Sawyer Products SP160 Ein-Gallonen-Schwerkraft-Wasserfiltrationssystem mit Doppelgewinde-Minifilter, Blau/Weiß/Klar

Brand:Sawyer Products

3.7/5

79.34

Das Sawyer Gravity System mit Dual-Threaded MINI-Filter ist eine leichte, robuste Lösung zum Filtern großer Wassermengen und eignet sich ideal für Rucksacktouren, Camping im Hinterland und die Notfallvorsorge. Das 1-Gallonen-Schwerkraftsystem (SP160) ist in zwei Modellen erhältlich und wird mit einem Beutel und einem MINI geliefert, während das 1-Gallonen-Doppelblasen-Schwerkraftsystem (SP2160) mit zwei Beuteln (einer für schmutziges Wasser, einer für sauberes Wasser) und einem geliefert wird MINI. Der Sawyer MINI-Wasserfilter mit zwei Gewinden wiegt nur 2 Unzen, passt in Ihre Handfläche und ist für eine absolute Filterleistung von 0,1 Mikron ausgelegt – er entfernt 99,99999 % aller Bakterien wie Salmonellen, Cholera und E. coli 99,9999 % aller Protozoen (wie Giardien und Kryptosporidien). Zudem filtert der MINI Mikroplastik zu 100 % heraus. Mit Gewinden auf beiden Seiten können Sie die Push-Pull-Kappe auf den MINI schrauben, um beim Filtern eine einfache An-/Aus-Funktion zu ermöglichen. Dieses praktische und leicht verpackbare Schwerkraftsystem mit Einzel- oder Doppelbeutel erfordert kein Pumpen und eignet sich perfekt für Camping, Jagd, Angeln, Erkundungstouren, Katastrophenhilfe und Notfallvorsorgeausrüstungen sowie für Abenteuerreisen, bei denen Trinkwasser zur Verfügung steht und Wasser in Flaschen sind nicht leicht mitzunehmen oder trinkbar. Die 1-Gallonen-Blasen verfügen über einen breiten Mundverschluss, der ein schnelles und einfaches Befüllen ermöglicht, sowie über einen praktischen Tragegriff. Um ein Schwerkraftsystem einzurichten, füllen Sie zunächst das Reservoir mit Wasser aus einer beliebigen Quelle (See, Bach, Teich, Gletscher, Küchenhahn usw.). Hängen Sie die Tasche auf – an einen Baum, an die Rückseite Ihres Rucksacks oder halten Sie sie mit der Hand hoch – und schließen Sie den MINI an den mitgelieferten Schlauch an und lassen Sie die Schwerkraft ihre Arbeit erledigen. Wasser fließt durch den MINI und erzeugt frisches, sauberes Wasser zum Trinken und Kochen. Das SP2160 Dual Bladder Gravity System verfügt über einen zweiten 1-Gallonen-Reservoir für sauberes Wasser zur Aufnahme Ihres gefilterten Wassers. Das SP160-Paket umfasst einen MINI-Wasserfilter mit zwei Gewinden, eine 1-Gallonen-Blase, einen Reinigungskolben und einen Schwerkraftschlauch mit Adaptern. Im Lieferumfang ist außerdem Sawyers Reinigungskupplungszubehör enthalten. Das SP2160-Paket umfasst einen MINI-Wasserfilter mit zwei Gewinden, eine Schmutzwasserblase, eine Frischwasserblase, einen Schlauchadapter mit Absperrklemme, Inline-Adapter, einen Schlauchadapter, einen langen Schlauch, einen Aufhängegurt mit S-Biner, einen Reinigungskolben, eine Reinigungskupplung und einen Druckknopf. Zugkappe und Schlauchführung. Seit 1984 nutzt Sawyer technologische Fortschritte, um Produkte zu entwickeln, die Sie im Freien halten – vom Hinterland bis zum Hinterhof –, darunter Insektenschutzmittel für Haut und Kleidung, Wasserfilter für Camping und Notfälle sowie Sonnenschutz.

