[pct-l] Pack weight?

Ken Powers ken at gottawalk.com
Thu Mar 10 18:32:02 CST 2011


I wonder what the bear who drug down this air bag would think when it bit 
into it?
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "'Sourdough' Foster" <athruhiker2006 at yahoo.com>
To: "Kevin Cook" <hikelite at gmail.com>; "Timothy Nye" <timpnye at gmail.com>
Cc: <pct-l at backcountry.net>
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2011 2:45 PM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Pack weight?


WoW....and thinking of the backpacking multipurpose philosophy a bit more, 
you
could use a longer cord and suspend your food 100' in the air at night 
avoiding
any and all bear encounters, loss of food and/or having to carry a canister.
Hmmm :-) Wonder if the Ranger would still write you a fine cause it wasn't 
in a
canister?? LOL








________________________________
From: Kevin Cook <hikelite at gmail.com>
To: Timothy Nye <timpnye at gmail.com>
Cc: pct-l at backcountry.net
Sent: Thu, March 10, 2011 4:53:12 PM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Pack weight?

Just calibrate your balloon to suspend your base weight. You can at least
carry your food and water ;)
How will you refill the hydrogen you cooked with at town?

My concern would be the balloon blowing around.

You did bring to mind another benefit this might provide. For a nobo hiker,
the balloon could provide shade since the Sun is usually at your back.

I know this was all in jest, but now I'm curious. Has anyone tried this? I
did a quick search and can;t find anything. I wonder what the problems are.
Maybe changing elevation causes issues? Would helium escape (hydrogen would
make me nervous)?

On Thu, Mar 10, 2011 at 10:59 AM, Timothy Nye <timpnye at gmail.com> wrote:

> >
> > Ron,
> >
>
> The preferable approach is the Gourmet pack lightening / stove fuel
> combination system.
>
> I've purchased a surplus weather balloon which I've inflated with hydrogen
> and attached at the top of my pack with about six inches clearance. The
> amount of hydogen used is calibrated to offset the weight of the pack. The
> balloon is fitted with a valve and a flexible length of tubing that I've
> hooked up to the fire ring of an old Coleman camp stove. The beauty of
> this
> approach is that as your pack gets lighter with the consumption of your
> food
> the then excess hydrogen is utilized to cook your meals. Of course, no one
> has to worry about fuel spills causing wildfires either. I've submitted a
> prototype to backpackinglight.com for a review and expect to soon bask in
> the resulting fame and fortune.
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