Hi! I'm Dom and I'm a freelance photographer (besides other things) based in Germany. I'm rather new to RU-vid and will be uploading gear tests, reviews and other content around photography.
I was planning to buy this backpack, but due to the flaws you mentioned, I decided against it. I also have the previous, old version, and I'll stick with it despite it being damaged a bit in a few places. Thanks for the helpful insight!
The old one is my fav packpack, but haven't been able to use it as my EDC because it cant have A4 documents, and also the non removable camera comparrtment (though it is falling appart). Can you fit a4 docs on the back of the new one? it seems a bit wider
Danke dir für die ehrliche Einschätzung. Ich hätte mir schon fast den Rucksack gekauft, aber der Designfehler, dass alles aus dem oberen Fach nach unten rutschen und schlimmstenfalls verloren gehen kann, ist ein K.O.-Kriterium. Falls es dich interessiert: ich habe einen anderen Rucksack gefunden, der ähnlich groß und ähnlich aufgebaut ist, aber den Vorteil hat, dass man das obere Fach per Reißverschluss vom Kamerafach abtrennen kann: Cullmann ULTRALIGHT 2in1 DayPack 600+.
Would you say it‘s possible to have a battery bundle attached to a Nikon fx-cam? And has one an idea of the camerabag is water resistant? I want to take the backpack with me skiing
Thanks for the review! I have the old one as well and your video helped me to decide. No more Photosport for me - LowePro essentially bricked the design…
I was looking at this bag . I have the old one and decided not to get this newest one. Simply for the fact they removed the extra safety camera door strap. I just dont trust one zipper alone holding your expensive camera from falling out. I went with the shimoda explore 25 but its more expensive.
I found a similar backpack called CULLMANN ULTRALIGHT 2in1 Daypack 600+. On the inside, instead of having the divider from the top and bottom part fastened with velcro, it has a zipper all around that area. I am thinking to get this one. But until then I need to do a bit more research since I found only one video on RU-vid about it
Can you increase the Velcro area by stitching a wide band of Velcro on the sides of the internal divider so it would be stuck much better in place so it would not come loose? Is there what to stick all that extra Velcro on the inside walls of the backpack?
Silly question: Do I have to buy a different Samyang Lens Station for every different Samyang lens that I have or owning just one work fine for every Samyang lens?
I have no idea, never had a D4 in my hands, I'm a Canon guy. However I very very much doubt it. The Canon R6 (which is a rather slim camera already) without any battery grips attached is somewhat of a tight fit all around. I don't think a body with attached battery grip would be able to fit in at all.
They described this "design flaw" as a feature in their video......the intent is that if you take the inner bag out and use it strapped to you, then you have the entire interior of the backpack for other stuff. I'm curious, does the flap between the sections only have velcro on the one side? It looks from the video as if it does.
