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  • Mystery Ranch Catalyst 26

    Mystery Ranch Catalyst 26

    This will be my most recommended backpack to friends, going forward.

    Note: this item was provided by Mystery Ranch for review.

    I’ve long recommended the Mystery Ranch Urban Assault to anyone asking me for a good backpack. It’s the backpack I recommend the most, because it’s versatile, comfortable, easy to use, and the price is competitive. But there’s odd things about it, and so when I heard Mystery Ranch was working on a bag based on the Urban Asssault, but updated to be more EDC friendly, I requested an early sample of the bag.

    The new line is called Catalyst. It comes in 18, 22, and 26 liter variants. I have the Catalyst 26 in Shadow, and I’ve been testing it for some time now. It’s almost a straight upgrade from the Urban Assault line. So let’s dive in.

    Specs & Dimensions

    As mentioned, the bag is 26L, and it’s on a similar footprint to the Urban Assault 24. However, it’s designed in a more integrated fashion, so while I always loathed the looks of the Urban Assault 24, the Catalyst 26 looks quite nice. In a lot of ways, I mistake the Catalyst 26L for the 22L variant since it looks very similar.

    It’s made from recycled CORDURA Nylon, something Mystery Ranch has been using a lot. It feels really nice. Perhaps the biggest addition here is the two external water bottle pockets on each side of the bag. I know there are a lot of people who wanted this with the Urban Assault — the Catalyst has it. And those two pockets aren’t baggy looking, they sit cleanly and smoothly against the bag, while still allowing full sized water bottles to ride securely in them. I’m a big fan.

    In Use

    When I first cracked the bag open, I was excited. It was exactly what I was hoping for: a larger Urban Assault, with a dedicated laptop sleeve and external water bottle pockets, without sacrificing looks. Boom, I had it.

    What I didn’t expect was all the small little upgrades throughout the bag which make it a gem to use. The quality is tried and true Mystery Ranch quality. The Nylon feels really robust to the hand, without there being rough nylon sitting on your clothing. This particular CORDURA feels like something between a 500D and 1000D. A little thicker and rougher than 500D, but not all the way to 1000D, it’s a very nice material.

    The harness is simple, subtle, and comfortable. It’s not fussy, and its something almost anyone will instantly find useable and comfortable.

    Walking through the bag, you get:

    • External laptop pocket. This has a divider in it, where you can keep a decent amount of gear. I can carry my two iPad Pros and a notebook. You could mix in a MacBook too if you wanted. Access is via two zippers from the top. Simple, easy, perfect.
    • 3-Zip design is still on this bag, but I suspect the zipper has been redesigned here as it moves better than any other 3-zip I have had from Mystery Ranch. There’s no binding on the zippers as you pull the main zipper up or down. It’s really top notch.
    • The top pocket of the lid is identical to most of the Mystery Ranch bags, and is cavernous.
    • The two external water bottle pockets stretch slightly out, and mostly inward. They have a lightweight elastic at the top. If the bottle doesn’t ride low enough in the pocket, there’s not enough friction to keep it from falling out if the bag finds itself in an awkward position. A 32oz Nalgene is on the cusp here as far as securely staying in the pocket when pushing the bag flat under an airplane seat in front of you.
    • Inside the bag is a plethora of new organization options. Three zippered mesh pockets, a handful of open top pockets, and a couple of elastic loops. They are going to be hit and miss for people, but there’s little downside to ignoring them completely.

    This bring us to the first miss on this bag: pen slots. There are none. There are elastic loops you can use, but none of them hold a pen very well. The top mesh pocket seems made for pens, which isn’t how I prefer to carry my pens. I wish the bag had even one slot to store a standard pen. As it is, the loops are too large, and either too deep or too shallow to securely hold a pen. I use the top mesh pocket on the back panel of the bag.

