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- The North Face Thresher Hydration Pack - 250cu in - 2008
- Hydration Packs - Small
- Backpacks
- Camp/Hike
The North Face Thresher Hydration Pack - 250cu in - 2008
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The North Face Thresher Hydration Pack - 250cu in - 2008
Grab The North Face Thresher Hydration Pack and fill the two-liter water reservoir for your bike ride. Secure your bike pump in the outside elastic pump holder, and stick a windbreaker under the exterior bungee cords. The North Face Thresher Pack's foam back panel and air-mesh shoulder straps keep you cool as you start your uphill battle, and the removable waist belt tightens for bumpy rides down the mountain. The antimicrobial Nalgene water reservoir helps prevent mysterious organisms from camping out in the bladder, and the magnetic bite valve stays out of the way as you ride.
Bottom Line: When you're on the move without a whole lot of gear, grab The North Face Thresher Hydration Pack.
Talk shop with all the gear freaks out there: ask 'em questions, upload/browse photos, and give your 2¢.
Too small
By: alienpotato
October 23, 2008
I got the Dogfish which is similar but a little bigger (370 cu in) and I find that on too small. I would say get one of the bigger packs unless you're looking for a pack to wear under your jacket. My other complaint would be that in cold conditions the water in the tube will freeze. Some other packs come with a material that covers the tube that combats this. I cut up an old tie to do the same thing. It helps a little.
Too little, not very durable
By: fisher
August 7, 2008
I was satisfied with this pack until I realized you can't fit much more in the pocket besides a wallet and a cell phone. I could've dealt with that but then the bladder nozzle started leaking for no apparent reason so I had to send it back.
Great until I destroyed it.
By: dsmoyer2303443
July 14, 2008
This pack works great but I accidentally melted the hydration pouch while trying to clean it. I now use the Camelbak Bottle. I still use the empty hydration bladder carrier for the ten essentails on day hikes.
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Change me.






