TMS Portable Military Camping Wood Stove Tent Heater Cot Camp Ice-fishing Cooking Rv








Key features
- •Stove can be used in an outfitters tent with a stove pipe vent; Four (17" long × 2 1/2" diameter) interlocking flue pipe sections
- •Spark arrestor for added safety; Removable dual side cooking tubes can be used for baking potatoes, foil meals, etc.
- •The stove has front and rear air flow regulators and an easy access bottom ash clean-out
- •Top grate is hinged and doubles as a carrying handle when stove is not in use
- •Grate folds to provide flat heating surface on top of stove and can be folded out for drying gloves, socks, small items
BrandTMS
CategoryCamping Stoves
TMS Portable Military Camping Wood Stove Tent Heater Cot Camp Ice-fishing Cooking Rv
List Price: $145.43$130.89DEALYou Save: $14.54 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 25, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers3.5
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
40%
4★
20%
3★
40%
2★
0%
1★
0%
Good little camping stove
Mike Kelley•April 29, 2017
Great stove for the price. I will echo everyone else's comments about the paint, the door and the legs, but these are pretty easy fixes.
I went camping in the rocky mountains on Christmas day last year, and this thing probably kept me from freezing to death. Kept my little canvas tent nice and toasty despite a -20 f wind chill. One thing to remember if you're using it for winter camping like that: it won't hold enough wood to burn all night. So, you'll wake up real chilly at some point. Be sure to keep some easy firestarters and wood inside the tent to get it going again.
I went camping in the rocky mountains on Christmas day last year, and this thing probably kept me from freezing to death. Kept my little canvas tent nice and toasty despite a -20 f wind chill. One thing to remember if you're using it for winter camping like that: it won't hold enough wood to burn all night. So, you'll wake up real chilly at some point. Be sure to keep some easy firestarters and wood inside the tent to get it going again.
Great deal for the price
Amazon Customer•January 7, 2017
Like everyone has said, the high heat paint heats up and peels off the first few times you use it. But its extremely easy to set up and get going. Easily heats my 8x18 trailer. I havent had any problems with smoke or the warped door that weren't my problems and not the stoves. You really can't beat the price for a stove that works this well. I would recommend this to others.
I wouldn't say this has anything "military" about it aside ...
I.B.G•December 2, 2016
I wouldn't say this has anything "military" about it aside from the style. That said the stove does work for heating purposes, and comes with 20 feet of stove piping to create a chimney of various lengths.
I took the advice of doing a hot burn to get the stock paint off - Worth the time and thanks for the tips everyone! Repainted with black grill paint and a second coat of high-temp engine block paint - and THEN a coast of rustoleum.
Unfortunately even with all of this it did manage to rust in a few places. The stove is Chinese built from mild Chinese steel, and it shows quickly if left with any moisture.
I took the advice of doing a hot burn to get the stock paint off - Worth the time and thanks for the tips everyone! Repainted with black grill paint and a second coat of high-temp engine block paint - and THEN a coast of rustoleum.
Unfortunately even with all of this it did manage to rust in a few places. The stove is Chinese built from mild Chinese steel, and it shows quickly if left with any moisture.
Funny how many people have no clue how to use a wood stove.
BTC•January 20, 2016
For the price, I can't complain. Is this cheap, yes. Is the door as bad as many have described? Yes. Does it wobble on its legs? Yes. Is the paint regular non-high temp paint? Yes. And for all the other complaints some are making about this $70.00 stove, here are the answers.
The unit is fairly heavy, so that was a nice surprise. The door is just a flat piece of metal. Will it work? Yes, but I would say that just about anyone using this stove seriously would want to make a better one. The legs are simply metal pipe that slide into a larger (about 2" long) metal pipe welded to the bottom of the stove. If the stove doesn't sit level, people, it's just light weight steel, it bends! Bend the leg to where the stove doesn't wobble anymore. Do as many have said, do your burn in outside and get the gloss black paint burned off, then repaint with high temp paint. For those who say it doesn't draw properly, I'll lay odds they had the rear vent open. When a fire is started the hot air goes up the flue pipe and if that back vent is open, guess where the cool air goes too? Much of it is drawn up the flue pipe which cools the air in the pipe and guess what - bad draw from the stove so smoke comes out the front. Leave the rear vent closed - always. Put the wood in the back of the stove to light it and get it going, not the front. Smoke (and the heat) are going to head the fastest way out possible. Having the wood up front, the door open, and the rear vent open, guess where the smoke and heat are going to head - right out the front. Once the wood in the back is lit it doesn't take long for the flue pipe to heat up and draw properly. Pile the rest of your wood in once you have the starting wood burning nicely, close the door and keep the front vents open - it'll keep burning without any problem. Don't put wet wood in and expect it to burn well. I had the stove assembled and burning in less than 10 minutes using dry seasoned wood. I used no paper or fire starting liquids to start dime to quarter sized seasoned kindling. After closing the rear vent, piling in my wood towards the back of the stove (mine came with a fire grate), I used Diamond Strike-A-Fire (http://www.amazon.com/Diamond-Strike-A-Fire/dp/B00JA80SPU/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1453510161&sr=8-3&keywords=Diamond+strike-a-fire) fire starters to get the stove burning. These fire starters are like super large matches made out of the same material as fire logs you can buy at the grocery store. I lit them and slid them on their side under the fire grate towards the back of the stove, and then closed the door. Within 2 minutes the gloss paint was pealing off because the fire was getting plenty hot. After that burned down I added some larger pieces of wood and let the stove cook for a while. I'll be making some of the modifications that others have mentioned here and on YouTube. I'll certainly be replacing the door with a custom one with a fiberglass seal and adding a Mica window as one owner on YouTube did with his.
