and cozy combination for the better part of a year now. I have cooked
ready-made noodle dishes from the supermarket with it as well as heated water for instant coffee
and to rehydrate dehydrated trail food. Most of my experience with it actually stems from
dayhiking, when my daughter and I like to have a break and a hot meal in the middle of it
(followed by a siesta in my
hammock).
I have also used this pot on a number of overnight hikes and a few (three) multi-day excursions.
It was used in conjunction with either my
Clikstand Universal Stove System
or my new self-made "SuperCat Stove" (which I made according to
instructions easily found online).
Ease of Use:
Using the pot lifter to put the pot into the cozy is easy enough, though it appears that the
lid must be taken off to do this. While I am able to grab both pot and lid with the lifter
in a way which does not make me fear that I will drop the package, this makes the lid move up at
the other end and does not, to me, look as though this is the intended use. Grabbing only the pot
is easy as pie, though it has led to some scratching of the anodized surface of the pot with the
pot lifter. In
and of itself this does not worry me - the pot lifter touches only the very top of the pot,
where it won't come into contact with food. I used to be a little concerned about the windscreen
of my
Clikstand,
however, which I generally transport inside the pot. I used to be careful when inserting
and extricating this, so as not to damage the inside or - worse - bottom of the pot. I am no longer
nearly so concerned about this.
I can leave the lid section of the cozy on the lid while cooking. This (according to what I
remember from my physics lessons) helps to retain heat in the pot while cooking (and, what with
heat rising up, does so where it counts the most). It also saves me the bother of
threading it over the lid handle each time.
Stirring things in the pot requires holding on to it with the pot lifter. This is a bit of a
balancing act, though that is likely more a factor of my stove and pot support than of the pot
itself. Still, I have sometimes wished for a handle that affixes directly to the pot.
However, I feel that the disconnect between pot and handle also has a
benefit in the fact that I can easily store the handle inside the pot. Given how
light the pot lifter is, I guess that these factors balance one another. No complaint, really.
Cooking With It:
I put water into the pot and alcohol into the stove, light my alcohol stove and place the
pot on the stove. Then I add the lid (with the cozy lid in place) and wait for the water to
boil. I then add whatever I meant to cook with it and occasionally stir it while I wait for the
alcohol to burn out (experience now lets me pour the right amount of alcohol in a way that it
burns out a minute - or two at most - after the contents have reached boiling again).
I then lift
the lid a little on one side, grab the pot there with the pot lifter and insert it into the cozy.
This
requires turning the cozy back and forth a little as I'm "screwing in" the pot. Doing this is
easy, however, as the cozy itself protects the hand handling it from the heat of the pot. The lid
rests, at an angle, on the pot and pot handle while I do this. Sometimes I manage this procedure
in a way which does not cause the lid to fall off...
Having done this, I place the lid on the pot in a level fashion (after having disengaged the pot
lifter) and smooth the upper pot cozy edges over the lid. Now I have
about ten minutes (for a
pasta dish, more with rice) to clean up my utensils and whatever garbage my meal may have come
in and to sit down in a scenic spot. Holding the pot in the cozy allows me to hold it with one
hand while I eat from it with the other. My food tends to be hot enough to still require some
blowing on it at first, but usually no longer so hot as to make burning my lips inevitable. In
my book, that makes it just right.
Durability:
The Ensemble has held up rather well. The bottom (outside) of the pot is smudged with soot to a
degree the dishwasher cannot get off any more. This should help the pot absorb heat from the
flame below it. The inside bottom of the pot features a few very small scratches in the anodization
surface - which are rather obvious because the silvery, non-anodized aluminum becomes visible
underneath. I assume that these are from my stirring the contents with my titanium spork (and
trying to break overly long spaghetti into smaller pieces with it). The outside edges of the lid
section of the cozy have blackened and shrivelled up a bit from the occasional flame licking up
the side of the pot, so it definitely looks used by now. But it has lost none of its usefulness
and will remain in my pack for the foreseeable future.
Pros/Cons:
Pros: Low weight, low cost. Cozy saves fuel and makes eating from the pot more comfortable.
Cons: None. Still.
Read more reviews of AntiGravityGear gear
Read more gear reviews by Andre Corterier
|