Messenger Bag Advice
#1
Thread Starter
ANTE UP
Joined: Jul 2006
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From: Arlington, VA
Bikes: 80's Shogun SS Conversion, 2006 Marin Muirwoods Urban, Schwinn High Sierra MTB (ancient)
Messenger Bag Advice
I'm sure there are more than a few threads on this topic, but since I can't search, here goes...
I'm trying to decide on a messenger bag, as my usual laptop bag / man-purse isnt really working so well for my commute. I'm a fan of this guy (Aucliar Messenger Bag) so far...

Most of my friends have timbuk2 bags, so i figured that is a pretty ringing endorsement. Has anyone had issues with Auclair products in the past? Should I just swallow my pride and fall in with the timbuk2 pack?
I'm pretty sure the aucliar bag would be fine, but id rather not get burned by inferior craftsmanship thats going to fall apart in 2 months.
Thanks ahead of time for any advice.
I'm trying to decide on a messenger bag, as my usual laptop bag / man-purse isnt really working so well for my commute. I'm a fan of this guy (Aucliar Messenger Bag) so far...

Most of my friends have timbuk2 bags, so i figured that is a pretty ringing endorsement. Has anyone had issues with Auclair products in the past? Should I just swallow my pride and fall in with the timbuk2 pack?
I'm pretty sure the aucliar bag would be fine, but id rather not get burned by inferior craftsmanship thats going to fall apart in 2 months.
Thanks ahead of time for any advice.
#2
B.C. to D.C.
Joined: Oct 2005
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From: between the Popeye's, the liquor store, the funeral home, and the strip club
Bikes: 1992 Miyata Nine 14; 1971 Raleigh Super Course fixie conversion; 2006 Jamis Nova (853 version); 2001 Diamondback Topanga (SS conversion); 1956 Rudge Sports; 1971 Raleigh Competition (processing); 199? Schwinn World Sport (processing)
ask in the SS/Fixie forum.
They have gouts and gouts of pages on mess bags.
They have gouts and gouts of pages on mess bags.
#3
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,602
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From: Cleveland
Bikes: Pugsley, fixie commuter, track bike
The fixed gear/track forums have many discussions about what the best messenger bag is for a cyclists. There are some fans of Timbuk2 but also many who do not like them. I think Timbuk2 is the most commonally available but not necessarily the best.
I bought a Chrome after reading many of the threads and looking at the various websites. I am very happy with my pruchased 2 years later. I commute with my Chrome Metropolis everyday in all kinds of Cleveland weather. It is holding up well and keeps the contents dry. Plus it is comfortable and can hold a ton.
If you want something a little more unique there are several smaller manufacturers that will make custom bags with your choice of colors and even designs.
Good luck in your search.
Craig
I bought a Chrome after reading many of the threads and looking at the various websites. I am very happy with my pruchased 2 years later. I commute with my Chrome Metropolis everyday in all kinds of Cleveland weather. It is holding up well and keeps the contents dry. Plus it is comfortable and can hold a ton.
If you want something a little more unique there are several smaller manufacturers that will make custom bags with your choice of colors and even designs.
Good luck in your search.
Craig
#4
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 211
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From: state college, PA
Bikes: xo-1, riv atlantis, witcomb fixie, on-one inbred, bridgestone mb-1 w/ drops, bianchi reparto corse mtn bike, trek 650b'd touring bike
timbuk2 bags are chinese now. lame sauce. support someone in the states, hey how about people who are actually messengers? re:load makes the finest bags around, and they do incredible custom work
#5
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 102
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From: SoCal
Bikes: 2006 Bianchi San Jose, 2008 Trek Fuel EX 6.5, 2008 Cannondale CAAD9 R6
Lame sauce? That is a term with which I am not familiar.
I cheaped out and went to WalMart. Got th ehouse brand bag for 14.95. No waist strap and so cheap, it reeks. Use a neoprene laptop sleeve to augment the porr cushioning. I like the Patagonia and the REI bags but I figured I could make do with the cheap crap until a sale came along.
