Home Forums Bike Forum What is it with these massive rucksack/camelbak things ?

Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 294 total)
  • What is it with these massive rucksack/camelbak things ?
  • stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Were getting as bad as roadies with all these self imposed rules and regulations.
    Ignore them all, have fun and be yourself.
    What does it matter to you if someone chooses to break your narrow minded self imposed conformity?

    Despite the apparent troll of the OP, I had to applaud this answer. Bravo to you sir 😀

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    ditchjocky – I don’t moan about dogshit on trails – I have mudguards on my bike. Its never an issue

    I am not getting at folk here. Don’t be so sensitive. There is no right or wrong just opinion. It just amuses me to see people with huge rucksacs full of stuff for 2 hrs spin at a trail centre or in the local trails a few miles from town.

    I do use a rucksac when off into the wilds or in winter. I have never needed more than a tube and patches,pump and multitool in decades of riding

    rewski
    Free Member

    Get a room people…

    Isn’t a case of having one rucksack that they use for all situations, emptying a bag of stuff just because you’re spinning around for an hour or so is a pain, plus you forget to put said stuff back in, which is even more of a pain, especially when you need that spare tube, ipad or can of stella 😀

    terrahawk
    Free Member

    I occasionally go out for a 2 hour ride with a big rucksack, mainly because I also occasionally go out for a 13 hour ride and I don’t particularly want to have a multitude of rucksacks, all for different days of the week.

    think abaaaht it

    U31
    Free Member

    So if your aiming for a 2 hour loop of your local trail centre, and 5 minutes in you get a mechanical, a flat or the weather changes from blazing sun to El Nino in a heartbeat, as it does around here, youd risk ruining your ride and pushing home, or bothering someone like me for spares, rather then carry basics on your back?

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    U31 -If that is aimed at me – No – I carry everything I need. Multitool, tube, pump, water, patches and glue, sram links x3, m5 and m6 nut and bolt.

    Its just on the bike and minimalistic

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    I wear a massive rucksack/camelback thing when on my road bike sometimes. I really hope there are a load of roadies on a forum somewhere discussing what an arse I am. I tried stuffing everything into my jersey pockets, but thought I looked an idiot 😆

    stumpynya12
    Free Member

    Or we could wear baggies and DH tops when out on our road bikes ? Roadies love cross dress overs don’t they ? Its rainning up north just now but heh its miles better than down south. Now which tyres should I be running wa ha har wa ha har (insane laugh)

    ditch_jockey
    Full Member

    Don’t be so sensitive

    Don’t worry, I’m not taking this to heart, just using a bit of hyperbole.

    I have never needed more than a tube and patches,pump and multitool in decades of riding

    You’re seriously fortunate then. I’ve seen folks with a crank that fell off on the Corrieyairack Pass, someone else who’se seatpost clamp bolt broke and we had to bodge it on with zip ties and gaffer tape. I lost a rear derailleur at the top of Black 8 in Les Arcs, so had to manufacture a single speed 5 Spot in order to get home to the hotel without it involving a long walk. I’m sure there must be others, but I can’t recall them now.

    Most annoying ‘kitless wonder’ I’ve come across was a roadie who’d set out to do the Bealach na Ba with no spares or tools. His chain had snapped in 3 on the coastal road between Applecross and Sheildaig and he had nothing to fix it with. Fortunately, we stopped and pieced the bits back together again with a few quicklinks, but in the process I got chain oil all over my good Rapha merino wool top. Guess I still have issues over messing up a jumper I spaffed that much money on.

    kingkongsfinger
    Free Member

    Trent Squeel, your prays have been answered. Now time to have a lie down.

    ART
    Full Member

    Tend to carry stuff according to where/ how far etc, but with the usual standard basics on board. But similarly we have also rescued people in various locations who needed stuff like a multi tool/ chain splitter, pump,inner tubes, patch kit, split link, disc pads, shock pump, zip ties …. the list goes on. We’ve also been helped by other people e.g. when a chain tool broke and we didn’t have a split link. So experience says the time you aren’t carrying something is the time you’ll need it .. like taking that spare inner out and realising it’s actually the buggered one that you forgot to replace 😯

    ditch_jockey
    Full Member

    did we have to see that – matching shorts and shaved legs!!

    joolsburger
    Free Member

    Most of what’s in my mule is water, then the usuals, pump, tools, tube, glasses, pants, kitchen sink, waterproof jacket if it looks like rain etc.

