Son of a Beach wrote:sthughes wrote:4. Sternum strap would not want to be any higher.
I'm not at home so can't check my Strezlecki (much the same as McMillan), but isn't the sternum strap height adjustable? Maybe my memory is playing tricks on me.
Penguin wrote:They are adjustable - from near strangling to completely strangling.
Penguin wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:sthughes wrote:4. Sternum strap would not want to be any higher.
I'm not at home so can't check my Strezlecki (much the same as McMillan), but isn't the sternum strap height adjustable? Maybe my memory is playing tricks on me.
They are adjustable - from near strangling to completely strangling.
I have a MacPac Torro and an OP Shadow. The Torro is very comfortable and I like a single compartment pack. Also a size 2 fits my very small back. It survived the southern range - a good test for a pack is Tasmania with head high scaparia and very narrow to non existent tracks in places. Dangly bits just get ripped off. I try to carry about 18KG max and the pack was great for that. Also not too high.
I recently bought a OP Shadow and loooooove it. It is 56L and weighs 1.5KG. Going to Frenchman's, ie no heavy bush, it was great. Started with 14KG with grog and shelter. So comfortable and fitted neatly on my back. The only down sides were the lack of a bottle holder and the high sternum strap. When the guy in the shop sold it to me he was pushing the next pack up as "the shadow is no good for carrying over 15KG", this pack was 600gms heavier. The whole point of buying the shadow was than I could get into the low teens in weight for a four to five day walk. I do not feel that the material on this pack would stand up to off track walking.
Cheers P
corvus wrote:
Penguin 200ml is not a quotable grog carryjust as well someone else carried the Drambuie
![]()
corvus
sthughes wrote:Yep it is, but the bottom most position is still fairly high. I have mine in the lowest position possible and it's fine, however I know others who find it a tad too high even at the lowest setting. The silly thing is that the 'highest' position is almost behind your head.
It's not really a complaint, more just an observation that it wouldn't wan to be higher.
Penguin wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:sthughes wrote:4. Sternum strap would not want to be any higher.
I'm not at home so can't check my Strezlecki (much the same as McMillan), but isn't the sternum strap height adjustable? Maybe my memory is playing tricks on me.
They are adjustable - from near strangling to completely strangling.
blacksheep wrote:corvus wrote:
Penguin 200ml is not a quotable grog carryjust as well someone else carried the Drambuie
![]()
corvus
sorry for wandering off topic, but you reminded me about the Aussie appreciation of Drambuie.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqEFtz2YGyA
blacksheep wrote:corvus wrote:
Penguin 200ml is not a quotable grog carryjust as well someone else carried the Drambuie
![]()
corvus
sorry for wandering off topic, but you reminded me about the Aussie appreciation of Drambuie.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqEFtz2YGyA
corvus wrote:P
Penguin wrote:corvus wrote:P
Penguin 200ml is not a quotable grog carryjust as well someone else carried the Drambuie
![]()
corvus
Xtreme Earth wrote:The Aarn packs 'Photohiker' taks about are very good and lightweight but they're not easy on the pocket!
blacksheep wrote: sorry for wandering off topic, but you reminded me about the Aussie appreciation of Drambuie.. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqEFtz2YGyA
MJD wrote:I've currently got a One Planet Shadow and a Macpac Cascade 65.
Shadow: weighs 1.5kg, is really comfortable and excellent for up to 15kg loads that gets me by for 1-4 days. Has done well off track apart from the side "pockets" wearing away as soon as they touched any rock.
Cascade: weighs over 3kg, more robust material, carried over 20 kg, seems to be doing really well in rough off track walking. Used recently in the Wilmot-Franklands over 8 days. Found the bottom opening very useful on the long walk - kept my sleeping bag, mat etc in the bottom and could get them out without having to unpack food bags that I didn't need to see for days. More waterproof than the Shadow.
Prefer to use the Shadow if my load is less than about 18 kg, the walk wasn't in really rough off track terrain, and the forecast wasn't abysmal.
sthughes wrote:So now if OP made the top compression strap just a smidgen longer to more easily accommodate snow shoes, it would be perfect!
photohiker wrote:Xtreme Earth wrote:The Aarn packs 'Photohiker' taks about are very good and lightweight but they're not easy on the pocket!
Well, talking as a consumer of outdoor gear, rather than a manufacturer such as yourself, I have a different viewpoint. I'm prepared to pay the asking price for my gear if it represents value to me, and I tend not to buy something just because it is cheaper. If it is cheaper and as good or better than the other offerings it might attract my interest. For a pack, it would have to have technology that put it on a par with the pack I currently use, something you don't currently offer.
Aarn come with a lot of embedded background R&D and product development, and I wouldn't be surprised to find that they cost more to make than a standard backpack because of the various features and fiddly sewing details built into the pack. From the look of it, a 70L Aarn is in the same ballpark price as an equivalent sized OP or MacPac. That's reasonable value IMO.
Good luck with your business, it's good to see someone having a go!
Area54 wrote:sthughes wrote:So now if OP made the top compression strap just a smidgen longer to more easily accommodate snow shoes, it would be perfect!
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 17 guests