DayTrip
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- May 13, 2013
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I've been getting peppered with so many 20% off coupons from various outdoor companies the past few weeks that I've been doing a pretty thorough review of everything I carry and whether or not I can upgrade anything to a better/lighter/more efficient version. I was reading a SectionHiker article about filtration and it got me wondering about this. I current use the Sawyer squeeze type filter which is pretty light, simple and while not crazy fast has been fine for what I've used it for. But with the intention that I will be camping/backpacking more this year I'm wondering about a faster option to generate more drinkable water in the same or less time. Filling several Nalgene's with the Sawyer can be a significant time delay.
Pump types like the Katatdyn Hiker Pro seem to be much faster producing water and the design seems like it would be far more efficient sucking water out of puddles, standing water and other smaller sources that attempting to fill a squeeze bag in would be difficult/take forever/maybe impossible. Are pump styles really that much faster than squeeze models? I believe it said that 48 pumps a minute produces 1L of water. And what about the "field maintenance" in the description. Should I read that as "breaks a lot in the field so it's designed so you can fix it"? Is that mechanical pump likely to break (the unit is so light I wonder if the plastic is not cheap and prone to breaking).
And what about gravity units? The Platypus model I looked at said it is capable of producing 4L of filtered water in 2.5 minutes. Is that for real?? That seems to good to be true. I could see where that would be a huge advantage. Just tank up the bag and let it create water while you're doing other stuff like putting up tent, eating if on a rest stop, etc. It would have the same obstacles filling the bag in smaller sources but for that kind of speed it might be worth the aggravation. The unit is not that heavy either and I believe there was a 2L version. And with the fittings that apparently go directly to many hydration packs this seems pretty useful.
Anyone care to elaborate on the benefits/pitfalls of the different types, make a pitch for their favorite, etc? I'd likely use mine for 75% day hiking and 25% backpack camping.
Pump types like the Katatdyn Hiker Pro seem to be much faster producing water and the design seems like it would be far more efficient sucking water out of puddles, standing water and other smaller sources that attempting to fill a squeeze bag in would be difficult/take forever/maybe impossible. Are pump styles really that much faster than squeeze models? I believe it said that 48 pumps a minute produces 1L of water. And what about the "field maintenance" in the description. Should I read that as "breaks a lot in the field so it's designed so you can fix it"? Is that mechanical pump likely to break (the unit is so light I wonder if the plastic is not cheap and prone to breaking).
And what about gravity units? The Platypus model I looked at said it is capable of producing 4L of filtered water in 2.5 minutes. Is that for real?? That seems to good to be true. I could see where that would be a huge advantage. Just tank up the bag and let it create water while you're doing other stuff like putting up tent, eating if on a rest stop, etc. It would have the same obstacles filling the bag in smaller sources but for that kind of speed it might be worth the aggravation. The unit is not that heavy either and I believe there was a 2L version. And with the fittings that apparently go directly to many hydration packs this seems pretty useful.
Anyone care to elaborate on the benefits/pitfalls of the different types, make a pitch for their favorite, etc? I'd likely use mine for 75% day hiking and 25% backpack camping.