Wow, this thing is light!!! 1 lb. 7oz. But is it good enough for a thru? Any ideas?
http://www.campmor.com/outdoor/gear/Product___65688
Wow, this thing is light!!! 1 lb. 7oz. But is it good enough for a thru? Any ideas?
http://www.campmor.com/outdoor/gear/Product___65688
i didnt see anyone use that pack this year during my thru hike. didn't seem to have enough support when i was looking at packs. the exos 46 on the other hand(i used a exos 34 from daleville,va until katahdin) was a very popular pack and not a whole lot heavier than the hornet. mine was 2 lbs, 2oz, and i think the 46 is like 2 lbs 6 oz or something.
but after figuring out my gear and getting lighter and lighter, i think i could rock a hornet during an AT thru hike. except i dont think i would, and will just go frameless next time and get a pack that is under 1lb
hope this helps
It's a nicely made frameless rucksack. Plenty of frameless packs out there among the ultralight hikers. It would work fine for a thru-hike if you are an ultralight hiker with a base weight in the 8-10 pound range, I reckon.
I tried one in a local shop and found the M/L size to be far too small for me in torso length. Shorter/smaller hikers would fine it fits just fine. It does seem to be well designed and well made.
Lots of other choices for this type of pack, many of them in the 8-12 ounce range or even less. See for example zpacks.com.
As a followup, I don't see how Campmor puts this in the "internal frame" category.
L Dog
AT 2000 Miler
The Laughing Dog Blog
https://lighterpack.com/r/38fgjt
"The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness." - John Muir
Con men understand that their job is not to use facts to convince skeptics but to use words to help the gullible to believe what they want to believe - Thomas Sowell
Wow, never been to the zpacks website. Jeez, that stuff makes feathers look heavy. Looking at some of their weight makes my 27 oz. tent I just ordered look like cast iron. Oh, well, the cycle repeats itself.........
A fellow named AYCE was using the Hornet 46 this year on the AT. He didn't seem to be having any trouble. I believe he finished in less than 100 days, if that gives you an idea of his hiking style.
"Hahk your own hahk." - Ron Haven
"The world is a book, of which those who do not travel read only a page." - St. Augustine
http://www.scrubhiker.com/
I talked to an Osprey rep back in September and she said they will start offering the Hornet 46 in small, medium, and large near the beginning of 2012.
NOBO section hiker, 1066.4 miles... & counting!!
The 2012 Hornet 46 will come out on January 9, 2012. New sizing, S, M, L. $159. 24 ounces.
Singletrack
I think so, at least for the middle of the AT when less gear is needed. I own and use the Hornet 46 and Exos 46, pretty much interchangebly. the Exos is definitely more comfortable with loads over 22-24 pounds or so. My scheme is to start my NOBO with the Exos next year, switch to the one-pound lighter Hornet for up into New England, then back to the Exos for the finish. My medium/large Hornet 46 weighs 25 ounces, my wife's small/medium 24 ounces. 1lb-7oz spec is "light" an ounce or two. MAYBE mine is a pre-Jan 2012, though I bought it in Feb/March of this year. I've used it for maybe 200 trail miles and some multi-nighters. Again, fine when low twenties weight, not good above 25, for me, at least. The Exos is find to 30-35.
I used mine on my foothills trail thru hike last year and loved it. Only 76 mile trail tho. It worked great and I'm 6 foot 1 and It fits me very well.