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US Made Stainless Water Bottles?
I am looking to purchase some stainless steel water bottles for hiking, cycling, etc. I've experimented with a couple of different materials and I am dead sent on food grade stainless. Love it.
I'm trying to find a US made stainless water bottle... Either double or single wall. I did find a Canadian made product - Purica - that is exactly what I want. If I can't find a US made product, I will buy the Purica bottles. Does anyone know of a US maker? And why aren't there any US makers? thank you, angela |
Not stainless...but I had to LOL when our states largest fishwrap wrote a long article on how bad for the envrionment the plastc water bottles are. They suggested one use a metal container instead. My mind instantly went to one in the garage that I used when I hunted. I used it for decades with no problems. It's an aluminum bottle that is carried in a canvas carrier. The carrier is olive drab in color, marked "US". Yep, a WWII surplus canteen. It's nice to know that I've had a "proper" way to carry water all these years. :D
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I use SIGG water bottles for hiking and and love them. Not sure on where they are made.
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Sigg is swiss, and what's wrong with Canada? eh??
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I use Nalgene plastic bottles, but they make some nice stainless ones too (and made in the US):
http://www.nalgene-outdoor.com/store/detail.aspx?ID=1235 |
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I only use their plastic ones, but I thought all Nalgene stuff was made in the USA. I Guess not! |
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silly only thing the us is manufacturing is bailout checks and ****ty cars. |
Just curious. Is your need to buy 'made in usa' strictly for fear of pour quality or is it more of a thing to help out american companies?
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No issues with buying a Canadian made product, greatly admire our northern neighbors. Purica (Canadian) looks like exactly what I'm looking for. What mystified me is that a water bottle isn't a terribly complex item... I would have thought that there would be numerous American makers. I'd like to buy American if I possible (quality must be good or no-go). But there aren't any... None. We can't or won't make a stainless water bottle? Well, Purica, here I come. (eh?) SmileWavy angela |
Get the new BPA free nalgene. Those are awesome and cant be broken. Stainless will dent and what not. Still tough but not as tough IMHO.
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I think Sigg needs to make aluminium bottles with larger openings. To allow easier washing, ice, etc. The original use for the bottles was fuel, not drinking.
Apparently Sigg has ceased making their fuel bottles. I'm guessing they wanted to focus on water bottles, and the fuel application would jeopardize the re-branding of the company as the eco-water-bottle company. Their website doesn't even mention their fuel bottle history, it's like they are ashamed of it. So now you have to buy a MSR fuel bottle to replace the trusty SIGG. A MSR aluminium fuel bottle is much cheaper than a SIGG. I think it is made in Canada, not sure. Lacks the lining but who cares? You're not storing water in the things long term. |
Read stuff from Nalgene for their info:
http://www.nalgene-outdoor.com/technical/bpaInfo.html If weight is a consideration for hiking, I'd leave the nice stainless at home. Sherwood |
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For single wall 18-27 ounce, I think about $15 to $18 would be all I'd spend (not counting shipping). I went to 3 different stores before I gave up and headed on-line. The single wall stuff made in china is about $11 to $14 in our local stores. Is the problem that our manufacturing costs are so high? Or is this an environmentally unpleasant item to manufacture? Seriously - I thought there would be about 50 US makers... Figured I'd be tripping over them. :( edit - I know this is alot of money to spend on a water bottle - but I intend to have it for decades... You're talking to the same person who had her first blow dryer for 27 years.... angela |
Angela. What is wrong with the $10 basic nalgene. I have found them to be excellent on backpacking trips.
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I think my preferred canteen would be a metal one with a very wide opening. That way I could store survival stuff in it and I could also use it to boil water in. Of course I am viewing this from a survival standpoint and not a hiking stand point.
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No not environmentally difficult, but getting approved for food grade is often a pain the royal asss. A product like that is all about tooling costs, not material or manufacture.
It would without question cost more to make in America so no one is going to spend all the money to tool up in the hopes people will give a damn that it's made in America. That's just the sad truth. |
I read a bit on aluminium and health.
Per the CDC, an average American ingests 7-9 mg aluminium daily. Aluminium is in some processed foods like flour, in some medicines like antacids and aspirin, and some cosmetics. Drinking water typically has <0.1 mg/l of aluminium, but can have up to 1 mg/l. A relationship between aluminium and disease, including Alzheimers, has not been established. The levels of aluminium released by cooking in unlined aluminium cookware is considers safe. That is per the CDC, anyway. |
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