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Luggage

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    #11
    I travel a lot and so I have different options depending on where & how long.

    Holidays: 1998 hard shell, clip locking, Samsonite. Scratched to hell but seemingly unbreakable. If it's good enough for cabin crew it should do you fine.

    For less than a week I use an Antler hard shell zip locking 'trolley' which has a broken lock or I use a soft shelled Berghaus trolley.

    We also have a massive soft shelled but heavy duty zipped bag from CostCo. It has additional clips to stop the zips being under too much tension.

    Other than that I have a Mares diving bag which is on its last legs (wheels) and bits keep falling off it.

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      #12
      For checked in I always use something solid that looks like tulip. I don't care what it looks like as it's less of a theft target for baggage handlers.

      Carry on anything IATA size, high end, elegant & less than a kilo. I network a lot on planes and your luggage talks more about you than your watch and shoes. Sad, but the way of the world.

      Top Tip - when not staying in a hotel please don't open your luggage on the end of your bed. You don't even want to know where it has been.

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        #13
        What sort of trips are you doing?

        I buy my cases from an independent department store my parents use to buy their cases from when I was little.

        They are guaranteed for two years but to be honest most of them last 4-5 years including the 2 years I'm using them almost twice weekly.

        The cost of the case dependents on whether they are having a sale on or not.(They are similar to Antler cases.)

        With rucksacs I want to last, I just go to a good camping shop. In fact the rucksacs often cost twice as much as the cases.
        Last edited by SueEllen; 10 December 2015, 12:38.
        "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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          #14
          Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
          What sort of trips are you doing?
          Yes forgot to define the requirements. When crossing the US on a Harley, this stuff might be more appropriate. Nah, love it anyway for leasure travel.

          Leather Luggage Bags - Leather Suitcases | Saddleback Leather Co.

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            #15
            I have the small Eastpack £100 case for mid-week, weekend travel etc, you can get a heck of a lot in, and it is a very well designed case - it opens like a book.

            It is also accepted on Ryanair flights, so no worries about taking it on-board.

            Eastpak | John Lewis

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              #16
              To wrap or not wrap 'tis the question
              How fortunate for governments that the people they administer don't think

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                #17
                Originally posted by Troll View Post
                To wrap or not wrap 'tis the question
                I think you're looking for the My Lunch thread.

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
                  What sort of trips are you doing?
                  Generally a 1-week holiday, where the case will be transported by car/bus/train and then live in the hotel/villa. Typically we take one medium-sized case each rather than one huge one.

                  My preferred form factor would probably be a traditional suitcase but with wheels on one or both ends for ease of carrying (and my wife has a bad back).

                  I hadn't really considered a hold-all, but since this is checked baggage I'd probably prefer something a bit more rigid for when we bring back bottles of booze
                  Last edited by d000hg; 10 December 2015, 13:27.
                  Originally posted by MaryPoppins
                  I'd still not breastfeed a nazi
                  Originally posted by vetran
                  Urine is quite nourishing

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                    #19
                    My old Globe Trotter suitcase that I bought in the 1980's is still going. It looks a bit battered these days but hasn't broken. It doesn't have wheels though.
                    England's greatest sailor since Nelson lost the armada.

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                      #20
                      Originally posted by Uncle Albert View Post
                      My old Globe Trotter suitcase that I bought in the 1980's is still going. It looks a bit battered these days but hasn't broken. It doesn't have wheels though.
                      Free excercise.

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