Morning all,
After getting the bottle on the underside of my downtime covered in s**t all to often, my riding buddy suggested the obvious of reinstating the frame bag I ditched to carry the bottles and shove a bladder in there.
I know a lot of folk from these parts have done this, are there any particular bladders that lend themselves to this better than my 1.5 camelbak antidote - as this folds and traps water quite a bit.
Its a fairly small frame bag on a 16" ScandAl frame but I take on a fair amount of water when I ride.
Thanks folks
Drew
Hydration bladder in a framebag
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
I tried that in a small framebag and didn't like it as it took up too much room. I now have a 750 ml bottle in a stem cell which works a treat.
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Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
I tried this at the weekend on the peak 200. Didn't like it. Had to lean forward in to what felt like an awkward position to drink, could be fixed with a longer tube I suppose.
The main issue I had was not having An accurate idea of how much water I had left.
Could you put your bottle in a plastic bag before you put it on the down tube?
Going to try a stem cell next.
The main issue I had was not having An accurate idea of how much water I had left.
Could you put your bottle in a plastic bag before you put it on the down tube?
Going to try a stem cell next.
Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
Fitting a crud catcher seems to keep the crap of my down tube mounted bottle.
Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
this is the answer. A fat gut fender is even widerIan wrote:Fitting a crud catcher seems to keep the crap of my down tube mounted bottle.

Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
I'd not read the pot fully but on two bikes I have partial frame bags and carry one bottle placed as far down the down tube as possible. one bike uses elite strap on bosses, the other a cut down mount skidmore adapter.
Speak to Beth at wildcat about this trickery - and get you framebag made wide, wide wide. In a frame that size it wont bulge too much as will not be very deep.
Speak to Beth at wildcat about this trickery - and get you framebag made wide, wide wide. In a frame that size it wont bulge too much as will not be very deep.

- johnnystorm
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Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
Bottle with a cap on the spout and just use it to refill a clean bottle?
Re: wide frame bags, I was set to buy a new one but my revelate/surly moonlander one fits my cooker. Tapers out to about 6" wide at the front. Not yet caught my knees on it!
Re: wide frame bags, I was set to buy a new one but my revelate/surly moonlander one fits my cooker. Tapers out to about 6" wide at the front. Not yet caught my knees on it!

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Re: Hydration bladder in a framebag
I use a 1l or sometimes a 2l source liquirainer. These are not bladders but not bottles either. Very lightweight and quite cheap.
http://sourceoutdoor.com/en/liquitainer ... aterbottle
I put this in the frame bag and have a source tubing set attached. You can attach this set to rigid bottles to.
https://www.rosebikes.co.uk/article/sou ... GwodQVcA-w
If you carry two 1l source containers you can have one for clean water and one for dirty as they will connect directly to a sawer water filter. Lightweight and versatile water system.
I attach the mouthpiece by putting some Velcro around the tube near the mouthpiece, and then some Velcro around my wildcat harness. Easy to pull off tube to drink when needed.
http://sourceoutdoor.com/en/liquitainer ... aterbottle
I put this in the frame bag and have a source tubing set attached. You can attach this set to rigid bottles to.
https://www.rosebikes.co.uk/article/sou ... GwodQVcA-w
If you carry two 1l source containers you can have one for clean water and one for dirty as they will connect directly to a sawer water filter. Lightweight and versatile water system.
I attach the mouthpiece by putting some Velcro around the tube near the mouthpiece, and then some Velcro around my wildcat harness. Easy to pull off tube to drink when needed.