Author Topic: collapsible cups  (Read 1350 times)

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Offline tp4tissue

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collapsible cups
« on: Tue, 14 March 2023, 19:53:26 »
they is ne gud' ?

do the silicone ones break over time ? especially in the cold ?


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Offline chyros

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Re: collapsible cups
« Reply #1 on: Wed, 15 March 2023, 08:40:06 »
Tried ones made out of a different material, they're ****e. Collapse too easily, prone to leakage, difficult to clean well.
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Offline fohat.digs

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Re: collapsible cups
« Reply #2 on: Wed, 15 March 2023, 08:56:09 »
Tried ones made out of a different material, they're ****e. Collapse too easily, prone to leakage, difficult to clean well.

When in the Boy Scouts in the 1960s I had one made of aluminum. It worked tolerably well, collapsed to a lightweight, hockey-puck-sized disc that fit in the pocket.

However, its primary use for hiking in the mountains where (and WHEN) streams were clean enough to drink from. Otherwise - why? do such things exist ....
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Offline chyros

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Re: collapsible cups
« Reply #3 on: Wed, 15 March 2023, 16:27:55 »
Tried ones made out of a different material, they're ****e. Collapse too easily, prone to leakage, difficult to clean well.

When in the Boy Scouts in the 1960s I had one made of aluminum. It worked tolerably well, collapsed to a lightweight, hockey-puck-sized disc that fit in the pocket.

However, its primary use for hiking in the mountains where (and WHEN) streams were clean enough to drink from. Otherwise - why? do such things exist ....
Mine was made out steel I think. But I just don't really see the point. You can't use them to take liquid with you, it's just for scooping.... for which you can also use your hands, which don't take up extra weight or space.

A much better solution, I think, is to use a dopper bottle, which doubles as a bottle AND a drinking glass, and which doesn't leak or become grotty, unlike those collapsible cups.

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