The below article is forwarded from www.rei.com
You can spend big bucks on a high-tech pack, but if it doesn't fit right, you won't be comfortable. REI's pack-fitting experts share their tips here for getting the right size pack.
Find Your Torso Length
Just because you are a certain height — say a 5'9" female or 6' male — does not mean you automatically need a "large" or "tall" pack. Your torso length, not your height, determines your pack size. Here's how to measure yours:
Have a friend locate the bony bump at the base of your neck, where the slope of your shoulder meets your neck. This is your 7th cervical (or C7) vertebra. Tilt your head forward to locate it more easily.
Using a flexible tape measure, your friend should start at that spot and measure downward along your spine.
Place your hands on your hips so you can feel your iliac crest, which serves as the "shelf" of your pelvic girdle. (It's the first hard thing you feel when you run your fingers down from the sides of your ribcage.) Position your hands so your thumbs are reaching behind you.
Have your friend finish measuring at the point where the tape crosses an imaginary line drawn between your thumbs. This distance is your torso length.
Use your torso length measurement to find your best pack size. Generally, manufacturers size their pack frames something like this:
Extra Small: Fits torsos up to 15-1/2"
Small: Fits torsos 16" to 17-1/2"
Medium/Regular: Fits torsos 18" to 19-1/2"
Large/Tall: Fits torsos 20" and up
On REI.com's product pages, you can find the torso range for each pack size listed just above the spec chart. If your measurement is right on the border (say, 17-3/4"), it's best to visit an REI store to try on both sizes of that pack. REI's product line includes adult packs sized to fit torso lengths as compact as 12" (10" for children) and as long as 23". If your measurement lies outside that range, you might require a custom-built pack.
Determine Your Hip Size
While not as crucial as your torso length, your hip measurement is useful to know. It's especially helpful if you are considering a pack that offers interchangeable hipbelts.
Take your tape measure and wrap it around the top of your hips, the "latitude line" where you can feel your iliac crest — those two pointy bones just above the front pockets on your pants. A properly positioned hipbelt will straddle your iliac crest, about an inch above and below that line. |