I cheaped out and went to WalMart. Got th ehouse brand bag for 14.95. No waist strap and so cheap, it reeks. Use a neoprene laptop sleeve to augment the porr cushioning. I like the Patagonia and the REI bags but I figured I could make do with the cheap crap until a sale came along.
#6
I just got an Inertia designs "Pro" messenger bag. Bag in a bag style so it is waterproof, made in usa (California) and the bag is great. I have a garment bag from them I use to carry my full suit, shoes etc. to and from work. I noticed that about after a year one of use one the clothes hangars in the bag was breaking down. I contacted Inertia regarding the life time warranty and they sent me a loaner to use while mine was being fixed. No receipt, no credit card # needed!
After a year of use! Anyway I had some ideas on how to improve the bag which they thought were worthwhile design changes. So I got my new & improved bag back, no$'s and the messenger bag as a "thanks" from the company for the ideas. Small business gotta love em'.
After a year of use! Anyway I had some ideas on how to improve the bag which they thought were worthwhile design changes. So I got my new & improved bag back, no$'s and the messenger bag as a "thanks" from the company for the ideas. Small business gotta love em'.
#7
SERENITY NOW!!!

Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,739
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From: In the 212
Bikes: Haro Vector, IRO Rob Roy, Bianchi Veloce
Can that thing hold a case of beer? That's the usual test.
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HHCMF - Take pride in your ability to amaze lesser mortals! - MikeR

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HHCMF - Take pride in your ability to amaze lesser mortals! - MikeR

We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!
#8
Junior Member
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 12
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I'm looking at the chrome bags myself. How big is the metropolis? It looks huge from the pictures on the site. I'm leaning towards the Citizen, a little smaller, but now I'm wondering how much it'll actually hold. Anybody have any experience or opinions? Think the metropolis is 2000 cu in and the citizen is 1200.
#9
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From: Arlington, VA
Bikes: 80's Shogun SS Conversion, 2006 Marin Muirwoods Urban, Schwinn High Sierra MTB (ancient)
Originally Posted by jyossarian
Can that thing hold a case of beer? That's the usual test.
This has been the one hangup regarding my attempts at maintaining a more bike-friendly lifestyle. Biking to the grocery store is great, but biking home without beer isn't.
the bag in question is 11 by 14 by 11, I think I'll be good for a 6 of boston ale, or magic hat, or pbr, or...
#10
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,602
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From: Cleveland
Bikes: Pugsley, fixie commuter, track bike
Originally Posted by ImpFreak7
I'm looking at the chrome bags myself. How big is the metropolis? It looks huge from the pictures on the site. I'm leaning towards the Citizen, a little smaller, but now I'm wondering how much it'll actually hold. Anybody have any experience or opinions? Think the metropolis is 2000 cu in and the citizen is 1200.
I normally carry a pump, thermos, lock, change of clothes, and necessary tools in mine. However occasionally I pick up groceries or dinner and the extra space comes in handy.
Now the Kremlin looks absolutely enormous. That is what the messengers use so they can handle the largest of packages.
Craig
#11
cars are fun
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 235
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From: Baton Rouge, LA
FYI someone my PerformanceBike shopping cart screwed up because every item I looked at ended up going into my cart, and I didnt see until after I had ordered it. So I ended up buying an TimBuk2 right after I bought a Chrome Metro. PerformanceBike said they couldnt cancel the order, even though it hadnt shipped yet
but I didnt fight it because it was 99 cent shipping. I guess I'll have a pretty good un-biased side-by-side comparison this weekend. Unless the TimBuk2 blows me out of the water, it'll be returned next week.
but I didnt fight it because it was 99 cent shipping. I guess I'll have a pretty good un-biased side-by-side comparison this weekend. Unless the TimBuk2 blows me out of the water, it'll be returned next week.
