

🔥 Cook Like a Pro, Anywhere You Go!
The Coleman Fold ‘N Go 2-Burner Propane Stove packs 20,000 BTUs of power into a compact, foldable design with dual adjustable burners and InstaStart ignition. Engineered for durability and portability, it’s perfect for camping, tailgating, and outdoor grilling, delivering reliable, high-heat cooking on the go.






















| ASIN | B000F7T2MU |
| Best Sellers Rank | #30,632 in Sports & Outdoors ( See Top 100 in Sports & Outdoors ) #188 in Camping Stoves |
| Brand Name | Coleman |
| Color | Red |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,928) |
| Date First Available | May 18, 2007 |
| Fishing Technique | Spinning, Casting |
| Included Components | Great Product |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 6.75 x 13 x 14.5 inches |
| Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 14.48 x 13.5 x 6.57 inches |
| Item Weight | 8.95 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Coleman |
| Material | Plastic |
| Model Name | 2000038018 |
| Model Year | 2015 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Package Weight | 4.08 Kilograms |
| Part Number | 2000038018 |
| Size | 2 Burner |
| Sport Type | Camping & Hiking |
| Style | Red |
| Suggested Users | unisex-adult |
| Warranty Description | Warranty |
M**J
The best burner!
So happy to have this. We have a lot of girls and burners. This is really the best compact and best designed burner for all occasions. It’s our favorite day trip/ camping one. Would buy again and again. Highly recommend to anyone looking. Get the backpack that it fits into and all your gear is there ready for an adventure.
N**Y
An evolved, compact design
I bought a Fold N' Go stove this summer for a trip through the Southwest, including a multi-day rafting trip down the San Juan River. We connected it to a smaller "pony"-sized propane tank using the adapter and cooked all meals for a group of seven, including use for heating dishwater, etc. It got sloshed with river mud and dusted with dirt, dropped, tumbled around inside an ammo can "river box" through white water, the works... In short, we really pounded this stove and by the time we were done with it, it was scuffed and scratched and battle worn but no worse for the wear. If there were any ways to destroy this stove, we would have found one. I originally wanted to buy--but could not afford--a new, sturdy, stainless steel Partner stove, which is the standard for most river runners. In the end, however, I was very glad I bought the Coleman. This little stove cranks out the BTUs, and at one-fourth the price of a "professional" stove. The money I saved was enough to pay for lots of other needed gear and travel expenses, and it still has many hard years left on it. How cool is that? Some reviewers complain about the lack of a windscreen--one of the features that enables this little giant to fold so small--but this was never a problem. It's no different that using a small backpack stove: just use some stray gear to build a little windscreen if-when needed. Problem solved. For river trips, we use a large, one-gallon kettle for heating water, and the Fold 'N Go boiled that in about 12 minutes at 4,000 feet. The gas adjustment knobs were a smidge touchy, but worked just fine. The propane adapter functions well, but be careful when threading the brass coupling into the recessed gas fitting on the back of the stove; one of our river party almost cross-threaded it before dinner one night. As with all brass fittings, a little common-sense care is all that is needed. Folded up, the stove easily fits inside a 20mm ammo can along with a propane hose and adapter and room for more, making this is a very handy size for river trips. Later on, I used it to cook meals in roadside campgrounds on picnic benches which, of course, it had absolutely no problem with. To summarize: this new design is the latest in a long line of historically excellent Coleman stove and lantern designs. I have used these products all my life through all kinds of conditions (which is why I took a chance on using it untested in a remote area) and it did not disappoint. It's too big to haul on backpacking trips, but for car camping and river trips, this is a definite winner at an excellent price.
P**4
Typical Coleman products quality
I retire my 20+ years old Coleman camp stove is not because is broken. In fact it still working 100% fine! I want something can cook with 2 full size pans. My option is Jetboil genesis and this fold n go. since my last coleman less over two decades, and the price different is huge, coleman is clear winner. The stove is easy to use, and is smaller than my old rectangle stove. and it boil water fast! For the price point it is a good stove. However, 3 things CAN BE IMPROVE 1- the clip to hold them together, it is not a good design. it can pop open easy. I need to use a velcro strip to hold them together. 2- control knob, only the first half inch of turn is controllable the rest of the 3 full turns are useless! But once you get use to it, than is fine. 3- propane regulator connector, set loose inside the stove when not use. This making noise when traveling. My old coleman stove have a cut to insert the connector to stay in place, that is a better design to keep the part moving around. Fix these 3 points, than the stove will be prefect! BTW, this stove have no wind screen like my old stove has, I haven't cook under strong wind! so, I don't know will this stove perform well. Also the wind screen on my old stove can use as a grease blocker. duel to the design this fold n go it is a disadvantage. grease are all over the place when doing pan fire! Update: did outdoor hot pot at 40F +/- degree and some wind. I can't get both pots up to boil due to the flame seats too low with the ring. and we don't have wind blocker. I need to flap the ring upside down to lower the pots. the pot still have about 1/4" between the burner, it works fine. Once I done that, the pot heat way faster. But the pots become a bit unstable so we have to be careful within.
