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#1
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how to do fork bags?
Tell me about how you are using fork-mounted bags for bike-camping.
...either the cage-mounted (Swift, etc) or the direct-mounted (e.g. Ortlieb, Tailfin). What are you packing inside? How heavy is too heavy (or too big)? Do these play nice with other front baggage? Tell me the things I should know! |
#2
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I use Tailfin mounts, King ti cages, and Revelate bags.
Usually put hammock/tarp/stakes in one side and kitchen and a few odds/ends in the other leg. Like a bar bag, you need to be careful with overloading and impacting steering feel. Less so since the weight is low, but still need to put the heavy stuff inside the frame or saddlebag (as close to front as possible). Plus… Small cage on bars for camp chair and sandals. Saddle bag with sleep system, food, and camp clothes. Half frame bag for 3l water bladder. Longer trips, the water goes into a backpack. Frame bag gets more food/snacks and tools. |
#3
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Cage mounted for me, as they allow me to strap my shelter to each leg, and quickly remove for setup. Hammock/straps on one side, and rainfly/stakes on the other.
Sleeping pad and Quilt (or bag depending on temps) on handlebars, then seatbag for clothes, pillow, extras. Frame bag holds stove, food, flask, tools. |
#4
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Not unlike Alistair I mount my kitchen (stove, pot, lighter, dehydrated food pouches, etc) on one side and my big agnes bikepacking tent on the other side. Tent has it's own packing system so I only need one fork bag and it comes in at just under three lbs, so I try to get my kitchen side to about that weight (at least at the beginning of the trip and I make guesses along the way). I'm using topeak versa cages because they're plastic and are easy to drill/modify for forks that don't have the bottle cage or 3 bolt mount options.
Photo is when I was fully loaded for a 6 day trip with unknown refill options (aka carrying more than I needed). https://imgur.com/a/WBakGzz |
#5
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I've used the Salsa Anything cages with Roadrunner buoy bags to good effect. I have King Manything cages but prefer the fuller enclosing with stuff sacks vs water bottles.
When bikepacking with family, I've put a sleeping bag on each side for balance. I've also done a tent on one side and bag on the other when the tent poles either in the frame bag of strapped on the fork next to the buoy bag. For the cooking kit to fit, you have to make sure your pot diameter is right for your bag. I just got a new pot to enable this option. Because of the multiple bags involved, I've found it takes more time to dial a bikepacking setup vs a backpacking set up. A pot being 1cm to big in diameter tends to matter a lot more with bikepacknig. Depending on the frame size and bags, the right items for the frame vs saddle vs handlebar bag seem to vary, so there's a lot of trail and error. Once I dial a system for a particular bike, I try to take some pictures for next time. |
#6
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Quote:
Only downside was that the side packs suck to mess with during the day due to the voile strap attachment and roll top. I lost my rain pants in southern nm after not rolling the top tight enough when putting them away (dumb mistake but I was wiped) and while it didn’t end up being a big deal, I’d definitely make sure going forward that I only pack nighttime gear there to reduce on-bike fiddling. |
#7
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A few good shots of Stefan Rohner et all, who I consider to be a very experienced bikepacker. I’m not sure of his gear selection, but the photos might tell the tale for you and he’s easy to correspond with.
https://stefanrohner.exposure.co/htt...iversales-2022 |
#8
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Everything cages with Sea to Summit 5L dry bags, strapped to the cages with voile straps. Stove, food, clothes go in those. Sleep system is in the saddle bag. That works with small frame bag for tools and tent poles and odd items, and small Ortlieb handlebar bag for additional small items, donning and doffing clothes.
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#9
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Quote:
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#10
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Stuff that I dont need riding generally. Camp flip flops, camp clothes, etc.
That said, on big long rides outside of civilization, I've run cages and strapped nalgene water bottles there too.
__________________
http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#11
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Many helpful responses and pictures. Thank you!
I'm hoping to experiment a bit locally. The Ortlieb bags I picked up a while back are a clever design and work OK for commutes, but it sounds like a regular bag with a compression strap may keep things more steady for dirt touring. Stefan's pics are Nat Geo quality. Love those. |
#12
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Quote:
https://ortliebusa.com/product/fork-pack/ I don't see a "normal" bag secured with Viole straps being any more secure than these. And the quick disconnect is probably nice - that should speed up camp setup and tear down each day, plus no straps to drop/lose in the dark. |
#13
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I use manythings cages + straps + silnylon packs. Relative to orlieb (which I love) my system weighs half as much but lacks ortlieb's handy and cool quick-release.
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#14
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I use plastic Anything cages and 5L Sea to Summit dry bags. One is stuffed with a mylar blanket, tarp, and hammock. The other a 5x3 piece of Tyvek, under quilt, over quilt, pillow, and stakes. I agree that you shouldn't put anything you'll need before reaching your sleep destination in the fork bags.
Untitled by ColonelJLloyd, on Flickr |
#15
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I’ve been happy with the Blackburn fork cages with Revelate Polecat bag combination on my Litespeed. Very reasonably priced, easy to mount, and relatively lightweight.
Last edited by mtbmoose; 10-24-2024 at 10:51 AM. |
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