    There is only a few other downsides:

    • The load lifters add clutter to the bag, without adding a ton of value. I’d prefer to see them removed all together.
    • For me the straps would be better if they were a half inch wider at the widest points on them. They aren’t uncomfortable, but I do wish they were a touch wider. That said, for people with a smaller frame, these straps are going to work really well for them. It’s always a tricky balance to make a strap which works well across many body types and shapes, and I think the balance is struck well here.
    • The sternum strap is what I’ll call the ‘lightweight’ variant, where it hooks onto a thin/small daisy chain. It’s not bad, and it is very easy to clip off, but it’s not particularly robust if this is something you rely heavily on.
    • The org inside the bag can be a little fussy to use as it goes decently low into the bag, but not all the way down. Leaving a bit of a void of space at the bottom of the bag, thus dragging something out from that section may interfere with items you have stored in the org. Not always, but sometimes.

    However, let’s talk about the positives of this bag, because there are a ton, so these are just a few:

    • There’s no zipper stick as the vertical zipper moves down the center of the bag. I mentioned this above, but it’s worth mentioning again, as this is the top complaint I get about the Urban Assault from my kids.
    • The internal organization take ups zero space if you decide you don’t want to use it.
    • You’ll not notice the laptop sleeve at all, but you’ll appreciate the heck out of it.
    • It holds a ton of gear, while being a lightweight bag to carry. It holds more than I need for the office.

    The thing about this bag: it could be the only backpack you need. I don’t see a downside to hiking with it. It seems perfect for travel. It is fantastic in the office. It is comfortable to wear, without being fussy to wear.

    When I started using this bag, it took absolutely no time at all to get used to it. I tossed my office gear in it, and off I went. Then I put it away for more than a month, as I was waiting for the release date to come up. And when I pulled the bag back out, again it took no time to get used to the bag, and to appreciate the smart design. In use, back and forth from the office, this backpack is a gem.

    One big improvement: the top handle, it is awesome. A really nice add, and something Mystery Ranch generally doesn’t have on many of its backpacks. The Catalyst also has enough depth it can somewhat sit up when it has some weight in the bag. While still not looking big, and carrying a ton.

    So yeah, it’s quite good.

    Compared to Urban Assault

    The big question is how it compares to the Urban Assault. At first I thought the comparison was that this was an Urban Assault, but for the office. That’s true, but the Catalyst is more than that. The Catalyst has almost no downsides when compared to the Urban Assault line.

    Technically, you could argue the Urban Assault has better materials with 500D. But I am not sure how much any of that matters. And even then, the top handle on the Catalyst is light years better than the Urban Assault.

    The true distinction is that the Urban Assault is a stripped down bag when compared to the Catalyst. The UA is a blank canvas for the user, where the Catalyst is trying to nudge you to being organized.

    If I were buying a bag to use in the outdoors/woods: Urban Assault. But for actual urban use? For the office, for travel, for school? Catalyst is the better bag.

    Overall

    I love this bag. It’s fantastic. It does come at a steeper price, with the MSRP on the Catalyst 26 coming in at $179. It’s not the bargain that the Urban Assault is out of the gate, but it is certainly the better bag of the two.

    Highly recommended. This is now the bag I will recommend to people who don’t want to think about bags, but want something great.

    Buy here, $179. (18L and 22L variants.)

  • Member Journal — 7/3/23

    Member Journal — 7/3/23

    What is better: new Filson or old Filson; and other minutiae such as terrible backpack product photos.

    This week: I did a thing with pockets; Old Filson v New Filson; Product Photos; WiFi SSD.

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  • Pour One Out for Apollo and Others

    Pour One Out for Apollo and Others

    Today’s a fantastic day to start a blog, or join a tried and true forum.

    Today is the final day for Apollo and many other apps/development teams who decided not to accept bullying from Reddit’s CEO/Executives. They are shutting down today rather than be extorted for money tomorrow.

    Good for them.

    (more…)

  • Filson Sale

    I love a good Filson sale.

    Filson has 30% off select items, buy through this link and I make money too!

  • Maven CM.1 Monocular

    Maven CM.1 Monocular

    This is the best monocular I have used, but it is one of the larger monoculars I have used.

    I’ve always been a monocular nut — I don’t want spotting scopes, telescopes, or binoculars as they are all too conspicuous. Give me a nice discrete monocular, and I feel like 10 year old me spying on a world in the most obvious way ever. So something like that.

    I have a lot of fun carrying a monocular in my bag, or on hikes, even when traveling. Being able to make out something a bit more clearly, it’s worth it. But not all monoculars are made equally — as any photographer will tell you, when it comes to ‘glass’ you get what you pay for.