Now what about complaints? Well I only have one, but it's minor. As a few people have stated, the welding done on this stove is pretty poor. It wasn't until after dark when I saw a little light dancing around near the back of the stove that I knew something wasn't right. The welding of the rear stove plate to the back of the stove body has a few very small gaps that I will need to welded shut. Some might say that the stove should be tested before shipping - ok fine, add another $30.00 to the stove - it's a cheap stove, it's not going to be high quality.
I'm very pleased with the stove. I expect no more for the price I paid, especially when the closest higher grade stove I could find as compact as this is in the $400.00 range. The handles and cooking tubes along with the tools and flue that all fit inside are great. If you're looking for a good deal and don't mind a few minor issues, than you'll be happy with this stove. If you expect quality and perfection for $70.00, you'll be greatly disappointed.
By the way, if you're planning on using this in a tent as designed, it would be super.
The unit is fairly heavy, so that was a nice surprise. The door is just a flat piece of metal. Will it work? Yes, but I would say that just about anyone using this stove seriously would want to make a better one. The legs are simply metal pipe that slide into a larger (about 2" long) metal pipe welded to the bottom of the stove. If the stove doesn't sit level, people, it's just light weight steel, it bends! Bend the leg to where the stove doesn't wobble anymore. Do as many have said, do your burn in outside and get the gloss black paint burned off, then repaint with high temp paint. For those who say it doesn't draw properly, I'll lay odds they had the rear vent open. When a fire is started the hot air goes up the flue pipe and if that back vent is open, guess where the cool air goes too? Much of it is drawn up the flue pipe which cools the air in the pipe and guess what - bad draw from the stove so smoke comes out the front. Leave the rear vent closed - always. Put the wood in the back of the stove to light it and get it going, not the front. Smoke (and the heat) are going to head the fastest way out possible. Having the wood up front, the door open, and the rear vent open, guess where the smoke and heat are going to head - right out the front. Once the wood in the back is lit it doesn't take long for the flue pipe to heat up and draw properly. Pile the rest of your wood in once you have the starting wood burning nicely, close the door and keep the front vents open - it'll keep burning without any problem. Don't put wet wood in and expect it to burn well. I had the stove assembled and burning in less than 10 minutes using dry seasoned wood. I used no paper or fire starting liquids to start dime to quarter sized seasoned kindling. After closing the rear vent, piling in my wood towards the back of the stove (mine came with a fire grate), I used Diamond Strike-A-Fire (http://www.amazon.com/Diamond-Strike-A-Fire/dp/B00JA80SPU/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1453510161&sr=8-3&keywords=Diamond+strike-a-fire) fire starters to get the stove burning. These fire starters are like super large matches made out of the same material as fire logs you can buy at the grocery store. I lit them and slid them on their side under the fire grate towards the back of the stove, and then closed the door. Within 2 minutes the gloss paint was pealing off because the fire was getting plenty hot. After that burned down I added some larger pieces of wood and let the stove cook for a while. I'll be making some of the modifications that others have mentioned here and on YouTube. I'll certainly be replacing the door with a custom one with a fiberglass seal and adding a Mica window as one owner on YouTube did with his.
Now what about complaints? Well I only have one, but it's minor. As a few people have stated, the welding done on this stove is pretty poor. It wasn't until after dark when I saw a little light dancing around near the back of the stove that I knew something wasn't right. The welding of the rear stove plate to the back of the stove body has a few very small gaps that I will need to welded shut. Some might say that the stove should be tested before shipping - ok fine, add another $30.00 to the stove - it's a cheap stove, it's not going to be high quality.
I'm very pleased with the stove. I expect no more for the price I paid, especially when the closest higher grade stove I could find as compact as this is in the $400.00 range. The handles and cooking tubes along with the tools and flue that all fit inside are great. If you're looking for a good deal and don't mind a few minor issues, than you'll be happy with this stove. If you expect quality and perfection for $70.00, you'll be greatly disappointed.
By the way, if you're planning on using this in a tent as designed, it would be super.
Good stove great for 10x12 metal shed
JC•January 11, 2016
Love the stove. Keeps my shed toasty warm. Yes I knew about the paint and I repainted it after it's first burn. I did install a fiberglass deal around the door because it should have one on it anyways. Also the spark arrestor is a joke. Picked up new material at ACE and put it arround the outside. Easy to clean and only cost 5 for the material and self tap screws.
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