Inklusive MINI-Wasserfilter, 1-Gallonen-Blase, Reinigungskolben, Reinigungskupplung und Schwerkraftschlauch mit Adaptern. Das vielseitige Camping-Wasserfiltersystem eignet sich hervorragend für Reisen, Wanderungen im Hinterland, zur Notfallvorbereitung und als Notfallausrüstung. Mit dem MINI mit zwei Gewinden können Sie die aufklappbare Sportkappe am Filter verwenden, um das An- und Ausziehen zu erleichtern. leichte Weithalsblase für schnelles und einfaches Befüllen; praktischer Tragegriff. Der leistungsstarke 0,1-Mikron-Absolut-Inline-Filter passt in Ihre Handfläche und wiegt nur 2 Unzen; 100 % der MINI-Einheiten wurden von Sawyer dreimal einzeln auf Leistungsstandards getestet. Erstellen Sie ganz einfach ein schwerkraftbasiertes Wasserfiltersystem mit dem 0,1 Mikron absoluten Sawyer MINI-Wasserfilter mit zwei Gewinden und einem 1-Gallonen-Reservoir.
Brand Sawyer Products
Brand ‎Sawyer Products
Brand Name ‎Sawyer Products
Capacity 1 Gallons
Capacity ‎1 Gallons
Color Blue/White/Clear
Color ‎Blue/White/Clear
Customer Reviews 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,925 ratings 4.6 out of 5 stars
Included Components One 1-Gallon Water Bladder, Dual Threaded MINI Water Filter, Cleaning Plunger, Cleaning Coupling, and Gravity Hose with Adapters See more
Included Components ‎One 1-Gallon Water Bladder, Dual Threaded MINI Water Filter, Cleaning Plunger, Cleaning Coupling, and Gravity Hose with Adapters
Item Dimensions LxWxH ‎5.75 x 2.75 x 13.75 inches
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H ‎13.82 x 6.1 x 3.23 inches
Item Weight 8.8 Ounces
Item Weight ‎8.8 Ounces
Manufacturer ‎Sawyer Products
Material Plastic
Material ‎Plastic
Model Name Gravity Water Filter System
Model Name ‎Gravity Water Filter System
Model Year ‎2018
Number of Items ‎1
Package Information Bag
Package Information ‎Bag
Package Weight ‎0.33 Kilograms
Part Number ‎SP160
Product Dimensions 5.75"L x 2.75"W x 13.75"H
Product Dimensions ‎5.75"L x 2.75"W x 13.75"H
Purification Method Hollow Fiber Membrane
Purification Method ‎Hollow Fiber Membrane
Size ‎One Size
Sport Type ‎ALL
Style ‎Single Bladder
Suggested Users ‎Unisex-Adult
Warranty Description ‎Rated up to 100,000 gallons by manufacturer