Hi Tihr, thanks for your comment! I do fully understand what the intent of this design decision is. I might not be stating it that clear in this video since it's a follow up, but go over it to some extend in my initial review I did last year. Not sure what you mean by "on the one side" - it's standard velcro, the soft... hairy? (not sure how to describe it, but you know what I mean, right?) bit is sewed on the inside of the backpack and the flap itself has the hook-part sewed to the underside if you look from the top down. So in theory that should be physically the best approach to it, because whatever pushes down pulls on all the velcro and doesn't peel it off. And as long as this happens in the middle or so it probably works fine. Based on my experience smaller things like GPS devices or filter cases have a tendency to work their way to the sides/edges though and that's where it at some point always came lose enough for those to slip through. Not sure if they then peel off the velcro from the edges or if it just can't hold it or whatever I don't know. I've always just seen the result. Then there is the point of fixing it once it's lose, that is -diplomatically speaking- a pita. The underside of the flap is made of soft microfiber-like material, probably to protect the camera compartment itself with very soft fabric so nothing scours off each other. Theoretically a very nice idea, however the velcro hooks on the flap bend around and stick like hell to this fabric, so you have a hard time pulling it off there (in fact it hooks there way better and seems to like to stick to that way more than on the actual velcro). Then you have to be very careful to attach the flap in the backpack where you (at least I) can hardly work with two hands while the velcro itself continues to bend down and stick to the flap underside to this somewhat flexible material that stratches a bit what makes it even harder to remove from the hooks to hook them into where they are supposed to be hooked into - so it's very annoying, time consuming and not an easy task to achieve 100% velcro fit between the flap and the backpack wall. Now I'm a rather patient person, but this annoyed me every time I did it. Maybe that's also part of the problem that the velcro doesn't really fully hold anymore when it's not 100% on and the microfiber underside still pulls it off, but as said, I find it rather impossible to properly put it together for the reasons stated. I get that this is all very subjective though and depends what you do with the backpack - if you only ever have a jacket and your gloves in there, it won't be a problem, as nothing pushes hard enough for it to open or could fall out if it came undone. If you make sure your jacket or something else is on the bottom like a bowl and everything is in there that could fall out, it's probably fine as well. I don't want to bother with something that personally though, also when I need the jacket or whatever is in there at any given time, then I don't want to undo the contents of the backpack to make sure nothing could slip through once I need what made the bowl on the bottom - if that makes sense. You might just use the backpack for a city stroll and just carry a rain jacket just in case and that won't be a problem. You might be only using it in hot climates where you don't really need much in there anyway, probably it will be fine. When I go hiking in the mountains or colder places (which is what I usually do) for a couple of days, I have a lot of stuff and clothing in there that makes the backpack part full and can push the velcro open and have things fall through somewhere - and it did so multiple times. I put my GPS unit in there when I don't need it (because, that's one other aspect I somewhat very much dislike in this backpack, it doesn't fit in the top pocket outside because that's maximally like 1/3 of the size the AW II's pocket was), which I actually lost through the opening but luckily noticed only 50-or-so-meters later and was able to find it back. I've had my filter case push the velcro open and slip below the camera compartment. Just for me to have thought I lost that thing with some hundred bucks worth of filter in there until I thought about looking below the camera compartment. I've had trail mix doing the same and then had to fiddle around on the trail to get that back up and the flap closed again which includes taking most of the stuff out that's in there... and so on, you get the point... maybe I'm using the backpack wrong, but a backpack I can't put anything small in or then have to tie it somewhere in the backpack to not fall out is not really worth much for me to be honest. That it's intended to be that way doesn't make it a perfect or even good design -again for me- though. In my opinion if they'd used a zipper and made it the 5 bucks more expensive that this costs more to produce instead of velcro and this microfiber-fabric directly where the hooks just look to stick, that would've been a way better choice for all aspects here in my humble opinion. cheers
@@dowe-photography4972 I saw that after I watched the other video!!! Sorry about that, I saw them out of order :) I just thought it was funny that it was a feature, that wound up being worse. I appreciate very much the detailed description, and I understand COMPLETELY what you're talking about....I have a bag that's very similar in some regard, it has very strong velcro but the pieces never seem to want to stick despite that, but it loves to stick to other things. After ruining a favorite scarf, that one got donated. And I totally understand the too much weight pushing down into the other area, I have another bag that does this (horizontally if you can believe that, I couldn't myself, even after seeing it happen). I think your suggestion about the zipper is spot on, that would definitely be the best solution. I wonder what else could be done (after purchase) because I really need an upgrade from the fastpack that I have now. That one is similar but has two defined chambers, and it's annoying that it can be topheavy even if you have heavier stuff in the bottom (the top part is larger and hangs over *grumbles*). Other than that I love the bag and the Photo Sport looked like an upgrade that I was considering. OHH what I meant was, does the velcro go all the way around the three sides of the flap between, from the video it looked like it only had velcro on one side (leaving two sides open).