E**5
Love this burner for our RV
It's compact, powerful, and super easy to use. I love how it folds up neatly for storage, and the built-in handle makes it a breeze to carry. We use it as we travel in our Sprinter, so easy to put away and packs enough punch to cook what ever we throw at it. I can boil water on one side while frying up some bacon on the other. The heat control is great, so I can really dial in the perfect temperature for whatever I'm cooking. Cleanup is a cinch too, thanks to the removable grate. Lighting the stove is a breeze with the push-button ignition. No more struggling with matches or lighters in the wind. Whether you're a seasoned camper or just starting out, this stove is a must-have. It's rugged, reliable, and makes RV cooking a breeze.
S**Y
Great for car-camping. fixed my knobs for the low flame. Windshields were a must.
After modifications on this Fold n GO, retired my Coleman classic. I used it for car camping 1, I made a felt washer for the knob, to simmer the flame . when I simmered the flame down, and let it go, the knob sprang back a little bit and gave high flames again. The flame control is a long bolt, with fine threads. There is a tiny gap between the female and male threads. The propane keeps pressing the bolt out. My hand push the knob in, against the propane pressure. After releasing the knob, the propane will press it out again, so the flame jumps up again. The felt washer keeps pushing the knob out. My hand can't push it in easily. I made a felt washer with 1” furniture pads, punched a 0.2” hole, mount the washer on the stem, between the yellow hex nut and the black knob. Then I got a steady low flame. The gas valves stayed cool. The felt washers were safe . www.amazon.com/dp/B08C373VBW 2, Windshields are a must for this stove. Campsites are always windy. I used two windshields. The 1st windshields was an aluminum one (13mm high, 9 plates) , was for my backpacking stove. I wrapped the aluminum windshield around my pot. The smooth surface reflected the heat back to the pot, and blocked the wind. The aluminum windshield was ~60°C, hot, untouchable. A paper box was the 2nd windshield. It was ~30°C, safe, touchable. The bottom flips were tucked under the stove. The whole setup was stable. I got that paper box at a local grocery store. After camping, that paper box ended as a campfire. 3, Aluminum foil was used as a liner on the burner, made it easy to clean. And it also reflected the heat back to the pot. 4, Grates were too high. The pot is too far from the blue flame. Some users prefer flat grates ( OD 25cm). I might bend them lower w a bench wise. After cooking, one grate might stay, the clamshell could still close, for packing. 5, Plastic clips on handles was useless, too thin. Velcro strips held them together. 6, That pot was a Revere 3qt w/ a copper bottom, from a yard sale. 7, A 5 lbs propane tank fitted in a 2-gallon bucket. My propane hose was for Weber Q grills, worked well w this stove. I used Teflon tapes, to get the threads smoother. www.amazon.com/dp/B0012XXD4Y www.amazon.com/dp/B077BLDL7T 8, The tip of that Coleman propane regulator was covered with a white vinyl cap, from a ClosetMaid wire shelf. That Coleman regulator was noisy while driving. I wrapped it with paper. www.amazon.com/dp/B00002NBSS
N**S
Works great, especially with some easy hacks.
