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I will travel to the Highlands and have a very quick stop-over at Glasgow Airport since I have to catch the bus from Daluir. Is there any chance to get alcohol fuel for a burner?

In some countries Methylated Spirits is available in pharmacy shops but I am not sure whether this is the case in Scotland, nor whether there is a pharmacy in the airport area.

Toby Speight
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ruedi
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    This might be better on travel.stackexchange.com – paparazzo Feb 24 '17 at 16:30
  • Not something I've ever seen in a UK airport, definitely something on the banned list I'd imagine, we're still fairly strict. You're normally limited in the pharmacy areas to Boots type places in an airport. – Aravona Feb 24 '17 at 16:52
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    Not going to find that in the airport, but the highlands has loads of Outdoors shops. Where are you headed exactly – Rory Alsop Feb 24 '17 at 17:21
  • We are heading from Glasgow to Glenfinnan. From there on we are in the wild without any town (A'Chuil, Barrisdale Bay) and end up in Morvich. – ruedi Feb 24 '17 at 18:03
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    Also consider hardware stores. In my experience (in Vancouver) there's a greater choice and lower prices. – Martin F Feb 24 '17 at 19:24
  • Thanks for the advice. I guess I will just check out a Hotel near the final bus station and send them the fuel beforehand and pick it up there. – ruedi Feb 24 '17 at 19:48
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    If going to Glenfinnan, you will probably have to change busses at Fort William. Fort William has plenty of outdoor shops, so you should be able to find some fuel there. – vclaw Feb 24 '17 at 20:52
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    That is a good advice. Have not thought about the bus change in Fort William yet. Great,thanks! – ruedi Feb 24 '17 at 21:27
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    There's two shops (Ellis Brigham and Nevisport) within sight of the railway station in Fort William. Both of those will sell stove fuel (and pretty much anything else you might need for your trip). – Toby Speight Feb 27 '17 at 09:44
  • A: fondue pots use methyl alchohol. Try supermarkets, hardware stores. B: isopropyl alcohol is available at most drug stores. – Sherwood Botsford Feb 01 '18 at 22:56
  • https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/questions/20056/what-are-the-different-names-for-and-sources-of-alcohol-for-my-stove – Martin F Dec 05 '18 at 20:31
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    Also see What can I burn in an open cup burner stove? - mainly the comments, which have a UK-based discussion about alcohol fuel availability, and (@SherwoodBotsford) some tests burning isopropanol – Chris H May 09 '22 at 14:49

2 Answers2

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Your travel to Scotland has probably passed; hope you had a good time. You are in the land of my favourite single malts: Glendronach, Oban, and Glenmorangie - and therein lies my answer:

Use ethyl alcohol in a pinch. That is, any high-proof potable spirit, generally anything 75% or more alcohol. Rum, for example, is often used for flambé, and anything 151 proof or better is typically used. Any rums, whiskies, tequilas, gins, etc are expensive compared to vodka, so, vodka or grain alcohol would be the cheap option to go with.

Avoid using dirty alcohols, like isopropyl: they can be sooty and toxic.

The nice thing about using ethyl alcohol is that when you're done, well, it doesn't have to go to waste: Slàinte! But with methyl alcohol, the best you can do is use it for a hand sanitizer (isopropyl), or, burn it off otherwise.

Actually, when you are in an area where methylated spirits might be available, but you are not aware of your location's regulations on manufacture or use, using that spirit could prove dangerous, whereas liquor store spirits is always safe.

Toby Speight
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Andrew Jay
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While you need to check your stove, I would expect it to run on any form of alcohol. Here in Canada, pharmacies all stock 99% isopropyl alcohol. And many hardware stores carry methyl (wood) alcohol

I'm not familiar with alcohol stoves. Here the camp fuel most used is marketed as "camp stove fuel" and is mostly cyclo-hexane. I have also used unleaded petrol in a stove, but it has a lower flashpoint.

When running outdoor programs we had the following rules for stoves:

  • Stoves are taken 30 feet away from camp, downwind and downhill to fill. This avoids clouds of fumes returning to camp.

  • The person who fills the stove is NOT the person who lights it. This avoids setting yourself on fire if you spilled while filling it.

Toby Speight
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Sherwood Botsford
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    To be absolutely clear, do not use car gas (petrol where the OP is going), cyclohexane, Coleman fuel, naphtha etc. – Chris H May 20 '22 at 15:15
  • The most common name for alcohol stove fuel in the UK is "meths" and it's usually dyed purple. Isopropanol would be called "surgical spirit" but has additives; even pure it doesn't burn cleanly (see my tests) – Chris H May 20 '22 at 15:15
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    The first rule isn't needed with meths, even with Scout groups. The second may be wise but the biggest issue with meths stoves is the invisible flame - do not refill until cold to the touch - rather than spillage – Chris H May 20 '22 at 15:17
  • BTW cyclohexane (C6H12, ring structure) isn't routinely used as fuel on its own as it's solid below about 6°C/43°F, but hexane (C6H14, linear molecule) is a major part of petrol/gasoline and naphtha/white gas/Zippo fuel – Chris H May 23 '22 at 08:40