haha no worries :-) It's sadly often the case that something brand new is not necessarily better (at least for the customer) or it's just not 100% working as expected - or was a really great idea and then accounting people put the budget cuts where it seperated from 'very great really usable feature' to 'well, nice idea though, thanks for trying' ;-) Aha! Now I got you - yes, the velcro is on 3 sides, front, left and right and the flap is sewed on the back. There is a little opening on the corners when it's "closed" where I can hardly push my index finger through (so let's call it index finger sized area) where the velcro strips are apart and there is nothing to stick, probably for production reasons and that actually might be one of the reasons a device like a GPS handheld could find their first step out, as there basically already is a little opening, but yeah, I don't know. In my video I think I just didn't bother to reattach it properly, as said, it's kind of annoying to do that - so sorry for the confusion :-D oh yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about, stuff sticking to velcro hooks and being ruined is freaking annoying. For that reason I actually avoid buying jackets or so where the wind breaker element or anything else is held by velcro (you probably know the type I'm talking about) ruined more than one good scarf and it mostly doesn't live through a year before it stops to stick anyhow. Luckily that is not really anything I'm worried about on this backpack though, as the velcro hooks immediately bend down and hold for their dear life on the microfiber underside haha ;-) You could look in the model before, the Photo Sport AW II, they actually still sell it new (at least in Europe they do, not sure in other parts of the world) and I love that bag since I have it. In fact I went back to it after being annoyed by the new AW III last year and didn't look back, would most certainly buy it again if mine got damaged. I find it to be the perfect bag, I use it as hand luggage bag as well (fits normal hand luggage restrictions easily), so I carry camera+lenses safely and have way enough space for electronics/batteries (which are mostly only allwoed in hand luggage), drone, headphones, kindle, sun glasses and stuff like that and still room to stuff a jacket in depending where/which time I fly. Only disadvantage, compared to the AW III one is that the divider is mostly sewed in and not to be opened or removed (however you can stuff stuff around the front and under the compartment as well which kind of even gives you more space, I usually stuff emergency underwear and a tshirt in there when I fly in case I strand somewhere or the luggage is lost - which has helped me more than once -, also it allows to put something in there that is longer than the carry compartment, not that anything particular came to mind right now... I use it often to just stuff clothing there when the backpack is really full. I guess you could do the same in the AW III maybe if you stuff it like through the camera opening or so... don't know). Anyhow, also you can't take the camera compartment out and it feels a teeny tiny bit less cushioned (at least after 6 or so years using it) and the shoulder straps are not as nicely cushioned, still very comfortable to carry, even when full -at least for me. I mostly do longer walks with it when it's colder, so I mostly have some clothing on and I'm used to carrying backpacks so that's not really bothering me that much, but to be fair, the AW III is a bit more comfortable to carry. Not by a lot though in my opinion. On the AW II however I get more stuff in there, the camera area is (what feels like way!) more spacy, I put the exact measurements in the video and it's not by much, but it actually feels like a lot, and the top pocket on the very top of the lid is at least 3 times bigger than on the AW III. I get a kindle with leather casing in there, plus a mobile, plus my keys, plus some paper tissues, sunglasses and bits and bobs that you have. On the AW III it's basically full when my keys are in there and a mobile spans it uncomfortably. That doesn't sound like a biggy, but it kinda is. Where you put those things instead when the bag is full, especially while travelling that is SO annying. Maybe that's just me :-D Yeah, it looked all very good on paper - I preordered the bag as soon as it was available, so even before they released the marketing campaign or anyone had one to show when I stumbled over it on their website one evening. I know it was risky and I'm not complaining and being basically the first to get one was what made me create the video in the first place - thought it would be helpful to people that considered buying it but couldn't inform themselves anywhere yet, which is what I usually do for hours before buying something. Looked like a great update to the AW II, especially being able to take out the camera compartment sounded like a great idea to kind of overpack on the beginning of a multi day tour, where naturally food would become less over