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Outdoor Research Helium Compression Sacks squish your clothes, sleeping bag, and other gear to minimize the amount of pack space you need for a long trip. Not only that, but the Helium Compression Sacks also include end pockets to stash small items. Thanks to Outdoor Research's use of ripstop silnylon fabric, these bags weight a fraction of regular nylon compression sacks.
Bottom Line: Once you have the Outdoor Research Helium Compression Sacks, your large backpack will gather dust while your small bag gets more trail time.
A size "2" would be about perfect. You can use the chat function to find out when/if they expect the next shipment to come in since the "2" is not currently available.
When I got a job and put my dirtbagging days behind me, one of the first things I got was a compression sack for my down sleeping bag. My first sack was the Granite Gear Air - it looked stylish, came in a little plastic case, had a neat logo, and so I thought I'd now be the envy of the campsite. Well, after about a year of stuffing my sleeping bag into it, the Granite Gear sack tore. It tore right at the edge where I'd hold it with my left hand as I stuffed it with the right. Granite? More like choss! At the time I thought that maybe stuffsacks are just meant to be disposable like that, like so many other conveniences of our consumer culture. So instead of buying one of the fancy ones, I went to the Outdoor Research outlet store in Seattle and picked up this Helium sack. It definitely doesn't look flashy - the colors are very granola. The first thing I noticed about it was that two of the straps are on snaps. Compared with my old sack, where none were on snaps (just cinches), this made putting it all together much easier. Without snaps, you're left to untangle the "cap" part of the sack every time you put it on, which is not the most fun activity when you want to just pack up and go. With the Helium's snaps, it's a no-brainer - just cap, snap, and cinch! But even more importantly, I've been using this sack for 3 years now, expecting it to rip like the last one, but it's holding together nice and strong. Since I wouldn't mind trying another sack for novelty's sake, I don't hold back when stuffing this guy. I push and pull on it like I'm shoving a demon back into hell. And yet it's held up perfectly. Looks like I'll be stuck with this ugly sack for a while!
Although that would be totally cool, no, they are called "helium" compression sacks because they weigh very little.These things are so light you should use these anchors to hold them down:http://www.backcountry.com/store/ODR0370/Exped-Snow-and-Sand-Anchor-5-Pack.html
This is a great compression sack. They're wicked light and make my sleeping bag super compact, which is I guess the intent. They work very well as do all OR products!
I have a pair of Big Agnes Cross Mountain 40 degree synthetic sleeping bags (one is a regular and one is a long). I use a size "2" for both of them and I have no problem getting them in these bags. However if your sleeping bags are rated for a lower temperature and thus have more loft they probably won't fit.You'll need at least the XL size for two synthetic sleeping bags. If they were down, you could make it work with the large.
I picked up two of these and they are great. The material is light-weight and still very durable. Also when not in use everything tucks into a built in pocket in the lid. The design with 2 permanent cinch straps on one side and 2 quick-buckle cinch straps on the other work great. All in all a great product.
I have a pretty heavy duty tent for winter camping and it takes up most of the pack. Can I use a compression sack for the tent or will it lose some of its durability being compressed to that degree? Thanks
In my experience, tents don't tend to reduce much in a compression sack; either you roll/fold them up nice and tight (w/o trapped air), or you don't. The heavier floor fabrics used aren't going to "squish" in a lateral compression sack. In general, tents can be re-rolled longer/thinner, or shorter/squatter, based on how you fold it before rolling. Poles are also limiting in how you pack the tent. HTH.I agree. The most advantageous use for compression stuff sacks are clothes & sleeping bags.
Did exactly what it was supposed to, the way i needed it to. I can finally fit my sleeping bag IN my pack, instead of strapping it to the outside:) really rounds out my gear- a near essential.
These sacks are great- superior design and materials. Hardest part is picking out the correct sized sack. Id suggest getting one thats a few inches taller than your sleeping bag, it makes it easy to stuff the sack and then pull the compression straps to smash it. Solid buy
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