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Cycling Backpacks
Hey nice to meet you all! What do you all look for in a backpack? My company's making a backpack for cyclists and we'd love some feedback if possible.
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If I were to design a backpack that I'd use on my routes, it'd be a slightly wider, less tall Topeak Trunk Bag that slides onto the rear quick rack yet also has 4 attaching points on the flat side that is facing you back, for adjustable traditional backpack straps.
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Originally Posted by oliviac11
(Post 21972055)
Hey nice to meet you all! What do you all look for in a backpack? My company's making a backpack for cyclists and we'd love some feedback if possible.
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I've never used one for cycling buy have for hiking.
It should have a place for a bladder to hold water and somehow not sit directly on your back to increase ventilation and reduce a hot sweaty mess. |
Originally Posted by Kapusta
(Post 21972101)
I want it to have rack and fender mounts.
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Originally Posted by oliviac11
(Post 21972055)
What do you all look for in a backpack? My company's making a backpack for cyclists and we'd love some feedback if possible.
High contrast colors (hi-vis on black). Reflective patches on all sides. Mesh holder(s) on the sides for standard cycling water bottles. Fuzzy lined pocket(s) for storing riding glasses (lots of backpacks have this for cell phone storage I think). Three separate zippered compartments, for separating clean, wet, dirty, and electronic things, with more sub-divides in each, for organization. Comfortable padded shoulder straps. Latch to secure the shoulder straps together at the nipple line. Large enough to carry change of clothes, lunch, and shoes for when I get to work. Horizontal piece of nylon at the very bottom for mounting clip-on tail-light. If any one of those features were missing, I'd probably not buy it. And the one thing my current commuting backpack doesn't have, that I really wish it did, was a built in way (hook and loop maybe?) to manage the tightening cords of the shoulder straps, so they don't flop around while riding. Right now I have to wrap them around and just hope they stay. DM me for my Venmo account # for sending me the consultation fees :) It took me years to find one, but here's the one I use that meets all that criteria. Good luck on competing with their high volume pricing though: https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...a326462266.jpg |
Originally Posted by Kapusta
(Post 21972101)
I want it to have rack and fender mounts.
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...60a387e14c.jpg |
Originally Posted by oliviac11
(Post 21972055)
Hey nice to meet you all! What do you all look for in a backpack? My company's making a backpack for cyclists and we'd love some feedback if possible.
For times when I put my bike in my car for rides where I'm driving to the start (after-work rides, most often), I have found that one of my daughter's softball backpacks is excellent for packing the gear I need because of the following features: - Main compartment has a removable separation panel, dividing it into upper and lower sections. The upper section I use for clothing. The lower section is accessible with its own mesh-panel zippered flap, which makes it great for shoes. - Exterior pockets (intended for bats) make a great place for water bottles. - Front smaller pocket for computer, lights, etc. - Helmet-holder (tucks away in a zippered pocket when not in use) The one I use is similar to this... https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon....AC_SL1414_.jpg |
Originally Posted by Riveting
(Post 21972163)
Like this? I could see a definitely see a backpack pannier being practical:
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...60a387e14c.jpg That would be a backpack mount. I don't need a backpack mount on my backpack. |
Sounds good! What kind of cycling do you mainly do on your routes?
Originally Posted by Troul
(Post 21972091)
If I were to design a backpack that I'd use on my routes, it'd be a slightly wider, less tall Topeak Trunk Bag that slides onto the rear quick rack yet also has 4 attaching points on the flat side that is facing you back, for adjustable traditional backpack straps.
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https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...22ef39d9d2.jpg
Trash Garbage Barge https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...d04038c187.jpg https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...6c88f49c8b.jpg I switched from a CHROME Kremlin to a TRASH Garbage Vortex ... the Trash is a very large back pack and is easier for bigger loads ... any back pack design should at least consider how Andy at Trash did the Garbage back packs:) |
Originally Posted by oliviac11
(Post 21972185)
Sounds good! What kind of cycling do you mainly do on your routes?
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For wearing while cycling, but that's awesome that you use your daughter's softball backpack for your gear 😂 Do you ever carry smaller packs while riding?
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Originally Posted by Troul
(Post 21972205)
road & hybrid. the racks on each bicycle type are equipped for the same quick rack slides. I'd ride the bicycle to work more if I were able to stow my laptop in the trunk rack bag if it were wider. It's robust enough, just not wide enough.