time so more space to then put the camera compartment back in on day 2 or 3 or something like that, or to have additional space when pulling out the camera compartment for a thicker jacket during the day when it's warm enough, or leave the backpack in the car and just use the camera bag for some shorter walks to some sight seeing place during a road trip or something... never really did any of this in practical use though. For some it was just generally too small anyway or just big enough to not mess with taking out the camera, for other times I couldn't bother with going through the process and just pull my camera out and go with that on its strap. And I still think it's a great idea in that regard, just that some parts are not really well designed for me personally, or ... well I don't really use a backpack like that. I went on a multi day hike in the mountains last year with it and it was a rather annoying experience with that backpack to be honest for a multitude of reasons (this wall of text is long enough already, not necessarily going into details now ;-)). Then took it for a shorter trip to the coast, only day trips, no overnighters, still was more annoyed than happy. Finally I switched back to my older AW II for the last trip last year (which was a couple weeks travelling through Iceland in the beginning winter) and that reassured me that for me personally the AW II is just a better and more practical backpack. Might be that I just got used to doing things a specific way over the 6 or so years I had it, but then again, if the new one doesn't have anything that improves that flow for me but instead makes it more tedious... why bother. Not sure if it would be possible or financially adviseable, unless you can do that yourself, to get rid of the velcro and stitch a zipper in. Even then, I don't know if that material would support that, but then again I'm not a tailor and would probably fail to stitch anything more complicated than to emergency repair some socks :-D However I guess that one change alone would make the backpack a lot more usable for me. Still, probably, not replacing my AW II right now, but still that's my biggest issue with it. That and maybe the size, I guess. 3-5L more + Zipper (and a bigger top pocket ;-)) would make it nearly perfect. Oh yeah a friend had a fastpack as well and he wasn't too happy with the size, that the zippers went open all the way (he didn't trust that they actually stop at the strips and stuff could fall out, not sure if that's a reasonable fear or not though ;-)) and said the same thing as you as well. Not comfortable to carry and too top heavy, so that was never an option for me. so, TL;DR: look into the Photo Sport AW II if they still sell it in your region new, might be one for you as well :-) anyways, nice chat going here, thanks for that, have a good one. Cheers
I have the original Photo Sport 200 AW from a decade ago. It's getting a bit worn and I've been thinking about upgrading to the latest model if there's some new features or benefits. Unfortunately this seems like a downgrade for the reasons you've covered. My Photo Sport is my all-time favorite camera bag / backpack and is great for hiking or even just walking around the city but the reduced camera gear storage and a divider that won't stay secure feels like big, annoying drawbacks.
Hi David, thanks for your comment! They still sell the older AW II at least in Europe, so if you can get your hands on it, that might be a better choice than the AW III for you. I personally never owned the AW Version 1 back in the day, I just didn't know it existed. Been using larger LowePro camera bags or over-the-shoulder type of camera bags back then. I only noticed the series when they released the AW II so I can't really compare both out of personal experience, however the AW Version 1 looks rather similar to the AW II after a quick internet search - so that might be a better choice for you then especially as they still seem to sell it at least online. I mean the AW III ist not all bad. It's just not a backpack for me, hence it's been lying around in my closet since a year and I've exclusively used my old AW II. Hope that came across in the video :-D Also I don't know if they might have improved something silently since I got it as one of the very first in Europe last year. Haven't had any recently sold in my hands. So that's a possibility. Doubt it, but possible nonetheless. If it's just the flippy floppy flap that doesn't stay latched (for me anyway) that bothers you one could think about sewing or glueing it fixed or... I don't know. But that's also not really something you'd wanna do to your expensive backpack. If you're happy with the AW I, I would suggest looking in the AW II for a replacement :-) cheers
Awesome review! I still use my photo sport model 20l that was terminated in 2016 or so. I like it for its camera gear and personal items carrying capabilities. I actually carry two cameras with different lenses on them plus my rain jacket, rain pants and some other stuff for day long use.
