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More Volume - Multiple Doors - Longer Burns - Ultralight - Easier set up

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The Rockslider
Coming Soon

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Game 
Changing Design

The Pyro Rock Stove was designed for the adventurer who needs a lightweight, dependable stove that exceeds the performance currently on the market. Made of ultralight thin pure titanium, this stove offers longer, more efficient burns, longer coal life, with easy set up. 

Specs

• Packed Weight - 2.5lbs (without stove pipe)

• Volume - 1,322 cubic inches (2,872 with
dug pit)


• Base Diameter - 18 inches

• Roll up/packable design 

 

* Exact specs to be determined. For use in floorless shelters only. 
 

* Patent Pending 

Use the ground to increase your burn chamber size and preserve coals.

Unlike other stoves the pyro rock stove doesn't only rely on its own thin walls to heat and store fire and coals. The stove allows for ground excavation below the stove allowing for an increased chamber size with an insulated pit. The results are longer lasting fires and coals without the need for constant babysitting.

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Our Origin 

The Team

Our Origin

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We're a group of passionate backcountry hunters and hikers who, like many adventurers, learned the hard way that every ounce matters - especially on long hikes and bush flights with strict weight limits.  

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We loved the idea of bringing a hot stove into the backcountry. Not just for comfort, but for safety - for warmth in brutal weather, for drying soaked boots and clothes after long days in snow or rain, and for real peace of mind in emergency situations.

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On several hunts in Idaho and Alaska, we relied on a popular titanium stove. It worked. But night after night, we found ourselves waking up every couple of hours to feed the fire. By morning, the coals were often weak or gone entirely. On a raised titanium floor, heat disappeared quickly - and with it, our sleep. Wet gear didn't always dry. Long burns didn't last.

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That's when we started asking a different question:

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What if there wasn't a bottom?

What if the earth itself could insulate and preserve the coal bed?

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Then we pushed further.

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What if it wasn't a box at all?

What if a cone shape drafted harder, burned cleaner, and handled larger logs? What if it had multiple doors so it could be fed from either side of the tent? What if it was built bigger - designed for longer burns, stronger coal beds, and gear that actually dries overnight?

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Those questions turned into sketches.

Those sketches turned into prototypes.

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And that's how the Pyro Rock Stove began.....

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