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Solo StoveMesa Tabletop Fire Pit with Stand | Low Smoke Outdoor Mini Fire for Urban & Suburbs | Fueled by Pellets or Wood, Stainless Steel, With Travel Bag, 17,5 x 13 cm, 635 g, Deep Olive
Product Dimensions | 15.49 x 15.49 x 15.49 cm; 635.03 g |
Part number | SSMESA-DEEPOLIVE |
Material type | Stainless Steel |
Manufacturer | Solo Stove |
Item model number | Mesa-standaard |
ASIN | B0BDF9FLTT |
T**N
You’re paying a lot but the quality is worth it.
The media could not be loaded. So let’s address the elephant in the room here. These genuine Solo Stoves are expensive for what is essentially a metal pot to burn stuff in.However, they are very well made, of high grade stainless steel, and shouldn’t rust to pieces if left outside or stored in damp conditions. The secondary burn system works brilliantly as long as fuel isn’t added beyond the upper vent holes and the steel ring is put in place at the top, funnelling the airflow for maximum efficiency. I’ve got a number of these in various colours, and the finish is amazing, the coloured coating hasn’t discoloured as I feared it might, and they are a cinch to keep clean. Tip it upside down and shake out any ash, any uncombusted wood or pellets that won’t come out will just get burnt next time you use it.The little stand is a nice design, as it fold up allowing storage inside the Mesa stove. The legs snap out into place with a reassuring click and the whole set up is solid once the stove is placed on the stand. This negates the worry of your tabletop being charred, although if I was using in a valuable table or a surface I wanted to protect, I’d just set the whole thing on a spare large ceramic tile, slate, or granite chopping board.One tip, before you use it for the first time, clean the upper ring with some sort of spirit alcohol such as methanol, methylated spirits etc, so remove any greasy finger marks. The first burn with turn the ring a darker colour and give it an individual patina. Any marks will be burnt onto the metal, so be warned.Now let’s be honest, these things (standard Mesa, not Mesa XL) are dinky. It’s about as wide as a large thermos flask, and half as tall. You are not going to get much wood in it, and unless you’re snapping twigs by hand to get the right length, it can take a bit of prep work to get the right length pieces.I’ve used standard kindling bought in the plastic bags at the hardware store. The pieces tend to be just too long for the stove and will poke out of the top. This breaks ‘the first rule of Solo stove club’ which is ‘you DO NOT allow your fuel to surpass the upper vent holes, repeat YOU DO NOT…’Whilst this isn’t an insurmountable problem, as the wood will eventually burn down some and drop lower, since you are constantly adding fuel, every five minutes or so at least, you will seldom if ever have the smokeless flame you wanted. If you have a table saw you could process your own half sized lengths of kindling, or try to find shorter pieces from a different shop. Ideally no more than around 3.5 inches long.Or you can do what I do and just buy a 15 litre bag of wooden cat litter, scoop a large mug of the pellets and drop them in. Place a firelighter ON TOP of the pellets and light. It’s important with pellets to burn from the top down, as these gasification stoves will suffocate themselves if you try lighting at the bottom.It can be a challenge to get the pellets to take a flame, but I cheat with bits of old candle wax (crush a finished tea light container and some flakes of wax crumble out) or the wrapper from Baby Bel cheese. A blob of barbecue lighter gel will also help. Don’t use a think spirit like methanol, petrol etc as the cat little will do what it’s designed to and soak up the liquid, swelling into a damp pulp which won’t burn too well, as you require airflow between the pellets. A fill of pellets will last between 25 and 45 minutes depending how full you load it. Some people like to have a cup of extra pellets and load small amounts using a long handled spoon, but overall it burns nicer in one go, then empty and refill. The waste for the pellets can build up and clog the airflow making it just smoulder if you keep adding them.Using wood or sticks it’s not burning downwards in the same way, so sticks can be added almost indefinitely or until the base fills with ash and needs a shake out.These stoves are designed primarily as a table decoration, to provide a centre piece and create an ambience. Don’t think you can buy one of these and toss away that propane patio heater. The larger fire pits that sit in the ground are intended more for this purpose. Don’t get me wrong, these things do kick out a fair bit of heat, but it all shoots directly upwards and very little reaches you if sat more than a foot away. To overcome this downside, Solo offer a heat deflector accessory, which is eye-wateringly expensive for what resembles a shallow colander on legs.I will probably end up buying one if a good sale comes up, but in the meantime I’ve had limited success with my home made versions (cue A-Team theme 🎵)……What didn’t work:1. Rolled stainless mesh tube (as spacer) with metal pizza cooking tray on top. Flames came straight through and no tangible difference in radial heat.2. Old rusty colander I had lying around ear the BBQ (is it just me?) which refused to stay out and released some vile smells ( probably an unlucky baby slug or some spider eggs)3. Stainless steel? (Or so I thought) drinks tray about a foot diameter, again placed on 4” mesh ‘chimney’.This was the best in terms of heat deflection, but again a weird smell and burnt patch on the tray made me cease the test, as I fear the tray may have some kind of plating? Or maybe just more slugs….Anyway, get yourself one of these and have some fun. I will mount mine on the floor and sit in front of it with a beer on cold evenings before coming in to eat. A half hour burn, listening to an Audible book and watching the hypnotic flames. Perfect!
M**D
Fantastic tabletop firepit which is smokeless
This a great little table top fire pit and is smokeless if you use dry wood or pellets. Does need regular "feeding" once its going. It provides decent heat if you're sat round the table but probably wouldn't keep a larger, wider group of people warm. Perfect for adding some ambience and a quick, convenient way of toasting marshmallows.We love this product so much we have now bought the larger ranger fire pit for bigger gatherings.
R**Y
Brilliant Little Firepit
We have a larger fire pit, but this one is ideal to set up and also take away with us. Given the ongoing uncertainty about heating supplies, it’s something that would be an excellent OUTDOOR standby. Well built and worth buying.
M**T
table top fire
it’s small but it is a table top fire, once burning it gets through fuel quickly, and almost smoke free don’t think i would use it inside but for sat outside in the evening it’s lovely.
A**R
Well worth the money!
A great product. I’ve got a larger one but the table top version is just as good and much easier for sitting out on a warmer evening enjoying a drink or 2!
S**N
Nice but expensive.
Expensive.
N**S
Extremely well made product , looks good quality, ideal for small outdoor gatherings
Product looks great and is well made , and will certainly get well used when the weather gets better and the light nights come in , would have gone for a colour version but the difference was a bit excessive.
N**Y
Mesa table top burner
Brilliant fun. I have found it better to use short lengths of kindling rather than pellets but it works with both. Lovely centre piece for outdoors.
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