Sorry, it is Photo Sport pro 30 L that I still use and has been terminated by Lowepro. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-IRNk58oUXrM.html However, I received my LowePro Photo Sport BP 24L AW III a week ago. I am disappointed at seeing its smallness and narrowness. It will not fit anything more than a jacket. I don't know why Lowepro did not work on upgrading Photo Sport pro 30 L. The main complaint with that model was thinness of shoulder straps. I also ordered Lowepro Flipside Trek 450 BP and received it yesterday. I think after fitting my gear in it, I will retain it and return photo sport.
Great review. Do you think it will fit a canon R5 with rf 24-70 f2.8 L attached plus an additional rf70-200 f4L on the side or vice versa? If not, any recommendation? Thanks
hey, thanks. Not comfortably (neither for you having to push it in with too much force, nor the equipment hanging around in there then). Maybe without the lenshoods and with the 70-200 attached to the body... Check at minute 17:05 (and onwards) in the video, I actually show some examples. The problem is mostly the width of the compartment - and the shallow depth doesn't really help. I switched back to my BP200AW for anything longer than an afternoon stroll in the city as the daily use of the backpack actually showed some downsides for me I couldn't really get along with, despite all its upsides. Planning to make a follow-up video for months, but just can't really find time to do it right now.
i bought this backpack a Hour ago, and i´m searching for a video like this..reeeeeally good Work, well done....thanks...you got a new follower man..have fun,,,happy new year and greetz from Germany, Munich...
En français. La petite fixation frontale du haut à la minute 6.03 n'a pas le petit bouton pour ouvrir le sac. Que faire? La fermeture est impossible à ouvrir.
Great review! Exactly what I was looking for. I am a happy user of the smaller "old one", BP200AW II, and totally love it! I really like the detachable camera compartment of the new version - really adds a ton of versatility. Most of your comments are spot-on! I liked the old one's two pockets on the hip supports - to me it's more interesting than the new one's "molle-ish" attachement loops. The rain cover pocket was much better on the old one IMO. The back panel looks better on the new one, but I agree - with the exception of truly "ventilated" backpacks with a suspension mesh structure (like Lowe Alpine's AirZone system), all other backpacks make your back sweat no matter what marketing names they give to it lol! Thanks for the video. Will wait until the new ones make it to local stores, so that I could go there and get a closer look/feel.
On the photosport aw ii when you put a hydration bladder in the back panel it would loose its shape so bad making the back panel rounded making the pack extremely uncomfortable. Have they fixed this on the 3rd model?
Thank you for the review. I had the previous version and disliked it for the following reasons; thin shoulder straps, small item got lost in the main part of the bag, poor back ventilation, useless hip belt pockets, I couldn't configure the camera compartment to suit my gear, no structural frame to the backpack. Most of these nit picks seem to have been fixed, I'd be very interested in trying this one.
I have the original Version, the predecessor to your "old one" I think neither the Version 2 nor Version 3 have gone better than the original so I am happy to stick with my original. So much so I bought another one to keep for when mine dies. BTW I did try the Version 2 (your old one) but sent it back because it wasn't an improvement.
Seriously, I really appreciate this video! It's surprising how much effort someone with a very small channel puts into a video like this - but it was definitely worth it! This video contains way better and way more specific information than any other online source that I have found for the new PhotoSport III.
Thanks Christopher, appreciate your kind comment =) I was trying to make a video that I would want to watch for learning about a product. I usually use RU-vid (probably like everyone else these times) to inform myself about things I think about purchasing. And as you mentioned, most are basically just sales pitches (which is totally fine, don't get me wrong) or done by people who don't really care about the stuff they present and usually I don't get the full details or it's slightly off for a positive presentation. Which annoys me quite a bit most times as it's wasted lifetime for me watching a lot of video with no real content. That's why I went into the effort in trying to create a review that would give ME the details I would be looking for (despite I ordered the backpack when it was not even really in the marketing already). I'm going out for some travels for shooting the next weeks, so I'm hoping the get some update video going on next month how it's been working for me there as well - but we'll see ;-) Thanks again mate, Cheers
@@dowe-photography4972 You definitely nailed the review! I ordered the backpack just after I had finished your video ;-) Looking forward to your upcoming videos!
