Yeah that be free one is nice.I've found the katdyn befree and hydrapak ones to work pretty well. They work with the seeker bags and the whole system is pretty light and compact.
You won’t be going thirsty with all those MichelobsI keep a sawyer squeeze in the pack, but the be free thing does the grunt work in camp.
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I don't have a lot of experience but the Quick draw worked great for me last year. I believe the same filter can be setup in a gravity feed system at camp and also be used on the run but don't quote me on that.I’ve used quite a few. The be free is solid. Lately I’ve been using the newer platypus QuickDraw that comes with the threaded end cap. It threads on the clean water side and attaches to smart water bottles and bags with that size cap, and I’m settled on it. You NEED to soak it overnight before first use though and run a few liters through it, otherwise the flow rate is pretty bad. The flow rate is better than the befree once you do that.
I've had to use my mug to scoop and fill my 4l platypus bags. Trying to scoop from a shallow source is difficult with a bag. Either a mug, cut beer can, plastic jetboil bowl, etc, to scoop helps a lot. If it's a small flowing source, follow it down where you can get bag under it, or dam it up.So next question, areas with limited water sources and or tiny streams of water, how do the bags work?
I'll sometimes carry a Cnoc bag (has a zip on one end) for a dirty bag or the bottom half of a smart water bottle to scoop water. Both are relatively small and the cut bottle weighs almost nothing,So next question, areas with limited water sources and or tiny streams of water, how do the bags work? All I've ever have used have been pumps, weight isn't a problem for me, all I care about is the safest drinking water.