No pics, but was gifted a Solo Lite twig stove last Xmas and finally got a chance to try it out...kinda.
On a recent canoe trip to Adirondacks there was so much rain I didn't bother using it with twigs. Having experimented a bit with it I knew it could boil a quart fairly quickly with twigs, and wanted to see how it would do with a homemade tuna can alcohol stove placed on the burn grate. I tried this in the past and it ran way too hot, so whipped up a can that I thought would work better at higher surrounding temps.
Absolutely incredible - an ounce and a half of denat alcohol brought a quart and a half of cold water to a rolling boil in about 10 minutes flat, burning bright orange flame around the bottom of the pot. Normally this is good and bad, as it means the fire is hot, but also that your fuel is being burned at an accelerated rate.
That 1.5 ounces burned for an astonishing 27 minutes at decent output. Anyone who has tinkered with alcohol stoves can appreciate this type of performance, and it adds a lot of functionality since the stove can still be used to good effect in wet conditions. To top it off - the tuna can can nest in the upturned pot rest when not in use, it doesn't even add to the bulk when broken down (I did have to bend the tips of the pot rest supports over to get it to fit).
The alcohol stove I used has pretty small ports directly on the top of the can, and not many - anemic under normal conditions. If you try to use a design that works well in open air or with just a loose windscreen, it will definitely burn too hot when running in the Solo stove.