I am not a fan of the Ronin Air pads by Flashed. They are ok, but not worth the extra dosh. IMHO of course....
I've only used one once but it didn't strike me as suitable for general use on its own. I think you definitely need to use it underneath a few normal pads, ideally some fairly soft ones.The one I used was Farrar's, its one of the 8a.nu ones. Basically a double bed sized inflatable mattress. On the good side it packed up to a reasonable size and wasn't a big hassle to inflate, on the downside its fuckin unwieldy once blown up and rather hard. The smooth rubbery material and hardness means I think it would need quite a different landing technique to a normal pad if used alone.
for example if you're just going out for a burbage circuit after work you don't want to be tarting around inflating a lilo.
especially the immediate resistance followed by a slow deflate;
Quotefor example if you're just going out for a burbage circuit after work you don't want to be tarting around inflating a lilo.I think thats a fair point, but most of here have at least 2/3 mats already I'd guess. I have a ultra light Burbage only pad for eg - one of those small Moon ones.
I'm still not sold on these as a general one-size-fits-all pad. For £300 you could get three Pod mats, be able to mat out any traverse you're doing, and still be able to comfortably fall off the jugs on NTBTA and the crux of downhill racer. And when you don't want to carry an 8kg mat, you could take just one. Airpads still strike me as a speciality item - yes they will get better, more available and cheaper, but I can't see them replacing standard foam pads entirely in the forseable future. for example if you're just going out for a burbage circuit after work you don't want to be tarting around inflating a lilo. I can't see everyone owning one in the same way everyone has a foam mat. they look good for specific projects though, and I suppose the filling doesn't wear out after a couple of years, (assuming the outer stays in airtight nick).Maybe a good idea for a general purpose air-pad would be something along the lines of a very thick thermarest. I.e. a combination of foam and air. You wouldn't necessarily have to inflate it all yourself (in the same waya thermarest self-inflates 80% of the way), you've still got some foam to stop you bottoming out and if you spring a leak its not just reduced to being an elaborate tarpaulin. could be thinner/smaller too? maybe seb was onto soemthing when he did paralogism. I'll be at the patent office first thing in the morning.
he told me it was 2 years old...it was f'kd...soggy and soft
I've got one of the Mondo pads which is excellent but WAY too big to take on a plane.
what are the dimensions of the pad folded ? I have a birthday coming up
Common sense would say that folded (presumably in half, you'd be hard pushed to get it into quarters!) you half one of the dimensions and double the depth.
was going to buy one of these for taking on planes but when I last looked into it they are still quite large when deflated but the biggest problem is the weight.
Still don't know why you would need a bouldering pad on a plane for but it seems all the rage so I'll keep trying
my question about size may seem a little obvious but having measured my car boot wanted to make sure it wasn't some funny folding thingy ma jiggy that caught me out having just spent 250 of my hard earned cash. you could do the same for some metolious matts and come unstuck.