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Tip: Brompton spill-over daysack
For those who are sometimes wanting more luggage capacity for a Brompton, which doesn't require permanently adding a rack, here is a relatively low-cost and multifunctional solution, not just for Bromptons but travel in general. If flying with a Brompton you usually have 1 checked bag for free - the Brompton, and one hand-luggage, say the C-bag so the daysack is inside your single hand-luggage.
The Brompton luggage system is very strong and all the high-density items are in the pannier, so the daysack is only low-density stuff so the daysack doesn't need to be strong. Most backpacks either have a built-in stiffener to give them shape and reduce hard items in the backpack digging into the back. Daysacks are designed for much less and have basically a thin fabric all around and so these squish small, such as inside a Brompton Pannier. Also, in general, it is useful to own a sit-pad, a self-inflating mattress which squishes small when not required. For touring and day rides and multimodal commuting having something warm+dry to sit on during lunch or waiting at a bus-stop or train station is a boon. Finally, it rains and so some dry bags focus waterproofing where it is needed. Even if your pannier is "waterproof" you can still get water via opening the bag during rain to reach for example waterproofs as it starts raining, so those items you don't need during riding, place inside a dry bag. If you get one large enough for the day-sack you can make a waterproof backpack in effect. So here is the backpack stuffed next to a S-bag for comparison http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0620.jpg and on the back http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...end-result.jpg Here is a Brompton C-bag with rear left pocket zipped up, containing the backpack http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0612.jpg The contents not stuffed particularly tight. http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0613.jpg The parts laid out http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0614.jpg The parts are a
The sit mat inflated. You don't need it rigidly inflated just enough to stop items digging in you, in fact just the natural self-inflation pressure seems fine. http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0615.jpg The sit mat inside the daysack http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0616.jpg Dry bag inside http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0617.jpg Not stuffed, shown against Brompton C-bag http://i334.photobucket.com/albums/m...k/IMG_0618.jpg The more stuffed is the daysack, the less the need for the sit-mat to provide the shape to the daysack so you can let air out of the sit-mat as required to get stuff in. |
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