    Always take the same pack as it’s comfy and secure don’t give a toss what anyone else thinks. Never have, never will.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    ditchjocky – all of those I can and have dealt with with what I carry.

    Cranks can be refitted with my multitool, I have singelspeeded bikes twice. etc. etc. There is a chain tool on my multitool.

    I have even fixed punctures and broken chains for others.

    I can mend anything I can think of with the kit I carry – I do often have two cableties as well – I forgot to mention them

    ditch_jockey
    Full Member

    like taking that spare inner out and realising it’s actually the buggered one that you forgot to replace

    In my case, that was on the canal path through Bishopbriggs in Glasgow, in the dark, freezing cold and sleeting. The commute home from hell I call it now, as I suffered the consequences of the council having cut back all the hawthorn bushes at the edge of the path.

    esselgruntfuttock
    Free Member

    I always take a backpack, even If I’m going for a 50min blast, at this time of year I usually come back with potatoes/apples/broad beans/mushrooms, or whatever’s in the fields etc etc. Can’t stuff all that ‘local produce’ in me pockets!

    takisawa2
    Full Member

    Two Camelbaks here. Small 1.5ltr for local rides/road rides, & 3ltr Mule for everything else.

    sangobegger
    Free Member

    I have to confess that riding my measly 5″,which is never enough by the way,I am usually to be found with me full face and body armour,etc – no big bag tho!.However,to clarify why? – Golspie,Laggen and a bit o the puffer,have at various times ripped me face off,busted me bones and generally inflicted such kickings on me that the only other way to get similar “injuries”,is to get pissed and punch some big bloke down the local boozer.Now I may be shite,old, an slo,but wearing a full face,
    no-one knows who you are anyway,so who cares.Probably only some skinny little bugger on a hardtail,an he is too busy giving himself a heart attack trying to “leave you for dead” anyway – Keeps my LBS in coin an all!

    yunki
    Free Member

    I have one £10 rucksack that sometimes contains a few emergency spares and a ‘nana and a couple litres of water.. and sometimes it also contains a nice warm jersey.. some lunch.. four cans of scrumpy jack.. sunnies.. a camera and a good book.. and other times it contains a weeks worth of clothes for when we’re going camping with the family in Cornwall.. and other times it contains all me little boys kit for going to stay with his Gran.. Other times it’s full of paint… yesterday it was full of shopping from town…etc etc etc

    I think camelbacks are really the mark of someone who doesn’t get mountainbiking.. anyone who uses one needs their bike (probably plural) taking off them and raffled off to real mountainbikers

    UK-FLATLANDER
    Full Member

    Personally, I come from a climbing and mountaineering background, and I’m well aware of keeping weight to a minimum, but equally I have the philosophy that I should be totally self sufficient. So if that’s on a mountain then I’ll have enough to cope with most emergency’s and if necessary a night out.

    As for water, if you’ve seen one of your group slump to the floor in a blizzard on Cairngorm due to dehydration, then you’d make sure you had sufficient water.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Quite agree with you flatlander. I am totally self sufficient with what I have, I can repair anything that is repairable and I carry enough water for me

    Its so much nicer to ride without a rucsac

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    UK-FLATLANDER – Member
    …I’m well aware of keeping weight to a minimum, but equally I have the philosophy that I should be totally self sufficient…

    And that my friends, is a real mountain bike attitude.

    We’ll leave the fashion conscious to parade around their little loops at the local play park.

    ajantom
    Full Member

    ajantom – Member
    The whole point of MTBing is self-sufficiency and being prepared.

    no, it’s ‘pratting about on bikes’.

    and it’s lots of fun.

    Ok….one of the main points IMHO.

    ……….and pratting about on bikes. 😀

    But the self-sufficiency thing makes it more fun, as you can go where you want when you want and fix it if it breaks, then continue on your way.

    have one £10 rucksack……..I think camelbacks are really the mark of someone who doesn’t get mountainbiking…

    Yeah, I have a cheap rucksack too – but it’s not as comfortable to cycle with as my Camelback. Why hurt your back, because you want to make a point?

    nickf
    Free Member

    Every so often you come across a witless wonder who’s totally unprepared, like the muppet in Morzine this summer who didn’t have even a spare tube or a pump, let alone a tyre boot. Thankfully my medium-ish Camelbak (given that we’re all naming our kit, a Hawg) held all of these things, and I could get him on his way. Otherwise a 5-mile walk back to town.

