Whats your preference, and why?
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We use White gas in this type of lantern because it burns cleaner and I can use it with the coleman stove and just carry one liquid fuel. Burns great in low temperatures. We also keep a couple battery powered lamps and headlamps too. We use them more often that the white gas.
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I have a propane one that I won as a door prize and uses the same canisters as my stove so easy to keep the same fuel for both. Fuel lights are easier on the eyes than most modern flashlights (high speed LED flickering) so I plan to use it more when with other people so they don't need to turn their lights on as much.
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We use propane because it is very cheap. I refill the camp size bottle from a larger tank (like the typical ones found on a BBQ grill)
After the deep fried turkey fad went away I was given quite a few larger, full tanks. The little bottle is very easy to fill and the gas is free. Speaking of lanterns, Zach do you still collect lanterns?
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White gas, or unleaded gasoline if you have a dual fuel lantern is usually the most economical, and if like us you also have stoves that will use the same fuel it makes more sense than propane. However as far as lights goes, the battery powered dim-able lights in our Camp-Inn teardrop are usually our first choice for lights when we need them in camp, and multi-brightness level LED flashlights/headiamps for illuminating the trail to the facilities at night.
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Although I have used them all, I prefer naptha, white gas fuel. As an owner of a few old style coleman lanterns, it has become a nostalgia thing for me. The priming, the smell and the sound while burning evokes memories of camping from many evenings and campouts. I do agree that flash lights and the camper side lights are musts for safety on a dark night ... but there is still something about hanging the old lantern on a tree that completes the evening.
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I am like Gerg Weller, I was in Scouts for many years and used propane. A small container makes the lantern portable and the big tank with a extention pole is great for setting on a table.
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Originally posted by swoody126 View Postsince you asked about "lantern" it is Kerosene
usually prefer no lantern opting for small flashlight or headlight if light is a MUST
like a headlight to read myself to sleep
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White gas or battery-powered
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I use propane for both my lantern and stove. I have an 11lb tank. My first stove was Coleman fuel. I didn't like the idea of dealing with gas. So my next stove was propane. Both run off the same tank.
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Originally posted by Scott Seyler View Post... As an owner of a few old style coleman lanterns, it has become a nostalgia thing for me. The priming, the smell and the sound while burning evokes memories of camping from many evenings and campouts. I do agree that flash lights and the camper side lights are musts for safety on a dark night ... but there is still something about hanging the old lantern on a tree that completes the evening.
The only two reasons I don't have the old style lanterns are 1) I figured if they were finnicky/didn't work, it would mean more items to add to the "must repair" pile (and/or I'd spend x amount of time during the camping trip working on the lanterns, and I already "work" too much when I camp, as it is), and
2) I worried about fuel spilling during storage/transit (same reason I don't transport tiki torches, though I love them).
So, I take the easy route, and use battery-operated and small solar lights. Looking at Zach's beautiful collection of vintage lanterns is giving me "nostalgia pangs" again, so I may have to buy a vintage Coleman lantern, nevertheless... .
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I rebuilt an old AIDA lantern last year and due to safety concerns prefer burning kerosene in it. This lantern gives off a tremendous amount of light so for general local lighting we prefer Luci lights. We throw the Luci lights on the dash and they are charged when we get to our destination.1 Photo
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I love my white gas units. There is something comfortably familiar and soothing about the glow and that glorious "hiss" of a Coleman lantern. It smells, sounds and embodies the basic elements of getting out there.
However, I just picked up a Nite Ize https://www.niteize.com/product/Radi...le-Lantern.asp Radiant 314 and used it exclusively on a 2 week backcountry trip which I got back from yesterday.
I'm digging it. No muss, no fuss. Great light and the stuff sack acts as a light diffuser. Great for general use and even reading. Long battery life and the amber setting is awesome. More compact and no fuel to add.
but.....I still love my two mantle pumper!🙂
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Originally posted by RatAssassin View PostI love my white gas units. There is something comfortably familiar and soothing about the glow and that glorious "hiss" of a Coleman lantern. It smells, sounds and embodies the basic elements of getting out there.
However, I just picked up a Nite Ize https://www.niteize.com/product/Radi...le-Lantern.asp Radiant 314 and used it exclusively on a 2 week backcountry trip which I got back from yesterday.
I'm digging it. No muss, no fuss. Great light and the stuff sack acts as a light diffuser. Great for general use and even reading. Long battery life and the amber setting is awesome. More compact and no fuel to add.
but.....I still love my two mantle pumper!🙂
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I know I'm "late to this party," but I don't like hauling flammable liquids, so I opted for the 10 lb propane tank and adaptor hose for my Coleman camp stove. For lighting I use those cheap LED lanterns from HF that slide closed/off and slip them on/up for whatever amount of light is required. The amber exterior lights on the camper take care of perimeter lighting as needed, then switched off. Hand-held flashlights or headlamps for emergency lighting, but most of the time I go dark at the campsite except for a campfire. I prefer to enjoy the lower light setting of camping and, pardon if I offend others, I dislike the campsites that look like a carnival. Yes, Yes, you've got kids and need to keep track of them or something like that but consider dialing it back a bit for those of us that embrace the night. I like to lay back in my gravity recliner and view the stars in the night sky, but sometimes that's hard to do when "The Funhouse" is in the next site over!
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