Well, FWIW, I'm still using the Lowepro Mini Trekker AW.

I've used it since the days I mostly carried only 3 lenses - Tokina 28-70 f/2.8; Tokina 80-200 f/2.8 and Sigma 300 f/2.8 plus one body (K10D or K20D) with the other carried on my sling with FA-50 f/1.4 mounted

... or alternatively with the other body carried on the sling with the 28-70 f/2.8 mounted & the FA-50 f/1.4 in the bag.

Plus a Sigma 1.4 tele-converter, strobe, spare batteries, chargers & a few other accessories.

[... and later the K-3 & K20D ... and later still the K-1/K-3 and most recently K-1/K-3 with the IR converted K20D - 1 in the bag, 1 on the sling & the K20D on a neck strap]

If I need to carry any more than that I have the Lowepro Nature Trekker AW II.

Haven't thought about looking for another bag for a while, but I might get a Lowepro CompuTrekker AW - just looking at them it seems to be the same as my workhorse Mini Trekker, but with room for a laptop.

I also HAVE the Lowepro Fastpak 350 - got it real cheap from Tiger Direct when they had a retail store in the area. Didn't take too long to figure out WHY it was so cheap - didn't have enough carrying capacity to be useful.

You do realize that IF you could find a general purpose, all-around bag suitable for EVERY occasion, it wouldn't be an unending quest.

Had a GREAT Thanksgiving. Everything I cooked WORKED.

I've still got leftovers to pack away, just as soon as I take a nap ...


On 11/23/2023 4:51 PM, Larry Colen wrote:
I hope that everyone is enjoying their American day of gluttony.    I have a 
topic of conversation that is about as prone to consensus as family 
thanksgiving debates about politics or religion should prove as popular with 
y'all as off topic threads about whisky or an interminable pun thread:  gear 
storage and transport, aka camera bags and related.  I will observe that 
preferences for camera bags, tend to be even more personal than preferences in 
the bedroom, and one’s individual needs, even more diverse.  Hell, my camera 
bag needs will change dramatically depending on whether I’m driving some place 
for astrolandscapes, or going for a hike in the woods.  So…

Before you tell me what works for you, think about what I say about my needs, 
and first let me know of what you think would solve my problems, then you can 
mention why your preference is the one true camera bag.

For many years, I used a Lowepro Fastpak 350, it was big enough to hold all, or 
then most, of my lenses. Then two things happened, they stopped making them, 
and I got my K-1.  With my K-1 I got a bunch more full frame wider angle of 
view lenses, many of which are modern designs which are also bigger and 
heavier.  There just wasn’t room in the 350, and I replaced that with a Tenba, 
which was a bit bigger, and also had external straps for a tripod which worked 
until I expanded my lens collection even more. Now that bag is just way to 
effing heavy if I want to be prepared “for whatever”.

Also, my job moved to Riverside (about 400 miles south of my home base in Santa 
Cruz) and I’m spending most of my time there, where I now need to rethink how I 
store the gear that I’m not immediately using.

I’ve been muddling along, and yesterday saw an ad for a think tank rolling 
airporter bag.  At first the system looks awesome, if pricey and there’s a 
Neewer 2 in 1 for less than half the price, that also has backpack straps.  
But,  I really don’t need wheels, and don’t plan to do much flying in the near 
future anyways.  Besides I have a Pelican case, which in many ways is great, 
but all that protection weighs a lot and takes up a lot of space.

One challenge that I face is that lenses tend to come in three size ranges:

small:  classic Pentax primes,  and most micro 4/3

Medium:  modern primes and classic zooms

Large: modern zooms, and classic telephoto

The challenge is that a camera bag that fits medium/large lenses could carry 
the small lenses stacked two deep, or stacked over a compartment filled with 
speedlights etc. but end up with the smaller lenses rattling around loosely.

I have found myself with three systems:

Micro 4/3: I carry my micro 4/3 on my bike.  It does better than my phone 
(though my phone is catching up) and is about half the weight of my APS Pentax.

APS DSLR:  My K-3 III makes a great daily driver system.  In most shooting 
situations the results are either indistinquishable from my K-1, or often 
better.  It also has the advantage of the lenses being lighter, and my 
telephotos have greater reach (yeah I could crop on the K-1 but it still has a 
faster frame rate, and better autofocus).

Full Frame DSLR:  When I need a wider angle of view the K-1 still works better 
than the K-3III because physics.  The K-1 lenses all work on the K-3 III but 
often at the cost of weighing twice as much.

What I think that I’d like is a few camera bags, one primarily dedicated to 
each camera body, with the lenses I most use with that body, and some way of 
storing the rest of my lenses, so that I could pick and choose what I need for 
that day of shooting, or just pack everything up for a photo trip and carry it 
fairly securely.

I haven’t found good camera cases for the storage/transport issue, but for a 
while I was using the old Rigid toolbox system for something similar, and the 
new boxes seem to be much improved.  Not quite Pelican quality, but still 
fairly weather proof, solid and the smaller box is only $30:
https://www.homedepot.com/p/RIDGID-2-0-Pro-Gear-System-Power-Tool-Case-254069/320483553
I suspect that some well made dividers and padding could turn these into 
something that would work well, with the cases sorted by use case.  One 
question would be how to make the dividers and padding.  As an aside I suspect 
that there’s a market opportunity for turning these job boxes into photo gear 
boxes.

My Tenba is pretty good for holding a lot of gear, and will probably continue 
to be my K-1 bag.

I’ve got an old Lowepro fanny (American not British usage)  pack camera bag 
that nearly works for a hike in the woods with a couple of lenses, but I just 
can’t get it adjusted so that it doesn’t flop over.  I’d love suggestions for a 
good fanny pack for carrying photo gear.  I’d also love suggestions for a good 
medium sized backpack, that’ll carry a camera body, a variety of lenses, and 
which I can conveniently carry a tripod on.

I’m not generally a fan of over the shoulder camera bags.  I know that they are 
very popular, and while your kink is OK, it just isn’t my kink.




--
Larry Colen
l...@red4est.com  sent from ret13est



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