    Having been caught out before, I’d rather have a degree of certainty. A pound or two will make no difference unless racing, and it’s good to have the space to put pads etc in when climbing.

    pastcaring
    Free Member

    have one £10 rucksack……..I think camelbacks are really the mark of someone who doesn’t get mountainbiking…

    again, what is there to get? what is the point of mountain biking? grown men/women playing on pushbikes in the hills?

    maybe after all this time i still don’t get mountain biking… but i have a lot of fun! maybe thats because i couldn’t give a flying **** what anyone else is riding, wearing, doing.

    enjoy your ride!

    sparkingchains
    Free Member

    Can get everything I need into a pretty small Dakine bag. Generally mountainbikers are looking more and more silly these days, the whole motorcross influence doesn’t really help with people ambling around trail centres all padded up for a day in the alps.

    grumm
    Free Member

    Is there some kind of database where we can look up what the regulations are for the correct amount of kit and body armour for each trail please? I really don’t want to embarrass myself.

    TheSouthernYeti
    Free Member

    Is it BigDummy (where art thou?) that has been know to drag a trailer behind his bike?
    I can only assume that this is done, in order to carry as many camelbaks as possible….. a different one for different parts of the same trail. It stands to reason that you need a bigger camelbak on a climb than you would on a descent, surely?

    flamejob
    Free Member

    I’m not sure about the 4mph, but I’m one of those blokes.

    I ALWAYS ride with knee/shin protection and sometimes with arm and full face.

    My Camelbak always contains what is in the pic, plus food and normally a 1.5l bottle of frozen water.

    [/url]
    CamelBak Contents[/url] by Flamejob[/url], on Flickr

    But it is feking hot here and mega rocky.

    coogan
    Free Member

    I use a 3L Dakine back pack all year round, carries everything I need. Dunno if it’s too big or too small. Nor do I care what some of the plums on here think about it either. Ride your own bike with whatever you decide to use/wear/ride and butt out of other peoples choices.

    LoveTubs
    Free Member

    Flamejob, wtf are you doing carrying all that shite? Are you entering the Paris-Dakar? LOL

    Thought for one min that was a car jack, but I see it’s for the rear shock…you use this on the ride?

    It may seem like I’m digging your bag’s contents (suits you sir) but either I’m putting myself and friends in grave danger or….

    That said, who forgot to pack a power link the other weekend 😯 😳 :mrgreen:

    The above is meant to be ‘tongue in cheek’, just a bit of fun Flamejob.

    EDIT; do I spy a prismatic compass? If it is, then I take all of the above back.

    yunki
    Free Member

    but it’s not as comfortable to cycle with as my Camelback. Why hurt your back, because you want to make a point?

    I think camelbacks are really the mark of someone who doesn’t get mountainbiking…

    again, what is there to get? what is the point of mountain biking? grown men/women playing on pushbikes in the hills?

    sorry… I made the tongue in cheek reference to the camelback as a pisstake of the OP..

    you can ride with a full grown bonobo chimp full of water strapped to you if you so desire.. I really won’t judge you for it..

    I was just being sarcastic.. thought it was obvious…ooops

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Flamejob, do you really carry 3 or 4 mech hangers with you?? 😯

    mboy
    Free Member

    Flamejob, wtf are you doing carrying all that shite? Are you entering the Paris-Dakar? LOL

    Do people really go out riding in the woods and on mountains, for hours on end, with only some water and perhaps a minipump and a puncture repair kit? Got to say that to me, Flamejob looks pretty well prepared, but certainly not overly so.

    I’ve been working on minimising the amount of kit I carry with me in my camelbak when I go riding, as obviously less weight is better, and to this end I’ve found a smaller first aid kit, smaller multi tool, and downsized a couple of other bits and pieces too… But given that I ride offroad, and often miles from anywhere, I always have at least the following in my Camelbak (A MULE by the way)…

    A First Aid kit
    2 Inner tubes
    Mini Pump
    2 SIS Energy Go Bars (I can have quite bad bloody sugar problems, when I need to eat, I NEED to eat if you get me)
    A Multi tool with allen keys and chain breaker etc.
    Mini Leatherman style tool (it’s tiny, but very useful)
    a few metres of gaffer tape, wrapped around the mini pump body
    a couple of pairs of spare brake pads
    some zip ties
    a couple of powerlinks
    2 or 3 tyre levers
    my iPhone and wallet

    And depending on the conditions, or what I’m doing I’ll also take

    a spare layer, or two, depending on how changeable the weather looks
    a shock pump, if I want to mess about with pressures on a ride
    extra food (if out for more than 3 hours say)
    clear glasses and a bag (usually if it’s wet or muddy)
    spare gloves (usually a warmer set, I have bad problems with bloody circulation in my extremities)
    2 gel pocket handwarmers… Not had to use in anger yet, but have been VERY close a couple of times… Like I say, I’ve got real poor circulation in my hands.

