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Is My backpack too heavy?

Your backpack is too heavy if: It's difficult to put on or take off. You have pain from wearing it. You feel tingling or numbness in your limbs. Strap marks show on your shoulders.



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A loaded backpacking pack should not weigh more than about 20 percent of your body weight. (If you weigh 150 pounds, your pack should not exceed 30 pounds for backpacking.) A loaded day hiking pack should not weigh more than about 10 percent of your body weight.

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No matter how well-designed the backpack, less weight is always better. Use the bathroom scale to check that a pack isn't over 10% to 20% of your child's body weight. For example, a child who weighs 80 pounds shouldn't carry a backpack that weighs more than 8 to 16 pounds.

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Here are our practical tips to make their school bag lighter:
  1. Check the backpack load weight. ...
  2. Reduce the bag clutter. ...
  3. Carry only what is required. ...
  4. Ensure good weight distribution. ...
  5. Get a backpack with multiple compartments. ...
  6. Get a backpack with wide padded straps. ...
  7. Get a backpack with a padded back cushion.


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Textbooks and school supplies, plus gym gear, electronic devices, lunches and more contribute to overloaded backpacks. In fact, about 70 percent of kids carry heavier-than-recommended backpacks, researchers reported a few years ago in the journal Applied Ergonomics.

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As a general rule, to prevent injury, a full backpack should weigh no more than 10 to 20 percent of your child's body weight. How a student wears a backpack is often just as important as its overall weight.

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It's ok if the angle of the straps is between a 30- to 60-degree angle. You are just aiming for a snug fit, without causing any pinching or creating spaces between the shoulder straps and your shoulders. If you feel like the pack is pulling you backwards, then tighten the load lifters a bit.

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When you add an extremely heavy school bag, five days a week for over a decade, we're basically crushing those water-filled gaps, compressing the spine with all the extra weight. A backpack accelerates the rate at which we lose water in the lumbar disks, causing us to shrink a little bit more quickly.

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If you are walking, pack the heavy things in the middle and towards the top of the backpack, in the section that is right next to your back. If, on the other hand, you are going skiing, it is smart to place the weight low and towards the back.

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Trips of 5 days or more usually call for packs of 70 liters or more. These are also usually the preferred choice for winter treks lasting more than 1 night. (Larger packs can more comfortably accommodate extra clothing, a warmer sleeping bag and a 4-season tent, which typically includes extra poles.)

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If you will potentially need that extra capacity on a future trip, then definitely get the 75L pack. If you're doing it just because it doesn't seem like much extra weight, even if you don't expect to ever need it, I would go for the 65L pack. That would also curb the temptation to overpack.

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The perfect size for a carry-on For the most part, that 40L backpack that may seem way too small to fit your life into is just small enough to sneak on a plane without checking it into the hold luggage.

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