I didn’t want to hijack the titanium stove discussion but a more general discussion prompts my question.
Now - if you are a kit collector or take pride in ownership of particular kit then all power to you. My question concerns the practicalities.
Is the premium price of titanium (Ti) worth it?
I use stainless steel (Ss)sporks. I could use a Ti one at nearly three times the price. Firstly if I’m eating something bland like my morning porridge I can taste titanium (borrowed spork)
More significantly, the difference in weight between Ss and Ti is about 20gms. You gain much more than that if your hat gets wet.
I do understand ultra-lite back packing but is that degree of weight cutting really significant or does it become an end in itself.
Couldn’t you get the same weight reduction as using Ti kit by leaving one of those knives at home or just going for an extra carp?
I dunno, you tell me. I walked all over Ireland with a steel framed rucksack and 22kg of kit. Now I chuck everything into the back of the car and use a day sack so I don’t have to choose.
YTi?
Now - if you are a kit collector or take pride in ownership of particular kit then all power to you. My question concerns the practicalities.
Is the premium price of titanium (Ti) worth it?
I use stainless steel (Ss)sporks. I could use a Ti one at nearly three times the price. Firstly if I’m eating something bland like my morning porridge I can taste titanium (borrowed spork)
More significantly, the difference in weight between Ss and Ti is about 20gms. You gain much more than that if your hat gets wet.
I do understand ultra-lite back packing but is that degree of weight cutting really significant or does it become an end in itself.
Couldn’t you get the same weight reduction as using Ti kit by leaving one of those knives at home or just going for an extra carp?
I dunno, you tell me. I walked all over Ireland with a steel framed rucksack and 22kg of kit. Now I chuck everything into the back of the car and use a day sack so I don’t have to choose.
YTi?