    Anyway, I personally don’t consider that a lot… I always have the ability to fix my bike, or myself, just about wherever I am. And I can’t count the number of rides where I’ve been riding with others and they can’t fix their bike cos they’ve not brought the right tools, or they’ve run out of food, or they injure themselves and don’t have a first aid kit, or their brake pads wear out (if you’ve ridden in Swinley, you’ll know what I’m on about here!) on a ride and I’ve had to be there to provide brake pads! People may laugh at me being over prepared, but everything that goes in my bag gets used out on the trails (except the handwarmers so far, but I’m betting they’ll get used this winter).

    kingkongsfinger
    Free Member

    mboy, thats alot.

    Rear shock pump and a couple of pairs of brake pads !! Check your pads before you set off and the shock pressure, with the amount of kit you carry i would stick a couple of extra bar in it, again check before you set off.

    You might as well take a brake bleedkit, hydraulic fluid, spare rear mech and mig welder, just in case.

    Tell you what, forget the above, attach a spare bike to your Camelbak (MULE) but make sure the pads are OK etc on it. 😛

    DirtyLyle
    Free Member

    Jesus, STW at its worst. Who cares if people wear huge packs with armour? Are you only a real Mountain Biker if you ride a rigid singlespeed 69er over secret (and most definitely not in a trail centre) trails while punching yourself in the face. Yes, a lot of new technology is overhyped, but a lot of it makes riding more easier and more enjoyable. Is that a bad thing?
    Sneering on forums is big and clever.

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    I consider that a ridiculous amount!

    For local rides
    Multitool
    1 tube
    Puncture kit
    Pump
    m5 and m6 nut and bolt
    2 cable ties
    3 sram links and 2 links of chain ( I only carry more than 1 sram link ‘cos the tandem has a timing chain that cannot be shortened)

    The pump goes on frame clips the rest in a small seat pack.

    Food and a waterproof goes in the jersey pockets if I needed. ( or in the seat pack)

    For going out into the heart of the Highlands, winter and multiday I would carry a bit more stuff but nothing like the stuff some of you carry.

    Why people carry all that unneeded stuff is beyond me – but if they want to its their choice. Just don’t tell me that a rucsac and al that stuff is needed as clearly it is not.

    stumpynya12
    Free Member

    Do I need to take bum wipe products incase I need a banging poo ? or could anyone suggest natural products that I may come across in the woods/moors ? Thanking you in anticipation of your kind/helpfull replies.

    davidrussell
    Free Member

    moss, just check it for ticks first. 😯

    mboy
    Free Member

    mboy, thats alot.

    Rear shock pump and a couple of pairs of brake pads !! Check your pads before you set off and the shock pressure, with the amount of kit you carry i would stick a couple of extra bar in it, again check before you set off.

    You might as well take a brake bleedkit, hydraulic fluid, spare rear mech and mig welder, just in case.

    Tell you what, forget the above, attach a spare bike to your Camelbak (MULE) but make sure the pads are OK etc on it.

    Shock pump only if messing about with pressures… Brake pads though, how much do they weigh? And how much space do they take up? NOT VERY MUCH!!! And as for the rest, well… You’re just taking the piss methiks… 😉

    I consider that a ridiculous amount!

    For going out into the heart of the Highlands, winter and multiday I would carry a bit more stuff but nothing like the stuff some of you carry.

    Why people carry all that unneeded stuff is beyond me – but if they want to its their choice. Just don’t tell me that a rucsac and al that stuff is needed as clearly it is not.

    I’ll refer you to the comment I made in my above post TJ…

    People may laugh at me being over prepared, but everything that goes in my bag gets used out on the trails

    Maybe I should have put “everything” in BOLD CAPITALS perhaps? I guarantee to you that I’ve used the lot… 😉

Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 294 total)

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