photohiker wrote:If the tent is the first thing you need at the end of a day's hiking, why would you want to pack it at the bottom of your pack?
the_camera_poser wrote:photohiker wrote:If the tent is the first thing you need at the end of a day's hiking, why would you want to pack it at the bottom of your pack?
Well, it's the heaviest thing, so theoretically it should go on the bottom, to keep your centre of gravity low.
alliecat wrote:Umm, nope. That's not what you want to do. The heaviest things (actually, the most dense) should be packed as close as possible to your spine, and up between your shoulder blades or even higher. That moves your total center of gravity the least from where it normally is when you dont have a pack on. Packing a heavy weight low down exerts too big a moment arm on your lower spine and hips - not good.
My tent goes at the top of my pack, outside the pack liner so I can get it out and set it up in the pouring rain without any water getting into my pack.
Cheers,
Alliecat
alliecat wrote:the_camera_poser wrote:photohiker wrote:If the tent is the first thing you need at the end of a day's hiking, why would you want to pack it at the bottom of your pack?
Well, it's the heaviest thing, so theoretically it should go on the bottom, to keep your centre of gravity low.
Umm, nope. That's not what you want to do. The heaviest things (actually, the most dense) should be packed as close as possible to your spine, and up between your shoulder blades or even higher. That moves your total center of gravity the least from where it normally is when you dont have a pack on. Packing a heavy weight low down exerts too big a moment arm on your lower spine and hips - not good.
My tent goes at the top of my pack, outside the pack liner so I can get it out and set it up in the pouring rain without any water getting into my pack.
the_camera_poser wrote:photohiker wrote:If the tent is the first thing you need at the end of a day's hiking, why would you want to pack it at the bottom of your pack?
Well, it's the heaviest thing
photohiker wrote:the_camera_poser wrote:photohiker wrote:If the tent is the first thing you need at the end of a day's hiking, why would you want to pack it at the bottom of your pack?
Well, it's the heaviest thing
And there was I thinking you took a decent camera with you.
johnw wrote:Actually I agree with Alliecat, whose explanation and rationale is much better than mine. I think keeping the centre of gravity close to your spine is the key. My only concern is loading really heavy stuff above the shoulders. Would this not cause similar problems to having them right at the bottom? I'm fairly short (about 170cm) and slightly built, so possibilty of "toppling over" would concern me.
p.s. I just saw Tony's post. Need to absorb that info, which looks interesting.
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