Gear Modifications and Care Mistakes to Avoid
Over the years, the staff in our repair department has seen a lot of oddball things come across the workbench. They have fielded thousands of calls about “custom” gear modifications and the unfortunate results, seen perfectly good gear become the victim of neglect, and had to explain to people why their great "gear improvement" idea might have been best left as just an idea.
Look, we know you’re brilliant. Honestly, we do. But some things are just best left to the engineers that are here every day, putting in countless hours to make sure that the stuff they’re designing is the best possible solution for the task at hand. In fact, there‘s a good chance we tried your idea and, if it didn’t make it into the final product, there’s a good reason for it. Let’s face it though—we’re all simple creatures and not easily deterred from our brilliance. We know the temptation is high, but there are two really, really good reasons not to modify your gear.
1. It Will Void Your Warranty
One of the biggest reasons not to modify your gear is that doing so voids your warranty. That’s not because we’re hurt that you tried to one-up us; it’s because modifications change the original nature of the gear, and we simply can’t work on something we didn’t design. That's not safe for you or us, and you might have just messed up perfectly good gear. Unfortunately, you’re on your own once you modify your gear beyond its original specifications, even if you have other, unrelated problems down the road.2. In Certain Situations, It Could Kill You
The other big reason is that you might end up changing things for the worse. While you can generally alter a utensil or mug without too much worry, changing how a stove or a water filter is intended to work can be downright dangerous. As our lawyers like to remind you in those owner’s manuals you may or may not have read, you can die a pretty horrible death from a stove modification or spend a fair chunk of that coveted vacation time on the toilet with the wrong DIY water filter modifications. Suffice to say, there are some fabulous reasons to leave the engineering to the (MSR) engineers. With those things in mind, let’s have a quick look at some common modifications that we’ve seen or heard about and specifically why they are bad ideas. In addition, we’ll offer some general care guidelines that get frequently overlooked, causing gear to end up in the repair shop or recycling bin. If you really want to get the most out of your gear for the long haul, the single most important thing you can do is to simply take care of it, as it was designed.STOVES AND COOKWARE
So, you fancy yourself a combustion expert, eh? Well, tinkering with a stove or cookware can drastically alter its performance for the worse and introduce all sorts of dangerous variables into the equation. Here are some common things to avoid: Using Over-Sized Pots Each stove comes with a maximum recommended pot size, and stability is just a part of the equation. The other is that a pot larger than the recommended maximum can reflect too much heat back onto the stove. This is especially dangerous with a canister stove, where the canister itself can be overheated. Even an armchair combustion expert doesn’t need to think too hard to imagine the implications of heating up a pressurized fuel canister. More subtly, you could also melt the self-sealing gasket that’s embedded in the top of the canister, causing a fuel leak that would lead to the aforementioned catastrophe. Even liquid fuel stoves have been melted under overly large crock pots, so heed the recommendations in your stove's instructions. Using Non-System Cookware with Stove Systems Our WindBurner™ and Reactor® stove systems are a few of our proudest engineering achievements. Each threads the needle of combustion perfection through the ideal synergy of primary air combustion and cookware integration. Of course, we’ve seen people try to modify flat-bottomed cookware and hack “adapters” aimed at making regular pots and pans work with these stoves. Newsflash: it doesn’t work. In fact, without proper heat dissipation, these powerhouse stoves will likely trigger their embedded thermal trip switches, designed to shut the stoves down in an overheating emergency. While you may be able to reset the WindBurner if that happens, you might have irreversibly damaged other components. On the Reactor stove, the thermal trip is a one-way street to eating cold food the rest of your trip and replacing your now-cooked (ba-dum-tss) stove. if you do trip your WindBurner, here are the quick steps to reset it:- Wait 5 minutes for stove to cool (Mandatory!). Disconnect fuel canister from stove.
- Open the Flame Adjuster counterclockwise 2 full turns.
- Insert one leg of the Fuel Canister Stand into the hole in the stove’s mixer tube. (It should stop against the mixer tube.)
- Rotate the leg clockwise to press the brass jet downward until a click is heard.
- Close the Flame Adjuster before reconnecting fuel canister. Stove is now ready for use.