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#1
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
I'm going to be flying up to Park City early in January. Unfortunately, I
don't have a bag for my gear. I've been looking at the Burton Gig Bag (cause I don't have a whole lot of money to work with). Is this a good choice, or should I get one of the higher priced models? Rick guttermonkey AT qwest DOT net |
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#2
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
Boardin' Fool wrote:
I'm going to be flying up to Park City early in January. Unfortunately, I don't have a bag for my gear. I've been looking at the Burton Gig Bag (cause I don't have a whole lot of money to work with). Is this a good choice, or should I get one of the higher priced models? Rick guttermonkey AT qwest DOT net I've got a gig bag and it's fine, takes board/boots/bindings and a load of space left over for clothing. If you're just taking the one board I reckon you'd be fine. I tried out a wheelie coffin last trip last season and it was just a pain, didn't fill half the capacity, it kind of crumples in half when you use the wheels and that was with 2 boards in it. DB |
#3
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
"Boardin' Fool" wrote in message ...
I'm going to be flying up to Park City early in January. Unfortunately, I don't have a bag for my gear. I've been looking at the Burton Gig Bag (cause I don't have a whole lot of money to work with). Is this a good choice, or should I get one of the higher priced models? If it is just one trip get whatever. If you expect more in the future, pay for a bag that'll stay with you. I have a DaKine wheeled bag and it rocks. I've recommended them to a few people and everybody loves it. Lots of pockets, removeable pouches, you can fit all kinds of boards, boots, clothing in there and will love it. Never had any problems with stability or durability of the bag and it is padded well to protect your equipment from any hard surfaces. Check it out, its a great bag. |
#4
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
"Boardin' Fool" wrote in message ... I'm going to be flying up to Park City early in January. Unfortunately, I don't have a bag for my gear. I've been looking at the Burton Gig Bag (cause I don't have a whole lot of money to work with). Is this a good choice, or should I get one of the higher priced models? Rick guttermonkey AT qwest DOT net The gig bag is not padded so flying with it is iffy. I had it for a road trip and it was fine but I wouldn't trust it more than that. My friend flew with his and he took a bunch of foam from work and padded his board with it and said it was fine but it was a pain having to pack and unpack it. I bought a 5150 snowboard bag from www.skiandsnowboardhouse.com. It has enough room to fit two boards and when I used it for my board, I just packed all my gear with it; boots, bindings, jacket, pants, tools, etc. It's padded and it's going for $50 now online. I took it on a 4 flights and it's survived quite well. One of the zippers looks like it got scraped on the floor. Other than that, it's fine. Only one season on it though. Good luck finding a bag. -Bruce |
#5
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
The gig bag IS padded.
I have the gig bag and it's worked OK for air travel, have taken it to NM & Whistler. The edge of my board cut through the fabric in one spot (at a seam where the padding wasn't) when I went to NM, what I do now is take a piece of old garden hose, split it down the middle, and wrap it around the edge of the board. This not only saves the bag but protects the edges of the board. Baggage handlers are notoriously rough with baggage. I personally don't like those big wheeled monster bags, which is why I got the gig bag. The big monster bags don't work well for car travel in my opinion, the gig bag is perfect. Be careful, if you read the fine print some airlines won't let you put clothing, etc into a sports equipment bag, I had mine packed to the seams, luckily they didn't check, but I saw one guy in whistler having to take clothes out of his gear bag. If you do put clothing in your gear bag, bring a canvas duffle bag just in case they make you take it out. -Tom |
#6
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 22:53:28 GMT, (TomTom)
allegedly wrote: Be careful, if you read the fine print some airlines won't let you put clothing, etc into a sports equipment bag, I had mine packed to the seams, luckily they didn't check, but I saw one guy in whistler having to take clothes out of his gear bag. If you do put clothing in your gear bag, bring a canvas duffle bag just in case they make you take it out. What airline was that with? I've never had a problem putting clothes and other stuff into my board bag. It's just another piece of luggage. They couldn't care less what's in it as long as it's legal and not forbidden. - Dave. -- The only powder to get high on, falls from the sky. http://www.vpas.org/ - Snowboarding the worlds pow pow - Securing your e-mail The Snowboard FAQ lives here - http://rssFAQ.org/ |
#8
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Suggestions on a bag for flying?
Switters wrote in message ...
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003 22:53:28 GMT, (TomTom) allegedly wrote: Be careful, if you read the fine print some airlines won't let you put clothing, etc into a sports equipment bag, I had mine packed to the seams, luckily they didn't check, but I saw one guy in whistler having to take clothes out of his gear bag. If you do put clothing in your gear bag, bring a canvas duffle bag just in case they make you take it out. What airline was that with? I've never had a problem putting clothes and other stuff into my board bag. It's just another piece of luggage. They couldn't care less what's in it as long as it's legal and not forbidden. I have to agree, Dave. I have NEVER heard of such a rule. I have traveled tons with my board bag (& to Whistler) and the only complaint I ever received from an airline is that it was too heavy, but still haven't been charged for the weight. (sometimes i have seen them weigh the bags and charge you if it is over 50 lbs, i believe). If the clothes thing is true, yeah, its worth packing a bag, but i'd put up one heck of a fight since i put all my boarding gear (socks, layers, fleeces, etc) in the bag. -t |
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