#12
Camo Shorts
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 68
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From: Washington, DC
Bikes: Nishiki Olympic 12 SS, CAAD9, Soma Rush
The metropolis will carry a case (24) of beer, a few books books and some clothes all at once and still properly close so that it will be rain-proof, but that's getting close to it's limit. I regularly use it to carry the bike gear like a lock, multi-tool, co2 inflater plus a full change of clothes, a towel, shoes and a 6 pack or a couple bottles of wine. I've never felt like it was getting too close to full for that, but if I switched the 6 pack to a 12 pack, it would get tight.
#13
Senior Member
Joined: Jul 2006
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My wife and I use Crumpler messenger bags (Barley Rustle Blanket) and love them. They are unique (at least in these parts), very comfortable, and even though I commute in the rain (sometimes forgetting my rear fender!) they strangely stay quite clean.
I highly recommend Crumpler.
I highly recommend Crumpler.
#14
2-Cyl, 1/2 HP @ 90 RPM

Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 15,762
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From: NYC
Bikes: 04' Specialized Hardrock Sport, 03' Giant OCR2 (SOLD!), 04' Litespeed Firenze, 04' Giant OCR Touring, 07' Specialized Langster Comp
I had a crumpler messenger bag that was perfect for a laptop, change of clothes, lunch, and a small electrician's tool kit. I ended up giving that to a coworker for his motorcycle and then he died.
My experience is that the timbuk2 (medium) is better with a small load and gets cumbersome when its fully loaded. My chrome metro's the exact opposite, it feels kind of loose with my usual load of lunch, work clothes, and pair of sneakers.
But every couple of days when I really need to stuff it, it feels great on my back. If I were you and I don't plan on carrying around too much, the citizen stuffed would work pretty well.
I got my chrome in all white vinyl, which is basically two thick liner type layers instead of the usual liner and nylon. The advantage is that it's completely slick and doesn't absorb any water or sweat at all. The disadvantage is that it's completely slick and doesn't absorb any water or sweat at all.
My experience is that the timbuk2 (medium) is better with a small load and gets cumbersome when its fully loaded. My chrome metro's the exact opposite, it feels kind of loose with my usual load of lunch, work clothes, and pair of sneakers.
But every couple of days when I really need to stuff it, it feels great on my back. If I were you and I don't plan on carrying around too much, the citizen stuffed would work pretty well.
I got my chrome in all white vinyl, which is basically two thick liner type layers instead of the usual liner and nylon. The advantage is that it's completely slick and doesn't absorb any water or sweat at all. The disadvantage is that it's completely slick and doesn't absorb any water or sweat at all.
#15
Member
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 28
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Read and be informed:
https://www.fixedgeargallery.com/reviews/messengerbags/
Personally I have a Chrome Metropolis and love it. Since I got it as a Christmas present I can't really complain, but I would have checked out the BaileyWorks bag too. My brother has the smaller Chrome bag, the Citizen, and when you throw in work clothes, shoes, and lunch the bag is stuffed. I like that the Metro has enough room for all that and more. Of course the flip side of the argument is that when not fully loaded the Citizen fits better because it is smaller.
https://www.fixedgeargallery.com/reviews/messengerbags/
Personally I have a Chrome Metropolis and love it. Since I got it as a Christmas present I can't really complain, but I would have checked out the BaileyWorks bag too. My brother has the smaller Chrome bag, the Citizen, and when you throw in work clothes, shoes, and lunch the bag is stuffed. I like that the Metro has enough room for all that and more. Of course the flip side of the argument is that when not fully loaded the Citizen fits better because it is smaller.
#17
Originally Posted by CBBaron
The fixed gear/track forums have many discussions about what the best messenger bag is for a cyclists.
The nice thing about a cheap bag is that it affords you the opportunity to try the messenger bag option, both in terms of comofort and size, before commiting a good chunk of cash on a high quality one.
For me, the biggest challenge was determining the appropriate size. I've got a Chrome Citizen & Crumpler Barney which I find just about perfect for my needs (change of clothes, lunch, bits and pieces). I've got a Crumpler Seed for when I need a bit more capacity.
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This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
Last edited by dobber; 08-16-06 at 12:16 PM.
