Now this alcohol stove thing is some fun.
Sorely needing a diversion last evening, I made one of the pressurized alcohol stoves. Even with JB Weld, I didin't think much of the interference fit between the top and bottom, so like Casastahle, I wrapped it with a strip of flashing at the joint (I just used a full coating of JB and taped it while it set up in lieu of a rivet).
The filler is a T nut JB Welded to the inside of the top, the neck passing through a close fit hole in the top of the stove, and a trim washer JB-ed on the outside. The plug is a brass screw. All the bits are from junk box(es).. I also used an inner wall in the build, to give the stove more structure, done per the plans. Nothing was purchased for this project. I even had Denatured alcohol on hand
For a priming pan, the bottom 1/2" of a heavy steel Chili can works.
The pot stand started life as a 1 lb steel coffee can, cut into two pieces (about an inch or so of the middle discarded, an eyeball engineering guess of the height needed for the pot) and interference fit (wood block and small hammer). A peepot load of 3/8 holes, reamed with closed needlenose pliers to make em less lethal....
It took but a few minutes for the pot stand to lose it's paint. The old camp coffee pot was blackened already from many wood fires.

Yup, it's boiling.

impossible to see the flames in full sun, but a twig held close to a jet proves it's still lit.
I'm gonna cut a windscreen of flashing that will fit inside the pot stand, along with the stove and a small bottle of fuel. Then I need to scrounge up two plastic coffee can lids to close up the "kit". Somewhere I have a smaller coffee pot with a cup that fits inside. The whole works will go in a small stuff sack..... I wouldn't call it world class backpacking small, but the "kit" would make coffee in a jiffy, and could easily stow in the aft hatch of my kayak to take with me fishing..... No morre HOUR of fooling around to make coffee with a twig fire, balance the pot on rocks, go without if it's wet out, etc.