    Maven is trying to buck that trend a little (and they are not the only ones) attempting to offer high quality optics, for more reasonable prices. To check out what they are making, I snagged their CM.1 Monocular which is a large 8×32 optic.

    I’m a fan, but it is large.

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  • Member Journal – 6/26/23

    Member Journal – 6/26/23

    I think I want to move to Capri, but while I sort that out, here’s some gear and other info from my trip.

    This week: reports from my travels; some links I want to share; and a couple new flashlights make their way to me.

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  • It’s Likely the Filson Journeyman is My Favorite Backpack

    It’s Likely the Filson Journeyman is My Favorite Backpack

    Round two, because I regret selling my first one, so we are going to talk about that.

    Shortly after I published my original review of the Filson Journeyman Backpack, I sold/traded off the backpack. While it’s an item I loved — at the time, I was convinced that it wasn’t something I would keep using, and I had found something better. It didn’t take a few weeks after I parted ways with that bag to start regretting the decision — I wanted to own it, but would I use it?

    I had no idea. After all, the Heritage line of the GORUCK GR1 is a much better backpack similar to the Journeyman — and I love that Heritage GR1, so why go backward in carrying comfort? I was pretty torn, but I found a great deal on a well-cared-for Journeyman and snagged it. And then I started to use it a lot. As in, more than my Heritage GR1 was getting used. And then, perhaps, I bought a second Journeyman for color variation or something.

    As I’ve thought and used it more, I felt it was time to talk about why I love this backpack, despite its apparent flaws and high price.

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  • Grayl Ultrapress — Travel Constant

    Grayl Ultrapress — Travel Constant

    You really should take my advice here, and get one or four of these. They are fantastic.

    I had been traveling with a pretty basic setup for water: buy a water bottle at the airport, carry a few water purification tablets for emergencies, and call it a day. I never really had a ton of issues. But I have some pretty annoying/comical stories of the shit I have done because I was in the hotel room, had no bottled water available, and didn’t want to drink the tap. But that’s for another post.

    I started to look at what I might pack to take care of my water needs on a much more manageable level. I knew I wanted a filter, so I started looking at what filters out what and decided I needed/wanted something that handled both bacteria in the water and viruses. That quickly narrowed the search and led me to buy a Grayl Ultrapress (16.9oz). Grayl makes a few variants of these — the differences are predominantly the capacity and the materials. The Ultrapress is akin to carrying a slightly skinnier Nalgene bottle, with about half the capacity.

    I love this so much; I own several of them — and highly recommend them. So let me tell you why this is a stellar filtration bottle.

    (more…)

  • Member Journal — 6/19/23

    Let’s talk about gear again, and how I bought more and have too much.

    This week: All about gear; my goals; and a few recent pickups.

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  • ‘Here’s the note Reddit sent to moderators threatening them if they don’t reopen – The Verge’

    ‘Here’s the note Reddit sent to moderators threatening them if they don’t reopen – The Verge’

    These jackasses.

    Still need convincing? See this threat from Reddit to their unpaid laborers who keep the site mostly thriving.

    No one should stay on Reddit. No one. Straight abuse of power here.

  • Laulima Malihini Slim

    Laulima Malihini Slim

    I cannot say enough good things about this light, so just know that going into this review: this is a spectacular light.

    I’ve always waffled on buying a Laulima light — they look amazing, but the larger lights seemed like they wouldn’t offer something I would use over my HDS, and the Hoku is a twisty, so it was out. Recently-ish, they came out with the ‘Slim’ lineup of lights, which run off a 14500-sized cell — these are fantastic looking. I snagged a Malihini Slim in Titanium second-hand, and I fell in love.

    (more…)

  • We’ve Lost Our Damn Outrage Because ‘The Community’ Knows Where Their Money Comes From And Are Scared to Lose That Income — But My Fucking Money Comes from Readers, And I’m Pissed

    Money, unprofessionalism, Reddit.

    We’ve known for a while that Facebook/Meta is a horrible company — for the world, to work at, and ethically awful. The evidence is everywhere; if you are like, “Where’re the links” then you aren’t looking. But fine, a reminder of why Facebook is bad. Then came Twitter’s demise, where the turmoil and degradation of an already problematic service somehow got worse under Musk. But fine, here’s a reason to dislike anything Elon Musk, I know you like your Tesla, but it’s a shit car, deal.