(not my pics) https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...02da9ca12c.jpg https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...86082108de.jpg |
Originally Posted by Riveting
(Post 21972223)
My Topeak MTX QuickTrack trunk has two fold down panniers that easily stores my laptop on one side, and a full change of clothes and sneakers in the other. And when not used, the panniers fold and zipper up nicely.
(not my pics) I think, if one is designed for a beam rack as described, it'd be the first for supporting those of us with beam racks & open up more traveling opportunities for the weight weenies too. |
Originally Posted by oliviac11
(Post 21972214)
For wearing while cycling, but that's awesome that you use your daughter's softball backpack for your gear 😂 Do you ever carry smaller packs while riding?
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My backpack would be not a backpack and a pannier and made in North America of quality components. Arkel already made it for me and I have had them for years with no issues.
Best feedback don't make junk or copy others. |
Osprey has covered all the bases, IMO- copy them.
I use Talon 22 for utility- mesh back panel is key, but pockets and helmet holder are nice. |
Everything that a Timbuk2 bag has, including a website that allows you to design you own bag and see what it will look like before you purchase it.
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Originally Posted by indyfabz
(Post 21972635)
Everything that a Timbuk2 bag has, including a website that allows you to design you own bag and see what it will look like before you purchase it.
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Cycling backpacks are dumb, like, straight-up-BTDT dumb. Maybe a hip pack with shoulder strap(s) for stabilization, weight distribution, and extended load capacity would make sense, but a backpack is a really stupid idea for cycling.
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Originally Posted by chaadster
(Post 21972729)
Cycling backpacks are dumb, like, straight-up-BTDT dumb. Maybe a hip pack with shoulder strap(s) for stabilization, weight distribution, and extended load capacity would make sense, but a backpack is a really stupid idea for cycling.
When I went to the gym (before it folded, taking a year+ of pre-paid membership with it) I brought shoes, towel, jacket, lights, lock, spare tire etc, and sometimes clothes change. Did not try to get that stuff in a hip pack. 1/2 hr each way. |
Originally Posted by woodcraft
(Post 21972776)
When I went to the gym (before it folded, taking a year+ of pre-paid membership with it) I brought shoes, towel, jacket, lights, lock, spare tire etc, and sometimes clothes change.
Did not try to get that stuff in a hip pack. 1/2 hr each way. There’s simply no good reason to carry weight on a bike high up on the rider’s back. It doesn’t make sense from either performance or ergonomic perspectives. It’s cheap, easy and convenient, but so is any ol’ backpack, and therein lies the problem. Rucksacks, aka backbacks, existed before the bicycle, yet we came to all sorts of contraptions to carry stuff on the bike, from rear racks, to porteurs to panniers, handlebar bags, seat bags, lumbar packs and messenger bags. All that should tell you something, not the least of which is that the backpack has been found to be wanting. |
Originally Posted by chaadster
(Post 21972797)
But any ol’ backpack will work for that. When we start talking about a cycling specific backback, when we get to the use scenarios which would distinguish it from any ol’ backpack, it gets real stupid real quick.
There’s simply no good reason to carry weight on a bike high up on the rider’s back. It doesn’t make sense from either performance or ergonomic perspectives. It’s cheap, easy and convenient, but so is any ol’ backpack, and therein lies the problem. Rucksacks, aka backbacks, existed before the bicycle, yet we came to all sorts of contraptions to carry stuff on the bike, from rear racks, to porteurs to panniers, handlebar bags, seat bags, lumbar packs and messenger bags. All that should tell you something, not the least of which is that the backpack has been found to be wanting. Hmm, come to think of it, I have way more backpacks than bicycles. Am I in the wrong forum? |
Originally Posted by woodcraft
(Post 21972845)
Hmm, come to think of it, I have way more backpacks than bicycles. Am I in the wrong forum?
One problem I used to have with backpacks while cycling was helmet interference. Maybe because my posture on the bike is more leaned forward rather than upright, the backpack would contact the back of my helmet, interfering with movement. I worked with a clothing designer friend years ago, in the early ‘90s— what up Randall Roy!— prototyping a backpack design for cycling which dropped the storage compartment well below the shoulder straps, for load stability, helmet clearance, and cooling. We didn’t have the technical material expertise to pull it off like it needed to, but the concept was good and he made me a couple of cool bags which I wish I’d held onto. My favorite on-body bag for cycling is the lumbar bag, specifically the Mountainsmith Tour: https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...ee6ed93e22.jpg If I really need load support, they have an optional strapette kit which I guess makes the Tour the ultimate cycling backpack: https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/bikefor...9d81368261.jpg |
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