Alright. I read the reviews about how the cooking grates are too tall and I agree. However, with this in mind I purchased a few things that definitely work to make this boil very quickly. Using the grate shown above I boiled 1.5 L of water from room temp in 8 minutes. Placing the Fire Maple directly over the burner as shown, it boiled in 6 minutes. The windscreen I bought also helps a lot. I'd use it in conjunction with either of these two methods. Below are the additional equipment that I purchased. My adapter to a 20 lb. Propane tank worked perfectly. Propane Adapter to 20 lb. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B06Y5XFF6F/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_imm_t1_4XO8FbDYW17MY?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1 304 Stainless Cooking Rack https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07DCQCTWP/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_imm_t1_oZO8FbNQC0S9X?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1 Windscreen https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HF51VMV/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_imm_t1_p0O8FbB3E4W7M?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1 1.5 L Cookware by Fire Maple https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078YQFVMS/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_awdb_imm_t1_81O8FbKH0K5PX?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1 Update: Solved! For anyone having issues with this stove not working with an adapter to a larger propane tank (5 lb or 20 lb) I have painstakingly solved this issue! While frustrating for a long time, the reason turned out to be very simple and solve able, just difficult to root cause. The adapter that Coleman provides is the problem. This is the rigid arm that connects to the stove itself and then to the 1 lb tank or adapter. The issue is on the 1 lb tank side. While this design seals against the 1 lb tank, it doesn't seal against the hose adapter to the larger tanks. The solution is to order a generic adapter design, not the Coleman one. As you can see in the picture, the two are slightly different around the brass fitting and the rubber gasket around it. For some reason the Coleman one bottoms out to the adapter hose on the brass. This isn't an airtight seal and the pressure regulator on your large tank will cut off the flow. The generic one for some reason doesn't interfere with the adapter and allows it to bottom out on the rubber gasket as it is intended. Buy this adapter and you will be able to use ANY SIZE PROPANE TANK with this stove. With this fix, this stove is my go to stove for all camping applications. I love this thing. Here is the generic adapter to buy: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08B3F1T65/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_ZAJPXVX1H7NSXE17DGXS?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
L**L
AWESOME Camp Stove!!!!!
I love, love, love this stove! I was reluctant after I ordered the stove because I read reviews from other people who had problems with the stove. This has not been my experience at all! The stove is great! I have been camping with it 3 times, and it has worked very well each time. I have had it lit with a fairly good breeze blowing and did not encounter any problems with the flame going out. It was very windy this last weekend, so for precautionary sake, I placed one of the camping totes on the side of the strong wind. I cooked the big breakfast without any problems at all! The self-iginiting feature is great! It is so nice to not have to use matches. I have read that others have had problems getting a lower flame to cook on a reduced heat. I did at first, but I have kept on working with it and have finally figured out how to do that. You just have to turn the dial gently so not to make the flame go out, and it will keep reducing down until you get it where you want it. I have cooked breakfast meats, eggs, pancakes, fried potatoes & onions all without a problem. The stove cleans up very nicely and is a breeze to put away. I love the fold-up design. It takes up very little space in my small truck. I have not found anything about this stove that I do not like. I could not be more pleased, and I definitely would recommend this product to a friend or anyone looking for a camp stove.
D**K
Needs a new revision and locking latch is thin plastic
The good: It's the only option for a folding burner and it's definitely got a bunch of flaws BUT you have hacks to make it worth a purchase. 1. Get a flat grates for an additional $12 x 2 2. Before using the burner. Seal all screw holes with silicone on the handles. 3. Be careful with plastic latch every time it unlatches if you move/shift the Bruner. 4. Stand up half the unit to block some wind. 5. Wind guards if you can get those to stand up in the wind. The bad: The locking clip is thin plastic. It will break and won't align easily if the cooker isn't perfectly clean not even a crumb can be in the way to allow closing or not aligning correctly to lock closed with the latch. Terrible valve adjuster!! Tiny turn for precise gas pressure is needed. The knob for adjustment of gas only controls beginning 1% of the turn when 99% is full blast until that beginning almost closed 1%. It's super easy to turn off when 1/16"in is on or off, (I might return it because of this). Overpours from pots can flow into the center fuel to air mix area and is a nightmare to clean, take apart whole burner. A heat resistant calking in the center will block liquids from pouring inside. Cooking grate is way too high from flame. Bad for any wind at all. Replace for flat grate, link below. The ugly: Need to fully clean the grill everytime to snap it back into collapsible slot. Need to fully clean unit so no obstructions. To save gas and time cooking buy a flat grate. Without a wind guard or indoors you will tear thru gas 3x faster. https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B07DCQCTWP/ref=ox_sc_act_image_1?smid=A1I8WOPSSES216&psc=1 Bad design. Snap latch lock is thin plastic not metal and will break in a short time. Be very careful 100% of the time. Bad design. The screw holes are exposed upwards when cooking allowing splatter to fill and oil to go inside screw holes across the handles. Use hot glue gun or silicone filler to fill holes. Bas design. No ability to adjust the angle. So the grate is so smooth your pot/pan slides off so easily. Bad design. Not able to stand up one side, to save table space. Bad design. When 1lb tank is attached it must be on the table not suspended. It will tilt the unit up when using small light pans and pots. If you adapt to 20lb you'll need a generic angle arm and QCC1/Type1 to 1lb male tank adapter. Which will cost $24 hose plus & $17 arm https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08B3F1T65/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_ZAJPXVX1H7NSXE17DGXS?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
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