    (more…)

  • Member Journal — 6/12/23

    Member Journal — 6/12/23

    What’s a weird thing seeing digital eyes turns out to be.

    This week: WWDC23 stuff takes over; and I will toss in thoughts on the MACV-2.

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  • Evergoods Civic Access Pouch 2L (CAP2)

    Evergoods Civic Access Pouch 2L (CAP2)

    A clever, and rather unique pouch for the market, but it carries far less than it’s bulk would convey.

    After I tried the CAP1 and fell in love with it, I wanted to try the CAP2 so I could see if Evergoods was able to capture that same magic twice. They weren’t, but the CAP2 is a pretty unique pouch in the marketplace, so before you rule it out, let me tell you what it is and isn’t.

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  • Filson Duffle Pack – First Impressions

    Filson Duffle Pack – First Impressions

    It’s like an Aeronaut 45 in a many ways, but functionally better, and also not ugly.

    I’ve seen a few stories/articles about people unexpectedly loving the Filson Duffle Pack. This is one of Filson’s few Nylon offerings, and is pretty unique among those offerings at that ( meaning: it’s not just a Nylon version of something they make in their classic materials). The Duffle Pack is firmly a travel bag, and it’s one of those dual-purpose travel bags: offering a shoulder strap and backpack straps.

    After snagging one to try myself: yeah, I get it, this is a really good bag — not my thing, but certainly better than similar offerings from Tom Bihn and others.

    (more…)

  • Member Journal — 6/5/23

    Member Journal — 6/5/23

    Maybe I won’t have as many typos now, and maybe we can figure out how to make devices lighter?

    This week: WWDC time; iPad Mini setup; iPadsOS and low storage; Generative AI.

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  • GORUCK’s New MACV-2

    GORUCK’s New MACV-2

    New boots!

    Yesterday GORUCK released the long awaited (by me at least) MACV-2 Boot. The big change is the outsole on this — it’s not very hiking/grippy looking. GORUCK’s product page goes into a good amount of detail on the changes, which all seem great for using the boot for rucking. It does, visually, lose a bit of the stealth astethic and will likely be harder to pull off as a daily boot.

    I ruck every day, and I wear only MACV boots. I snagged a new pair to try, can’t wait. Buy here.

  • Three Flashlight Collection: Budget to Luxury

    Three Flashlight Collection: Budget to Luxury

    Now let’s talk about building a three flashlight collection at three different budget levels.

    This is the third part of my ‘Three XYZ Collection: Budget to Luxury’ series of posts (part one, part two). The idea is simple: building a three item collection for a given category, which should cover almost anyone — and doing it in three price brackets.

    Let’s get started with flashlights.

    (more…)

  • Reddit, Pulling the Ol’ Elon

    Reddit, Pulling the Ol’ Elon

    Best of luck, Reddit.

    Christian, the developer of the most excellent Apollo client for Reddit, writing about the pricing model he was quoted by Reddit to keep Apollo working under the new paid API system:

    Apollo made 7 billion requests last month, which would put it at about 1.7 million dollars per month, or 20 million US dollars per year. Even if I only kept subscription users, the average Apollo user uses 344 requests per day, which would cost $2.50 per month, which is over double what the subscription currently costs, so I’d be in the red every month.

    It’s hard to see this as anything more than what it is: Reddit doesn’t want third-party clients anymore. That’s fine as a business decision and Reddit’s to make. I think Reddit claiming this is even remotely fair pricing is fucking rich.

    I also think this has not worked out well for any company that has tried it thus far cough Twitter chirp. I’ll also say that I love Reddit, but there’s no fucking way I am using it as I do today without Apollo as my viewer for Reddit. The native Reddit app is shit.

    Too bad.

    If Apollo does want me to pay a 2x subscription price? I’m all in, sign me up. Make it 2.5x though.

  • Member Journal — 5/29/23

    Member Journal — 5/29/23

    What happens when I run out of watches I want and start spending that budget other places, and stuff like that.

    This week: expensive cameras; how do you carry your gear when you travel; site design notes; what does the life I want, cost; iPad Mini; Pill Cases and other gear notes…

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