Thank you for the great review! I've been wishing someone would do a comparison of the Fastpack II and III bags, and it's great that someone is doing that with one of Lowepro's other multi use bags!
Thanks for your kind comment! I'd love to test out more LowePro bags and make videos about them, but as I'd have to buy them myself (not really assuming anyone would send them to me for reviews with such a small channel) that's probably not happening anytime soon, also I'm still rather happy with the new PhotoSport for what I intended to use it :-)
Do you think would it fit a Nikon D500? I see it's 4-5mm taller and I'm wondering if would be too hard to take it in and out while keeping the backpack on a single shoulder strap.
No clue, I believe I never had a D500 in my hands and no idea how it compares size wise to one of the Canon bodys I know - sorry, can’t really say something about that you can rely on, so I won’t.
I’ve just received the 24ltr backpack and I’ve got my Nikon d500 in the camera compartment with the L plate attached, it’s a tight fit but it’s in, also have zoom lens attached.
Thank you for providing such a detailed and informative video for this bag. So many bag reviews on RU-vid don't go into any detail but you covered everything in a very clear manner. Keep up the good work :)
Thanks for the review. I have the Photosport 300 AW II (like some other photo bags) and the camera compartment of the new one is too small for me. I woiuld like to see a little bigger bag than a 24L...
Agree, also have the 300 AW II, and a bit more room in the new one would be great. For me though I believe that the new compartment has a better fit for my gear so even if the volume is slightly smaller I'd be able to fit more or less the same, and with easier access as it slightly wider.
Thanks for the video it was very helpful in my decision. I am interested to know if you heard any similar alternatives? Thanks again.. and great video!
As a long time Lowepro fan, I really appreciate the thorough review, thank you ! I’m still using the original Photosport 200 AW, and the detachable camera compartment is a feature I would really enjoy, as many times I had to resort to using another hiking bag, when I had a smaller photo setup, and wanted to bring more food or something. About the water bladder compartment, can it hold a laptop? I may have misread the subtitles but I didn’t exactly get which part you were talking about, when you mentioned fitting a 15 inch MBP.
Thanks for your kind words, I'm glad the review was helpful =) It actually never struck my mind to show what and which size of laptop would fit in the water bladder compartment to be honest. Which is mostly because I don't quite like having a hard, flat surface on the back of a backpack, at least in the summer when not wearing multiple clothes on top of each other, (part of why I don't like water bladders in these "outside" compartments - usually it follows the shape of the back a bit better when there's nothing in the bladder compartment and I prefer that for comfort) - and I personally would only do that if I really have to - and only for flights or thereabouts where I wouldn't carry the backpack for longer periods of time. I'm not sure if that's overly careful but with a laptop there between your back and the backpack and its contents, I'm not totally sure how well that is for the laptop giving it's now sandwich-ed in between the load and your back. Anyhow, I should have covered it in the video - but then again that all was my point of view and how it works for me and since I never use it that way I totally missed that... so, thanks for your great question! It goes the full width and the full height of the back part so it absolutely fits a 13" MacBook and there's still quite a bit of space left and right so you should be able to fit any slim 14" laptop "ultrabook" (or whatever they call these nowaways) and -maybe- even a 15" one, but I can't test that due to the lack of one. I measured it to be roughly 25,5cm (10") wide and 39,5cm (15.5") deep. The height I didn't really know how to measure easily, as it gives a lot way but would depend on what else you got in the backpack (or rather how much) and it also probably will go down on the carrying comfort size quickly too. So: yes, it should fit any modern laptop depending on how thick it is and how thick