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Scritto da: C. Robinson
Does the job but could be improved, awkward to use
To start off, you don't need a water filter to make tap water drinkable - these things are for backpacking. When you're doing that, a couple of things happen. First, no matter what you do, you're going to get silt in your dirty bag, at least a bit. Second, you know that dirty bag has "unsafe" water in it - and every little droplet on the bag, the fitting, the hose, etc. is just waiting to spoil your night by contaminating your clean water. I don't know where other users backpack, but I don't backpack where I have a flat table to lay this thing on. I need to hang it, and the only reasonable way to do that is with a thong through the carrying handle and around a tree trunk or branch. That works great, and even leaves the output hose "port" a little higher than the filler port, which gives silt a place to settle. (If you're using the Sawyer Mini filter you should always let dirty water sit 5-10min or more, trust me, your filter throughput will thank you!) I really wish they sold a pre-filter for this - it would be SO easy at their manufacturing scale to include a high-flow cone-type filter that stuck up into the dirty bag, held in place by the outlet hose attachment. As it was, I put a bandanna over the hole before screwing on the cap. It worked, but wasn't ideal. But now you have this bag hanging down with a hose to the filter itself. Dripping dirty water down onto itself. Hopefully you read the instructions and aren't completely out of water, because you need to save some clean water each "cycle" to rinse off the components before using them. The output of the filter goes to a water-bottle-style pull-to-open drinking valve. This isn't ideal. It's really hard to "aim" into things and the filter is heavy, so it flops around on the end of the hose. Meanwhile precious filtered water is getting tossed around wasted. And especially if you're sharing this system you don't want to be using your dirty mouth to open the valve, but takes a lot more force to open than any bottle I've owned. Once you get it open, water starts flowing and you have to use a dirty mouth/hand to close it again, or lift it up above the dirty bag to stop the gravity flow - potentially letting a few drops you didn't notice hanging on the system fall into your cup, bottle, or whatever. Fortunately, these things are all really easy to fix, I just wish Sawyer did it themselves. Four cheap items dramatically improve the experience: 1. A second Sawyer "hydration pack adapter" set, $6 here on Amazon. This gives you another blue and grey screw-on adapter. 2. A short length of 1/4" ID silicone hose. Attach the adapters above to the output side of the filter, and then attach the hose. Carry the blue "bottle coupler" with you that comes with this kit as well. 3. A pair of tube "pinch clamps", the small plastic kinds that you squeeze to close off a water tube. They're often sold for aquariums and are only a dollar or two apiece (although I bought a 6-pack). Put one apiece on the hoses, about an inch from the filter itself. 4. A small plastic "hose clip" designed for holding aquarium air hoses to the tank walls. Clip this to the very end of the new output hose. Here's how this work. When you fill the dirty bag, close the hose clamps above and below the filter. This stops the filter from "losing its prime" (getting air bubbles into it, which cuts the flow in half). You can set it down any which way without worrying about the output side getting dirty or dripped on because it's long enough to set/hang out of the way. When you start filtering, you can set up your output side before opening anything and wasting any water. If you want to filter into a bottle, attach the bottle coupler to the last/unused screw fitting and put it on the end of the hose. Set your bottle so it's stable and angled well, and you can take your time. When you're good, open the pinch clamps and filter away. For one last trick, if you want to filter directly into a pot, hydration bladder, or other vessel, you can use the hose clip to attach the output hose right to the top lip of your pot and it won't flop out and get dirty or waste water. Again, you can do all this with the flow "off" and turn it on when you're ready. These things together only add about $10 (I bet Sawyer could do it for $2) and 4oz to your setup. But they turn the whole experience of filtering water from "sort of touch and go, be careful" to "no sweat, this is easy."
Scritto da: Raphaella Ward
It looks good except that…
I was missing a part and the bladder bag did not specify BPA free so that gave me an uneasy feeling. I am trying to get clean water, but the container is not BPA free. ???? why ???? I returned it, but the concept for this item is great if it just were BPA free I would had kept it and request the missing part from the seller.
Scritto da: Harry
Good to have on hand - Just in case
Good to have on hand - Just in case
Scritto da: AndyAlexander
worked great for my canoe trip
Took this recently on a 6 day river trip in Utah. Worked just as I had hoped. I used it a little different than the standard method. I settled the silt in a 5 gal bucket of river water (using alum-there's YouTube videos how to do this), then used the tubing to make a siphon, with siphon running plugged the tubing into the filter which was screwed directly in to the bladder. That way the bladder stayed clean, filtered water. With filter and bladder sitting on the ground next to the bucket, took about an hour to fill the one gallon bladder. An extra 6 inches of tubing would have made this method a little less fussy, but it worked just fine. Product comes with a good assortment of fittings to make a lot of things possible. In the pictures, the green thing on the bucket is a homemade deal (made from a pill bottle) to keep the tubing from pinching at the edge of the bucket, with rubber band to keep it in place
