View Full Version : CamelBak Water Bottle - 25 oz.
flyingwil
10-16-2006, 12:01 PM
I have been using a 25 oz. CamelBak Water Bottle for quite some time now. It has some great features, and so far no complaints! The best feature of it is how the top is configured for flexability. It can fit on my Nalgene, the straw can be used or not used (becomes a big tommy tippie cup), and the big bite and pressure valve has not leaked yet. Just thought I would share a cool product.
Average price is around $10-15.
http://a1072.g.akamai.net/f/1072/2062/1d/gallery.rei.com/media/757277.jpg
Durable LexanŽ polycarbonate construction now benefits from easy-to-use, no-drip bite valve system; simply flip up the valve, bite and drink
Wide-mouth bottle fills easily and holds 25 fl. oz.; dishwasher safe in the top rack
Standard cap size fits most wide-mouth bottles; bottle fits many water filters
Easily attached to a pack or belt using a small, lightweight carabiner; handles warm liquids as easily as cold
Lists approximate volumes in ounces and milliliters
Scott Brady
10-16-2006, 01:50 PM
I have used one for a few months too. Great quality and a VERY good seal.
Just a word of caution: If you fill if with a sugary drink (lets say Snapple Peach Tea) and leave it in your truck in the garage for nearly a month, it is not a good idea to squeeze the bite valve... Just trust me.:violent-smiley-031:
flyingwil
10-16-2006, 01:52 PM
I have used one for a few months too. Great quality and a VERY good seal.
Just a word of caution: If you fill if with a sugary drink (lets say Snapple Peach Tea) and leave it in your truck in the garage for nearly a month, it is not a good idea to squeeze the bite valve... Just trust me.:violent-smiley-031:
That must have been a great big mess!
Scott Brady
10-16-2006, 02:02 PM
Yeah, especially when you are looking at it with the intensity of a science project. Fortunately, I took the brunt of the explosion, saving the truck. :Wow1:
articulate
10-16-2006, 03:02 PM
Fortunately, I took the brunt of the explosion, saving the truck. :Wow1:
Ah! Major crisis averted. High fructose corn syrup is murder on automotive clear coat. Probably those fancy stickers, too.
bigreen505
10-16-2006, 03:17 PM
Yeah, especially when you are looking at it with the intensity of a science project. Fortunately, I took the brunt of the explosion, saving the truck. :Wow1:
Lovely. I had a similar experience (actually several times now) with Zipfizz in bike bottles.
david despain
10-17-2006, 03:04 PM
i just read through mark's bottle thread and after i dried the tear and read through this thread i wondered if any one has tried or uses one of these water bottle lanterns?
http://gearlog.com/blogs/gearlog/archive/2006/08/14/18377.aspx
i saw one at a store in TX a few months ago and it looked pretty nifty. dont know how well it works in the real world though.
njtacoma
10-17-2006, 04:37 PM
I have one of those lantern bottles, they work pretty well. My current winter use is most often to walk in and check on our kids with all the lights out in the house. A kind of handy flashlight by the bed.
If you have it half full and slosh the water around it casts some neat shadows across the walls of a tent!!
My criticism is that when the bottle gets near empty it is very top heavy, definitly don't leave the lid off, you will spill.
slepe67
10-18-2006, 01:21 AM
I too have a bottle like this. I fly for a living, and its funny, cuz I have mine secured to the aircraft fuselage with a carribeaner (sp). When we climb to altitude, and I grab it, it usually gushes water all over the place from the pressurization. Wierd. I do like it a lot.
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