your sleeve is - if you want to carry it in there, though I'm personally not totally convinced about that ;-) What I was talking about in the video (got a tendency to mumble, I know...) is putting it in the main compartment. I put it in some sort of protective sleeve (I got a very cheap no name neoprene thing from Amazon I bought probably in 2013 or so), put it in the back in front of the pockets there so it is more or less flat on the back and doesn't waste much space and that works great for me. The same I did with the Photo Sport 300 AW II and that has worked nicely for me all the years over dozens of flights and hikes. I have mainly soft things in my backpack though. If I'd be carrying stones or anything else with sharp and pointy edges (to exaggerate) I might not want to put the laptop in there, but yeah, so much for common sense. Cheers
@@dowe-photography4972 Thanks for the detailed response ! No worries, your review reflects real world use, so it’s very good 👍 I’m a bit reluctant to fit a laptop in the bladder pocket for the same reasons, but maybe in a sleeve and for a short a to b trip (in a plane or car mostly) it could do the trick. It’s good it fits in the main compartment though, on the original Photosport the camera compartment can’t be folded and unless putting the laptop in the front, where it would get crushed on the side, it’s not ideal. An iPad fit more nicely in the bladder pocket, with a sleeve, so there’s still that. The new model is quite pricey (I got my old original model second hand but good-as-new for like, 30 euros so it was a real bargain :p ), so I probably will wait a bit to get it, but it really seems nice. Maybe I’ll get the version II in the meantime 😅
@@dowe-photography4972 1st of all thank you very much for this great and detailed review! I appreciate it very much. I'm currently owning the Photo Sport 200AW and I'm quite satisfied about it. It's great for hiking and bicycle day trips. When I travel by train I put a 14" laptop into the water bladder compartment which barely fits in there. In my opinion it's quite well protected there. Anyway - the BP24 seems to have some great advantages which I miss on my 200AW. I just haven't decided yet if I'll go for the BP15 or the BP24 🤔 - I might sleep a few nights over it but more likely it will be the BP24...
Hi Denis, I'm sure, you'll be happy with it! I talked to LowePro shortly before the first 5-or-so were able to be ordered and they mentioned it'll take until late August until it'll be widely available due to material supply issues. So I'm glad you've been able to catch one already now! Cheers!
@@dowe-photography4972 yeah I think I got quite lucky, I'd been checking Amazon regularly since I saw this was announced and it appeared today. It's good timing too as I have a trip coming up. This review confirmed my purchase was a good one btw, I think the short comings you listed are fair and the biggest issue for you (compartment size) shouldn't effect me as much with my smaller apsc mirrorless
@@DenisMcD I've bought it directly from LowePro, here in Germany basically no (trustworthy) shop had listed it when I bought it. Google gave me a couple US shops, but availability wasn't great either and I didn't really wanted it to be shipped around the world, get stuck in customs and all that fun that comes with ordering abroad. LowePro sent it out within 24 hours from Italy, so that was rather quickly. In regards to size - I mainly use my R6 with the RF 15-35 and the EF 24-70 (with the EF to RF Ring Mount Adapter attached) and that fits very nicely (oh and by the way, I tested the RF 24-70 2.8L today too instead of the EF 4L I used in the video, fits as well - but I don't own that lens, so it didn't make it in the video), but if I dediced to take the 70-200 I probably will have to have that on the body when it's stowed even on the R6 - we'll see. The 6D MkII is just my backup body, I wouldn't take on hikes anyway. Both of the backpacks are not really "going to a professional shoot and taking everything you own with you" kind of backpacks in the first place, so I didn't expect much space (that then would make the luggage compartment smaller again, which I wouldn't like either :D - however I would've liked at least a similar sized camera compartment... but that's my only major downside and I'm sure it won't bother me really