#18
Thread Starter
ANTE UP
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From: Arlington, VA
Bikes: 80's Shogun SS Conversion, 2006 Marin Muirwoods Urban, Schwinn High Sierra MTB (ancient)
I ended up ordering a Timbuk2 classic, size L from performance. With a 20% discount applied it comes out to around $14 more than the Auclair.
Last edited by a bit racialist; 08-16-06 at 12:21 PM.
#19
Originally Posted by ridelugs
timbuk2 bags are chinese now. lame sauce.
__________________
This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
This is Africa, 1943. War spits out its violence overhead and the sandy graveyard swallows it up. Her name is King Nine, B-25, medium bomber, Twelfth Air Force. On a hot, still morning she took off from Tunisia to bomb the southern tip of Italy. An errant piece of flak tore a hole in a wing tank and, like a wounded bird, this is where she landed, not to return on this day, or any other day.
#20
babyjuniorsonofa*****
Joined: May 2006
Posts: 266
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From: denver
Bikes: '83-'84? Nishiki Prestige
i've had a medium timbuk2 for about three years now. when i started commuting, i bought an extra large used, with the tags still on it, for very cheap. i use the medium for most commutes, i travel pretty light. but the extra large is great for grocery/beer runs. i can fit a 30 pack in that thing with room to spare, and it's still pretty comfortable.
#21
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2005
Posts: 1,602
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From: Cleveland
Bikes: Pugsley, fixie commuter, track bike
Originally Posted by dobber
Best as in which is most fashionable or carries the most street cred?
The nice thing about a cheap bag is that it affords you the opportunity to try the messenger bag option, both in terms of comofort and size, before commiting a good chunk of cash on a high quality one.
The nice thing about a cheap bag is that it affords you the opportunity to try the messenger bag option, both in terms of comofort and size, before commiting a good chunk of cash on a high quality one.
I havn't tried many different bags but the cheap ones look to be a completely different bag than the Chrome I have. I'm sure I'd be just as unhappy with a cheap messenger bag as I am happy with my Chrome. I do think there are other bags and backpacks I would be happy with but I am not sorry about my choice.
Actually the biggest problem I have with my Chrome is that people think I am some kind of hip messenger. I try to counter act that by wearing a helmet mounted mirror and riding with fenders and lights.
Craig
#22
I've got a Timbuk2. I bought it off Craigslist used, so it's got two black panels and one blue/white camo panel in the middle. Not the flashiest or coolest looking, but sure is effin durable as hell. Mine's a medium, and it seriously holds a lot. Last thing that I love is the quick release strap-length adjuster.
Good stuff.
Good stuff.
#23
Thread Starter
ANTE UP
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From: Arlington, VA
Bikes: 80's Shogun SS Conversion, 2006 Marin Muirwoods Urban, Schwinn High Sierra MTB (ancient)
Originally Posted by shakeNbake
That's the nashbar bag.
For $40 it looks great.
For $40 it looks great.
Reading this post pretty much dissuaded me from buying that bag from nashbar.
#24
chrome, bailey works, reload, freight baggage, take your pick. i have a bailey works, i like the dimensions better than chrome. they are durable, waterproof, and have better strap mechanisms/pads compared to the timbuk2.
#25
Member
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 30
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From: Jamestown, NC
Bikes: Seven Alaris SG, Gary Fisher Sugar, LightSpeed Antares
I have a Chrome Metropolis and simply love it. I had the Timbuk2 first and didn't like the strap adjustment at all (I know it is a matter of taste), but the buckle is waht sold me on the Chrome. The first time that you have are tired from your ride and have to sling a fully loaded bag over your shoulder and almost take off your head, you will appreciate the seat belt buckle disconnect of the Chrome (makes it worth every extra penny you just spent) for easy removal without slinging over the head. Also, from what I read, the Timbuk2 is still made in the USA unless you purchase their laptop specific bags and they are now being made in China (and all other may follow suit shortly, but for now the Messenger bags are still made in the USA, by chinese women though I beleive).




