johndavidjr Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 For a recent 3-night hike which included bushwacking and a moderate snow climb (see post in Olympics section) I left behind the framesheet on MEC alpine pack of about 52 cu liters. Have used this newish pack very little, with or without framesheet, and in past 7-8 years have used almost exclusively a frameless 50L Lowe pack. I don't have much of an opinion on whether leaving out framesheet was good/bad, though it obviously saved a little weight. Has anyone formed an opinon on detailed pros & cons?? Quote
cracked Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 Pro - carries heavy loads better. Con - makes pack less flexible, worse for climbing. And heavier. IMHO, a daypack sized pack only needs a framesheet if you're carrying skis and boots on it. Try it sans sheet, if you don't mind, you're good to go. If it bugs you, you can cut a new framesheet out of the lid of a plastic walmart storage bin. And what the hell is a cubic liter? Quote
johndavidjr Posted July 9, 2004 Author Posted July 9, 2004 umunamuricun-ena cubic liter must be around 60 cubic inches of course, but I'm weak in arithmatic. I've carried the pack (US$60 on close-out) on two short trips with frame sheet & I find it difficult to say just how much the thing improved load-carrying, and even more difficult to say is why. Maybe I wasn't carrying enough weight, but I'm somewhat of the ectomorph build, & don't carry weight well to begin with. It's probably just a matter of experience and preference. Quote
tomtom Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 umunamuricun-ena cubic liter must be around 60 cubic inches of course An inch is a measure of length. A cubic inch is a measure of volume (a cube one inch on each side). A liter is already a measure of volume (a cube 10 cm on each side). So what the heck is a cubic liter? - Amuricun Tom Quote
snoboy Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 One of my favourite packs, that I often use for ski touring, is a frameless pack; the Serratus Genie. It takes a little more effort to pack it well, but other than that, as long as the weight is reasonable, I have no real problem with the frameless idea, up to a certain size/weight. Quote
johndavidjr Posted July 9, 2004 Author Posted July 9, 2004 I'm so glad Reagan killed metric conversion, because I can't figure it out. All I know for sure that's relevant is, my Lowe was advertised as the Snow Peak 50, and somewhere back in the dark ages of the 1990s, I took that to be about 3000 c.inches. Quote
cracked Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 The framesheet is also nice if you're stuffing your ski boots into the thing..it keeps them from poking your back. Quote
Dru Posted July 9, 2004 Posted July 9, 2004 framesheet is also good for preventing the #4 camalot from gooning your kidneys from behind the less back padding your pack has the more a framesheet will help. also helps to transfer load from the shoulders to the hipbelt. if you take a framesheet out of a 38L pack it wont make much diff but if you take it out of a fully loaded 90L pack you will notice, the pack will tend to banana bend as you tighten the shoulder straps up and want to take your back with it Quote
johndavidjr Posted July 10, 2004 Author Posted July 10, 2004 Yeah my cheap, MEC bag is unsusually long & narrow for its size, & when more fully loaded without the sheet, it tends to deform somewhat. It's got padding & I can manage to keep stuff away from back pretty well. The load-carrying disadvantage sans sheet at 20+ or so pounds (how many kilos?) wasn't so easy to observe; subtle & hard to quantify-- to the point where I'm not even sure there is one. (Why would a piece of plastic & couple of aluminum sticks make a difference?) More clearly, I remember when loading up my frameless Lowe to the max, I'd naturally think it was too damned heavy, & if only it had framesheet, then life would be wonderful. So is it wonderful, or isn't it? Quote
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