tasadam wrote:Welcome to the forum Brad.
I don't know the pack you have, but I have a 75 litre pack and it's got heaps of room for all my stuff & camera gear.
How many days in your multi day are you thinking? I did 15 days or so in this walk...
Granted I was with my wife, she has the Macpac Esprit which is 65 litres. My pack was the Macpac Cascade FL 75 litre.
I did close to 20 years with the Macpac Ravine 65 litre pack.
Maybe you'd like to put together a detailed equipment list and we can all have a look at all your gear and see if there are other ways you'd be better spending, rather than carry more, pack less?
Happy to help further if I can.
Cheers!
Brett wrote:Wow twenty years, that must have been some trip
eddie the eagle wrote:I thought that the Ravine was 70-75L, but I'll defer to Adam on this one - he's far more knowledgeable and it seems a bit smaller than 75L to me as well.
eddie the eagle wrote:just tried to get to the online equipment calculator - link's disabled as at 30 June as you're aware.
Could you please advise the new link/redirect/instructions on how to get there?
blacksheep wrote:quite simply if you want durabable water resistance and toughness for our conditions you probably want canvas. that narrows it down to macpac, one planet , mont, W.E and maybe md's. If you don't mind lighter weight fabrics that will tear easier and PU coatings that will flake away sooner than you'd want then you have a much wider range to choose from...
PTCB wrote:blacksheep wrote:quite simply if you want durabable water resistance and toughness for our conditions you probably want canvas. that narrows it down to macpac, one planet , mont, W.E and maybe md's. If you don't mind lighter weight fabrics that will tear easier and PU coatings that will flake away sooner than you'd want then you have a much wider range to choose from...
No doubt Macpac make good gear. It's reputation is well earned. However there ARE other good options, and properly maintained and looked after packs will last forever!! It's the old Ford v Holden debate isn't it?
Just like girlfriends, treat em right and they will always be there...BaaaaaaBaaaaaaa
bushbasherbrad wrote:The Pack i have was a cheepie that i picked up at mu local allgoods store and here is the list of what I pack:
Down sleeping bag
Spare t-shirt
Wolley trousers
One pair of thermals(top and bottom)
Gondwana jumper
Jacket
All the clothing goes in a Sea to summit compression sac
Freeze dried food
Head torch
First Aid kit
Camera
Whistle
Camp shoes
Plate,Bowl,kife,fork and spoon
bushbasherbrad wrote:My Brother has a mountain designs 75ltr pack and that is excellent and has plenty of room
PTCB wrote:Have just replaced my old pack with with an Osprey Argon 85 pack. I couldn't be happier. A bit blingy as it has all the essentials, but light and very comfortable. On recent walks with 28 to 30 kg in it( it's cavernous inside )I could hop all over the place with it on, a very confident pack to wear. As far as durability is concerned it's tough, these were the packs used on the cannibal run through the west coast of Tassie a while back ( check out the details via Paddy Pallins site ). I picked mine up on sale so wasn't a bad price, then again for a top of the range pack you get what you pay for. I couldn't recomend it more highly.
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