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Head to Head

Omnia Stove-Top Oven vs Gas One GS-3000 Butane Stove

Stove-top baking oven vs the butane stove it sits on. Two products that combine into a $100 van bakery.

— VerdictOur Pick

We recommend the Omnia Stove-Top Oven

Different tools that work together. The Omnia bakes on top of the Gas One — bread, pizza, casseroles. The Gas One is a cooking surface; the Omnia is an oven. Together they cost $100 and give a van kitchen both stovetop and oven capability. Buy the Gas One first (you need a stove), add the Omnia when you want to bake.

Read the full Omnia Stove-Top Oven review
Side-by-side

Specifications

Omnia Stove-Top OvenGas One GS-3000 Butane Stove
Editorial Score9.3/108.6/10
User Rating4.7 (3200 reviews)4.6 (8900 reviews)
Price$69.95$29.99
Diameter8.5 in
Height5 in
Weight1.5 lbs3.1 lbs
MaterialAluminum with non-stick coating
Heat SourceAny stove or cooktop
Capacity~1.5 quarts
Dimensions13.4 x 11.1 x 4 in
Power SourceButane (8oz cans)
Output12,000 BTU
MaterialsSteel + ABS
Warranty1 year

Omnia Stove-Top Oven

Strengths
  • Bakes on any camp stove or cooktop
  • No electricity or propane oven needed
  • Non-stick interior cleans easily
  • Compact and lightweight (1.5 lbs)
Trade-offs
  • Small capacity (fits 1 small loaf)
  • Learning curve on heat management

Gas One GS-3000 Butane Stove

Strengths
  • No electrical draw — runs on 8oz butane cans
  • 12,000 BTU — boils water in under 4 min
  • Piezo ignition + auto shut-off
  • Carry case included
Trade-offs
  • Butane underperforms below 40°F
  • Single burner

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