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Thread: Low pack weight

  1. #1
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    Default Low pack weight

    I am very happy at the moment because I just weighed my new pack with all gear (minus food, water), and it only weighs 22.5lbs! I know that is not a record or anything, but I was calculating based on some estimations to be a good bit higher. The new pack is a Six Moon Starlite, the old one was an REI Mars 85. The difference is like night and day. The six moon fits me much better as well.

    Anyway, I just want to make sure I am not forgetting anything so here is my list:

    Pack
    Northface 20 synthetic bag
    Kelty Crestone 1 tent
    REI 1.75 trekker pad
    Aquamira filter bottle
    Cooking Pot
    Lexan Spoon, Fork
    Gloves
    small bottle bug spray
    sunscreen
    itch relief spray
    med kit
    zip ties
    50' nylon rope
    Fleece Baraclava
    Rain pants
    Rain poncho
    windbreaker
    fleece pullover
    down jacket
    Mid weight baselayer
    Heavy weight baselayer
    Nylon Pants
    Superfly stove
    Fuel Canister
    Bic Lighter
    Aquamira water drops
    Head lamp
    solar powered lantern (bulky but lightweight, will run for 8hrs so i thought it would be nice for reading and stuff)

    I just realized one thing I was missing was an extra pair of socks. Oh, and the Data Book. Please let me know if there is anything else I need.

    Also, with food and water, what do you think my pack weight will be at full load?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Cosmos View Post
    I am very happy at the moment because I just weighed my new pack with all gear (minus food, water), and it only weighs 22.5lbs! I know that is not a record or anything, but I was calculating based on some estimations to be a good bit higher. The new pack is a Six Moon Starlite, the old one was an REI Mars 85. The difference is like night and day. The six moon fits me much better as well.

    Anyway, I just want to make sure I am not forgetting anything so here is my list:

    Pack
    Northface 20 synthetic bag
    Kelty Crestone 1 tent
    REI 1.75 trekker pad
    Aquamira filter bottle
    Cooking Pot
    Lexan Spoon, Fork
    Gloves
    small bottle bug spray
    sunscreen
    itch relief spray
    med kit
    zip ties
    50' nylon rope
    Fleece Baraclava
    Rain pants
    Rain poncho
    windbreaker
    fleece pullover
    down jacket
    Mid weight baselayer
    Heavy weight baselayer
    Nylon Pants
    Superfly stove
    Fuel Canister
    Bic Lighter
    Aquamira water drops
    Head lamp
    solar powered lantern (bulky but lightweight, will run for 8hrs so i thought it would be nice for reading and stuff)

    I just realized one thing I was missing was an extra pair of socks. Oh, and the Data Book. Please let me know if there is anything else I need.

    Also, with food and water, what do you think my pack weight will be at full load?

    I weighed it on a digital scale by the way, multiple times and it averaged at 22.5

  3. #3
    AT 4,000 miler, LT Blissful's Avatar
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    You could cut some stuff. Nylon pants. Lantern (your headlamp is fine for reading). Heavyweight base layer (you have a lot of clothes) What are you hiking in?

    Crocs for camp? Extra socks? rain cover and /or compactor bag?
    Maps? Data book?
    Camera? (optional)



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    Registered User WhoDey's Avatar
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    Congratulations on lightening up! When is your start date as this will greatly affect the gear you will need. I doubt you will need a fleece pullover, midweight baselayer, heavyweight baselayer, and a down jacket. I also do not see any underwear listed I don't know if that was a mistake as some people do not wear any. With 2 liters water and 5 days of food you should not be over 35 pounds
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    LT '79; AT from Springer-Rangeley in sections; Donating Member Kerosene's Avatar
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    With supplies for 5 days, you're going to end up closer to 35 pounds, which is the upper limit of the SMD Starlite without a suspension hoop.

    You could probably drop a couple of pounds by replacing your sleeping bag with a down bag (see WM UltraLite) and a single-wall tent (see the SMD Lunar Solo), but of course that takes money.

    Regardless, consider adding the suspension hoop to the Starlite, even if your pack weight drops below 30 pounds, as I think you will appreciate the additional support.
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  6. #6
    Registered User WhoDey's Avatar
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    It would also be advisable that you post the weights of each individual item so that you can see just how much each item adds up to your total weight
    "Speak softly and carry a big stick; you will go far". Theodore Roosevelt

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    Quote Originally Posted by WhoDey View Post
    Congratulations on lightening up! When is your start date as this will greatly affect the gear you will need. I doubt you will need a fleece pullover, midweight baselayer, heavyweight baselayer, and a down jacket. I also do not see any underwear listed I don't know if that was a mistake as some people do not wear any. With 2 liters water and 5 days of food you should not be over 35 pounds

    Thanks all for the quick replies. I have all of my cloths included in the weight, meaning i threw the clothes I will be wearing in the packs before I weighed it. I am going to start in mid Feb, so I though the fleece and down jacket would be necessary. I thought i would take 2 sets of baselayers: one for hiking, one for camp. I did not include underwear becuase I thought the baselayer felt fine as underwear. Thanks again for the input and let me know what else I might need for the cold feb. weather.

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    Whoa, 40 ounce pad! Replacing that with 1 and 1/2 walmart blue pads would save about half that weight...maybe more.

