66788 said:My 5 gallon propane cylinder (never leaked) lasts 3 to 4 weeks in the winter in Quartzsite. That's heat for the vented Propex heater (thermostatically controlled dry heat), the 6 gallon water heater, and the 2 burner stove. Does soy wax do all that?
Propane is readily available virtually anywhere in the world. I haven't seen any Blue Rhino soy granules in front of any convenience stores or home depot stores.
If soy wax was a viable fuel, it would be in general use today. It's not for multiple reasons.
I didn't think it could all that. Just referring to heat. Though it could take the chill off a pot of water for washing.
It sells for $1.15 to $1.30 a lb in bulk. The advantage over propane is that it will save you refill trips because a lot could be stored. It stores as flexible solid in any shaped space. It will melt a bit, but of course you'd want to store sealed up in plastic so that won't matter too much. I haven't tried it in a very hot climate, so the melting could be an issue there. Anyway, a lot of people dismiss it but it is a simpler and more elegant way to handle heat. It works in a tent, but in a tent things are stationary. So my thoughts were about how to house it safely in a container because I can't find tech designed for this anywhere online. The best I can think is a steel pot with venting holes drilled into and the cover. I never used a cover in the tent but in the camper I'd want one. It would need to be steel or cast iron or something that won't start burning! Anyway, it does work, the main issue is safety.