Such was my plight when Black Diamond asked me to review a new
technical pack: the Speed 40. I took it out of the package, saw features on it
that were not like my old pack and I resolved not to like it. I would like to
say after 2 months of using it as my only guiding pack that my resolve has
lasted…but it hasn’t. The BD Speed 40 is quickly becoming my new, old stand-by
guiding pack!
I will admit that there was one feature on the Speed 40 that
I liked right off the bat – the removable hip belt. It’s a super functional hip belt, mind you,
with a gear loop and Ice Clipper attachment on both sides. However, people
might call me a bit weird for many reasons, but at the top of the list would be
the fact that I do not use my hip belt like the vast majority of folks. Having
the option to remove it is a change this old guide got used to quickly!
With the exception of the hip belt, most of the other
features on the Speed 40 were an acquired taste for me. For example, I was put
off by the new suspension system when I first put the pack on. It felt like the
pack was slipping around on my back because the shoulder straps are connected
through the hip belt on a cable that equalizes the weight on your shoulders
regardless of your body position. I will have to say however, that I have grown
blissfully accustomed to the security the Speed 40 offers me when I’m making
those off-balanced climbing moves…the moves my old pack used to threaten to pitch
me off of when the pack would shift unexpectedly.
Another thing: this pack has a pad built into the bottom of
it. Who does that? I mean, what a waste of space and weight, right?...wrong
again, old guide! Before I started using the Speed 40, I had to replace
anything remotely breakable in my first aid kit (which lives in the very bottom
of my pack) at an alarming rate. In the past two months I haven’t had to clean
my first aid kit even once – no broken vials, exploded ointments, or crushed aspirin
bottles. Who knew that a little pad could accomplish so much!
And what about those ice axe attachments? Why stress out an
old guide by changing my beloved ice axe loops or sleeve and buckle systems?
Maybe because it works?! BD’s new system is fast and light weight. The single
cord for each axe attachment is also great because it has no buckles associated
with it. You know the buckles I’m talking about –the ones that are forever
getting clogged with snow…the ones that are infuriatingly difficult to open or
close when you have gloves on.
And then there is the closure at the top of the body of the
pack. The Speed 40 has a dry bag-like closure that rolls down and then clips
together with a buckle. What self-respecting old guide needs to deal with that?
Why not just stick with the tried and true draw cord closure system. I mean, I’m
a climbing guide not a raft guide after all! Such was my thinking before
all my days out this winter in spindrift and wind-driven snow. Those days used
to bring me home to discover in the pack emptying process that snow had gotten
into every nook and cranny in my pack…even my first aid kit at the bottom of my
pack! Not anymore - BD’s new closure system leaves me with a spin ‘driftless’
pack at day’s end. Who’d of thought?!
I could go on, but I’ll let this review rest. Like I said
earlier, my original goal was to send the BD Speed 40 back to its maker with
its tail between its legs…evidently; I failed miserably in my task. It looks
like the Speed 40 is the pack I’ll be comparing BD’s next new pack to. I’ve
said it before and I’m forced to say it again: I guess you can teach an
old guide new tricks!
Bob Chase
Colorado Mountain School Guide
800-836-4008 x3
1 comment:
Hi,
I was wondering if skis can be attached to the side of this pack using the compression straps? Also, are their straps to possibly accommodate a sleeping bag on the top or bottom?
Thanks!
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