Scritto da: Nathan
Great filter with two small design flaws
This filter is a great filter. My family and I are using it while in COVID quarantine in a developing nation that does not have potable water coming out of the faucets. It fills our water bottles fast and is easy to use. I definitely recommend it. I would give it 5 stars except for two small design flaws, which are these: 1. The handle on the bag should be diagonally opposite the spout so that when you hang the bag, the spout is in the lowest part of the bag. I'm not sure why this was not done. Are they trying to anticipate catching sediment in the low corner to avoid having sediment go through the filter? Not sure. It makes it a bit of a pain in our situation, since it makes us refill the bag before it is empty. 2. there is no way to position the filter over the mouth of a water bottle without holding it (meaning, there is no hands-free way of using this). You have to sit there and hold the filter in the correct position over the mouth of the bottle the whole time it is filling. The only other option is to put the filter into the bottle, but that defeats the purpose of filtering the water, since the outside of the filter will be dirty in most situations. A clip-on brace/stand/tripod that sits over the mouth of a nalgene bottle would be a real nice feature.
Scritto da: JLW
Good filter but the pouches let us down.
Our MSR pump failed after over 15 yrs of use. With a family now we thought we'd try the gravity system as we use a lot more water and it can be filtering whilst we prep food etc. Overall the Sawyer system is a good one, it is fast, even in silty water, and we even had success trying it as a "life straw" straight from a creak. The back-wash system is also great - we even helped other campers back-wash their higher cost systems! It's the pouches we had a problem with. The plastic is brittle. We expect our kids to help us in small ways. The 8 year old was taking a full small pouch of clean water to the food storage bin (bear-proof bin) and dropped it from waist height. It burst open spilling the whole content - that was a surprise to us, they need to be more robust than this. It left us short of water and short 1 clean water bottle. The dirty water bag then dropped 5ft after hanging it in a tree. There is no built-in hanger, so I hooked the carry handle on a branch stub. As the bag drained it changed shape and fell off, bursting around the hose connection - not so surprising from that height but its a gravity system, it has to be hung up somewhere. I now tie it on using my own rope... more stuff to carry and mess around setting up. After using vinyl/fabric water-bags, we weren't prepared for these failures. I managed a duct-tape field repair on this bag but it really hampered our ability to collect water. Unfortunately, I didn't carry the vinyl bag as a spare and anyway they don't fit the Sawyer connection threads. Not sure what to do now. I have a good filter, but I don't trust the bags, especially when hiking and space in the backpack is limited to carry spares. One final tip: With this system, you will have bottle lids everywhere - tie them on to avoid losing them and littering the streams and campgrounds (see my photo's for 1 way to do it).
Scritto da: Derek
Fantastic
Watch a video on youtube and learn how to use each part. The filter can be used on its own as a straw or can screw into standard bottles like those sold by Platypus (and then use the squeeze method). If using the big bag (gravity method), using the hose helps a lot with flow rate. Make sure to get air bubbles out of hose if possible. Once you get the hang of it it's a breeze to use. Make sure to clean the filter regularly. Regularly back flush it with clean water using the syringe, or for deep cleaning soak the filter in warm water for several hours then back flush maybe 6 or 7 times. I've been using this for 4-5 years, on average maybe 2 weeks per year for two people, and it's still going strong.
Scritto da: Mely.
Very useful in camp!
This is as definitely a game changer for the amount of water I drank on my most recent back country canoe trip. It was so helpful having a bag of water I could filter and use as needed while in camp. The filter worked fast and was very easy to backwash. The only issue I had was that by the 2nd day, the rubber tubing was full of cracks and holes that leaked (see attached photo). I was very careful in how I hung it and packed it so I don’t know how or why the tubing ended up like that. It got progressively worse throughout my trip and will have to be replaced soon. The plastic of the bag feels brittle as well so hopefully it doesn’t become an issue down the road.
Scritto da: Kobalt
Works
I have the Squeeze bag filter kit from Sawyer, they're good but this one I will use for every day tap water filtering. I never trusted city water so it goes through a ceramic filter and now through this gravity one, water is pure without funny taste just what I needed. Edit: the 1 gal. bag is very close to useless, it feels like hard plastic and looks like it can puncture/break easily if folded too often. At that price it should've been packaged with a soft more rubber like bladder like the platypuss. Very poorly designed bag btw, put the filler where the handle is and the handle where the filler is
Scritto da: gorbur
Versatile
Takes silty water to a clear state relatively quicky. Included all the bits for a basic gravity feed and cleaning. Bag packs flat and fills close (3L) to capacity well. Backwashing was straight forward. However he tube to syringe connection is just friction fit so does pop off without due care. The only extra needed is a string strap to suspend the bag. Ill still take along tablets just in case but this is now my primary water source.

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