Picaro wrote:Actually, you hardly notice the difference. The instructions say that once you notice resistance its time to use the adapter on a tap to backflush it, and you're off and running again. I'm yet to need backflushing on mine, i guess it depends on water quality.
heres a link to some oftheir gear.
http://www.sawyer.com/water.htmlI have the SP122 3way, which I'm happy with on my bladder. And when I'm overseas ( or a town water area,) I can connect it direct to the tap for clean water.
Good info, thanks.
Last trip to Scotland, I used the
Travel Tap. Whilst it's bug coverage includes viruses, it's flow rate was pitiful. By the end of 2 weeks I was having to KNEEL on it to get any water flow. And that was using clear water the whole way. They quote 300-600ml per minute. It was a lot slower than that, even when brand new.
My new hydration system is a Sawyer SP122 3-way like above on a Platypus 'Big Zip' SP 2 Litre bladder system. I'll keep a 1 Litre Platy in the kit to cover water in camp.
The only downside to the Sawyer that I can see is that it will fail if frozen. Good thing it comes with quick-release connections - I will extract the filter from my pack and chuck it in a ziplock in or around my sleeping bag overnight.