Probably the easiest and most useful of my MYOG projects. Made from an Alpkit 20l airlok extra. Sort of following Alpkit's own MYOG seatpack thread on their own site but I first cut out the base then laid it out flat rotated at 90 degrees to their version so I would have the tabs to each side and a horizontal opening. Not huge in size but it takes my sleeping bag very nicely. I seam sealed the new seam but as it carries my sleeping bag I will take the extra precaution of putting it in an airlock drybag first (which weighs very little). No leg rub and I hardly noticed it was there. I did notice an improvement to the steering with less weight on the bars though.
Last edited by Ray Young on Mon May 13, 2013 9:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
Tidy looking seatpack. :) You couldn't post up the link to the Alpkit guide could you? I've just been looking around their website and I can't seem to locate it.
Hi Jack, on Google search type in "diy saddlebag alpkit" and it will bring it up. If you want full instructions as to how I did it I'm happy to oblige because like I say I did mine a little different.
Ray, what's the advantage of mod other than the profile is slightly better? That's never been that much of an issue for me, not really any leg rub with an unmodded bag. The mod loses space
jamiep wrote:Ray, what's the advantage of mod other than the profile is slightly better? That's never been that much of an issue for me, not really any leg rub with an unmodded bag. The mod loses space
Hi Jamie, sorry I misread this earlier. I have tried mounting unmodded 8l bags and was never happy with the result. I just happened to have a 20l bag going spare so thought why not, otherwise it would never get used.