Converting a propane stove to butane

Looking at stoves, now.
The "lunchbox" stoves that run on a slip-in 220g butane canister are rife in my part of the world.
Singles and double burners.
The double burner, 2 can, propane stoves are simply left and right hand versions of single burner butane stoves joined together. With the cans at each end.
This makes them very long.
Next step up is the Coleman type stove that runs on the screw-on 1 lb. bottle of propane/lpg
These range from the small basic one as below, on up to veryy flash ones.
The little green coleman above is compact, about the same price as the 2 burner propane stove, has at least part of a windshield (the lid) and will fit where I want to go.
But - those green 1lb gas bottles are not cheap in my part of the world. I can buy a 220g can of butane for $1.50 or less.
a 450-ish gram coleman propane bottle ranges from $9 to $15. So anywhere from 3 times the price for a given weight of gas, upwards.
I think I can only put in three pics, so see next post for actual questions.
The "lunchbox" stoves that run on a slip-in 220g butane canister are rife in my part of the world.
Singles and double burners.
The double burner, 2 can, propane stoves are simply left and right hand versions of single burner butane stoves joined together. With the cans at each end.
This makes them very long.
Next step up is the Coleman type stove that runs on the screw-on 1 lb. bottle of propane/lpg
These range from the small basic one as below, on up to veryy flash ones.
The little green coleman above is compact, about the same price as the 2 burner propane stove, has at least part of a windshield (the lid) and will fit where I want to go.
But - those green 1lb gas bottles are not cheap in my part of the world. I can buy a 220g can of butane for $1.50 or less.
a 450-ish gram coleman propane bottle ranges from $9 to $15. So anywhere from 3 times the price for a given weight of gas, upwards.
I think I can only put in three pics, so see next post for actual questions.