Jack o wrote:Hello,
I am considering purchasing a new back pack for multi-day treks in the Victorian and NZ Alps. I’m not on a budget and am prepared to pay for a quality unit. However most of the packs I have looked at so far are made in Asia and appear quite flimsy. Even a sales person from Macpac expressed concern recently, that the base of their hiking packs had over the years become lighter and much less abrasion resistant. He maintained that this trend was being driven by ongoing consumer demand for ever lighter packs.
Are their any manufacturers out there who still make a good robust hiking pack with an abrasion resistant base?
wildernesswanderer wrote:+2 for Macpac, love ours, I have a Cascade 90 and Ascent 70 and my wife has the Espirit 65. I've had about 25kg in the Cascade and it was easy to carry. Still preferred walking out with about 17kg left in it lol. BUt I bought it for the Overland Track and Milford Sound hikes.
Tried Aarn packs and like the concept but didn't lie the harness, personal opinion of course and try as many harnesses as possible because we are all different
norts wrote:I have a problem with the Macpac webbing slipping, I have a Ravine, love the concept of the pack but the webbing lets it down.
On flat out walking ie Huon Plains I would be adjusting the harness every 3/4 hour. Belt and shoulders slip. I have tried putting some small cuts in the buckles to make it more abrasive, that helped slightly, went from 1/2hr to 3/4 hr before adjusting again.
I have persisted with the pack because when it is adjusted properly it is very comfortable. Also it is a bomb proof fairly light pack.
Roger
norts wrote:I have a problem with the Macpac webbing slipping, I have a Ravine, love the concept of the pack but the webbing lets it down.
On flat out walking ie Huon Plains I would be adjusting the harness every 3/4 hour. Belt and shoulders slip. I have tried putting some small cuts in the buckles to make it more abrasive, that helped slightly, went from 1/2hr to 3/4 hr before adjusting again.
I have persisted with the pack because when it is adjusted properly it is very comfortable. Also it is a bomb proof fairly light pack.
Roger
norts wrote:I have a problem with the Macpac webbing slipping, I have a Ravine, love the concept of the pack but the webbing lets it down.
Miyata610 wrote:wildernesswanderer wrote:+2 for Macpac, love ours, I have a Cascade 90 and Ascent 70 and my wife has the Espirit 65. I've had about 25kg in the Cascade and it was easy to carry. Still preferred walking out with about 17kg left in it lol. BUt I bought it for the Overland Track and Milford Sound hikes.
Tried Aarn packs and like the concept but didn't lie the harness, personal opinion of course and try as many harnesses as possible because we are all different
Yeah I agree we are all different.
I had exactly the opposite result. The Aarn harness system works exceptionally well for me, unlike my Cascade 75 which is just too uncomfortable for heavy loads. I can never get the hip belt tight enough to stop it slipping. It's just too flat and hard. The Aarn Load Limo suspension system really works for distributing load. Macpac had something similar many years ago, but never perfected it, and it was just abandoned. I'd love to see it resurrected.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 50 guests