BigBlue 28W Solar Panel Charger with Dual USB-C and USB-A, Portable Solar Phone Charger for Camping, Hiking, Backpacking, Emergency Solar Charger for iPhone, iPad, Samsung Galaxy, Power Bank, GPS etc

BigBlue 28W Solar Panel Charger with Dual USB-C and USB-A, Portable Solar Phone Charger for Camping, Hiking, Backpacking, Emergency Solar Charger for iPhone, iPad, Samsung Galaxy, Power Bank, GPS etc

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kullulu posted on r/Ultralight3w

This was a post I made from hammock camping a few days ago. https://www.reddit.com/r/hammockcamping/comments/1tpbga1/comment/oo7t5um/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button I use a Resmed Air Mini, with a battery that costs 60 bucks and lasts two nights, and a converter. If I'm canoeing, I take a solar panel that charges the battery. When I'm hiking, I just take more than one battery if I'm out for more than 2 nights. The Air Mini uses a waterless humidification system called HumidX. If you're in the desert you'll want the Humid X Plus, otherwise, the Humid X works great. Someone on r/ultralight put me onto the battery and converter a few years ago, and it's so much cheaper and works better than the more expensive batteries I've tried, and it's not prohibitively expensive to replace the battery if something goes wrong. I was updating my lighterpack and just reweighed the cpap. cpap - 300 grams converter - 87 grams battery - 391 grams (each battery is 2 nights/25,000 mah) mask, tubing, humid X puck, dyneema bag - 130 grams

kullulu posted on r/hammockcamping4w

Hammocks and Cpap? This is my jam! I use a Resmed Air Mini, with a battery that costs 60 bucks and lasts two nights, and a converter. If I'm canoeing, I take a solar panel that charges the battery. When I'm hiking, I just take more than one battery if I'm out for more than 2 nights. The Air Mini uses a waterless humidification system called HumidX. If you're in the desert you'll want the Humid X Plus, otherwise, the Humid X works great. Someone on r/ultralight put me onto the battery and converter a few years ago, and it's so much cheaper and works better than the more expensive batteries I've tried, and it's not prohibitively expensive to replace the battery if something goes wrong. Now for the mechanics of using it! I prefer keeping the cpap in a well supported peak loft, so everything is out of the way except for the mask. In summer, the cpap, mask, and battery. sits in my peak loft in the hellbender hammock or in a pocket in my townsend bridge hammock. The Dutchware peak loft is best in class, and holds the weight extremely well. I keep it all in a small dyneema bag, or if canoe camping, inside a real dry bag surrounded by clothing to cushion it. In winter, I keep the cpap battery in my Dutchware perfect pouch, which is between my base and mid layer when I'm not sleeping to keep the battery operational. So I'm not breathing extremely cold air, I keep the cpap under the top quilt once it's bedtime. It's extremely important not to eat meals which will give you bad gas while doing this Cpap repairs: I have done trail repairs on the tubing which had a small leak. I used some leukotape I had wrapped around my miniBic lighter, and the cpap pressure was restored. Now I keep an igneus repair kit which has gorilla tape which probably would have worked even better. When I started camping with a cpap, I hung my entire giant machine from home in a gear hammock next to my normal hammock and used a 7 pound battery. It wasn't pretty but it was doable, just not fun to backpack with. I'm much happier with my current setup. If you have a warbonnet XLC, the shelf should work great as a place to keep a travel cpap and battery. It should be a great solution!