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The North Face Terra 30 - First Look

First impressions of The North Face's smallest Terra multi-use hill and mountain pack which is available in both men's and women's versions - so there...


Posted: 3 August 2005
by Jon

The North Face Terra 30 - First Look

Price: £55.00

Weight: 1050 grammes (one size)

Features: Multi-use day pack with TNT Light suspension system, 30-litre capacity, 59 x 30 x 18 cm , top access with lid, 420D nylon and 1680D Balistics fabrics, X-Bungee storage, dual daisy chain and tool loops, two side water bottle pockets, inbuilt hydration campatibility, side compression straps, Safe-T whistle on sternum strap, lid pocket, security pocket inside lid pocket with key clip.

Undramatic but effective.
Back system a tad flexy


The Concept Modified for this year, the Terra 30 is the smallest of TNF's Terra hking and trekking packs. At 30 litres in capacity, it's intended as a multi-use hill and mountain day pack, the sort of sac you can use for walking, scrambling, a bit of winter mountaineering maybe and the occasional climbing trip. It's also available in a women's specific version.


Features If you're the sort of gear fiend who demands innovation in everything, you're going to be disappointed, mostly it's just a question of thoroughly proven features, well done. So you get a reinforced Ballistic base to complement the ripstop Nylon of the main body, hydration facility and water bottlle pockets, semi hip-belt with padding, a lid with pocket and moveable Velcro-fastened ice tool loops on the twin daisy chains.

The new for this year TNT Light back system isn't quite as explosive as its name suggests, just being three foam islands for regionalised comfort. The TNT versions on the larger Terras have added stiffening PE sheets for better load carrying and, in the case of the Terra 50, an adjustable back length.

One touch we do like on the latest TNF packs, is the Safe-T sternum strap, which, like those on the Osprey packs, incorporates an emergency whistle into the buckle, which is neat and effective.


In Action For every Eric Clapton, there are scores of thoroughly professional session musicians who just do a thoroughly reliable gig. The Terra 30 is a bit like that. There are no stars and fireworks here, but equally pretty much everything you want and expect from a 30-litre mountain pack is present and correct.

It sits reasonably comfortably with the TNT suspension providing a decent fit and cooling that's no worse than anything else on the market with a conventional back system. The tall-ish, narrow profile works well for scrambling and doesn't catch on incomveniently sited rocks while compression, sternum and hip-tensioning straps allow you to cinch things up for stability.

We can't fault things like the provision of both hydration system compatibility and water bottle pockets - do people still use water bottles ;-) - and twin loops give you winter ice tool options as well. The compression straps even unclip to stow longer objects like, erm, baguettes, with minimum hassle.

As a walking and scrambling sac it works fine and the 30-ltre capacity is ideal for most day outings. It's less happy as a climbing pack, mostly because the combination of no frame sheet and no shoulder tension straps make carrying a dense, heavy load like ropes and rack uncomfortable. Fine for the odd trip, but if you're after a dedicated climbing sac, we'd look elsewhere.


Verdict


It's not flashy and it's not particularly innovative, but the Terra 30 is a thoroughly capable and well thought out walking and scrambling day sac with pretty much all the features most people will look for. It will also do the occasional climbing day, but the back system isn't really intended to cope with the heavier weight of climbing hardware and ropes.

Build quality feels good, but we do think it's a little expensive. It'd be interesting to see TNF using the EVA foam features in their hydration pack back sytems elsewhere in their range as well, the TNT foam is a little on the soft side..


The North Face web site



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