    Too many base layers. Fleece is overkill unless maybe it's something very light like the R1. Aren't you going to be wearing those nylon pants? Do you really need rain pants when you're using a poncho? Either way, I wouldn't bring the rain pants. If the rain doesn't soak your legs, your sweat will. At most I would restrict the weight of rain pant to 3-4 ounces.

    Leave the lantern at home.

    Filter and Aquamira? If you're going to use chemicals, then do it all the way and leave the filter at home.

    Do you really need a fork to eat your camp food? If so, I suggest trying a spork.

    Your pack weight isn't awful though. I would have been happy to carry that load in '09.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kerosene View Post
    With supplies for 5 days, you're going to end up closer to 35 pounds, which is the upper limit of the SMD Starlite without a suspension hoop.

    You could probably drop a couple of pounds by replacing your sleeping bag with a down bag (see WM UltraLite) and a single-wall tent (see the SMD Lunar Solo), but of course that takes money.

    Regardless, consider adding the suspension hoop to the Starlite, even if your pack weight drops below 30 pounds, as I think you will appreciate the additional support.
    I would like to get a down bag, but as you mentioned that would cost more money. I am not on a super tight budget, but would like to make use of some of the gear I already own. I decided to get a new bag because my old one was very uncomfortable on log hikes. The starlite feels great, and the weight I have mentioned includes the support hoop, which I plan I using. Thanks for the input!

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    [QUOTE=leaftye;1091046]Whoa, 40 ounce pad! Replacing that with 1 and 1/2 walmart blue pads would save about half that weight...maybe more.

    Too many base layers. Fleece is overkill unless maybe it's something very light like the R1. Aren't you going to be wearing those nylon pants? Do you really need rain pants when you're using a poncho? Either way, I wouldn't bring the rain pants. If the rain doesn't soak your legs, your sweat will. At most I would restrict the weight of rain pant to 3-4 ounces.

    Leave the lantern at home.

    Filter and Aquamira? If you're going to use chemicals, then do it all the way and leave the filter at home.


    I have the short version of the trekker which weighs 26 oz, I also have a thermarest z lite. You think there would be any advantage to the z lite? The trekker provides better inslulation from the ground I believe.

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    The full length Z lite is almost a pound lighter. You may want to some of that weight savings to carry a sit pad, again, from the walmart blue pad. Put that pad under your torso at night and you should have about the same combined warmth as that Trekker pad.

    I love sit pads. It takes away my excuse to avoid breaks. I used to look for nice logs or boulders to sit on, especially when there's rain or snow. Now I plop my pack against a tree with my sit pad in front of it and sit back without worries.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Kerosene View Post
    With supplies for 5 days, you're going to end up closer to 35 pounds, which is the upper limit of the SMD Starlite without a suspension hoop.

    You could probably drop a couple of pounds by replacing your sleeping bag with a down bag (see WM UltraLite) and a single-wall tent (see the SMD Lunar Solo), but of course that takes money.

    Regardless, consider adding the suspension hoop to the Starlite, even if your pack weight drops below 30 pounds, as I think you will appreciate the additional support.
    Excellent suggestions!
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    some items not on your list to consider - lighter, TP, and small bottle of hand sanitizer. If I overlooked them I apologize.Good luck.

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    you could certainly get a better (lighter) tent - LightHeart Gear Solo tent 1lb 11oz
    http://www.lightheartgear.com

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    Tent, bag and pad if you got the cake, replace. (savings 3.5 lbs) If not definatly the pad 40 oz ouch. REI should take it back.
    Scrap the lantern, what is your cooking setup?

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    to the OP - feel free to ignore those who tell you to switch your gear. That's why I cringe when someone posts a list such as yours. I know you wanted only feedback on what you might have forgotten or could leave out due to redundancy but people always want to promote their favorite gear so you always get more than you asked for. Your list is fine and is more than sufficient for you to hike the trail from Springer to BSP. Save your $$$ for food and towns along the trail. Best wishes.

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    Evaluate after every trip, improve if necessary. It's only got to work for you. Looks good to me though.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bags4266 View Post
    Tent, bag and pad if you got the cake, replace. (savings 3.5 lbs) If not definatly the pad 40 oz ouch. REI should take it back.
    Scrap the lantern, what is your cooking setup?

    I have the short version of the pad (26 oz) and a z lite (16 oz), so I will have to decide between the 2. I have an optimus .6 liter pot and an msr superfly stove. I would like to get a new tent, but I do not think it is worth shelling out the cash when I have a capable tent. Thanks

  19. #19
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    I believe you're going to end up with a base weight two to three pounds higher than this when all is said and done. For instance the data book and if you're carrying a lantern to read with what are you going to be reading? What are you carrying water in? Organizational stuff like dry sacks, pack liners, etc? Hand sanitizer? Camera? etc. etc. and probably a few more things that are hiking style specific. All of a sudden your modest 22.5lbs becomes 26 lbs. Ounces add up quick.
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    Cosmos how much do you weigh and how tall are you? I can understand using what you already have to hike with. We all do not have an endless supply of money to purchase the lightest equipment available. It would be nice to have but I am sure you will not be the only guy out there with 35lbs in their pack.

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