Expensive luggage worth it?

Old Jun 29th, 2021 | 12:41 AM
  #21  
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Well, we knew that the who "psycho" thing as to what your luggage says about you and what kind of person you are would eventually emerge. Actually, I guess it is really what people want their luggage to say about them to others.
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Old Jun 29th, 2021 | 05:48 AM
  #22  
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I also have an IT bag that I purchased at TJ Maxx. It is so light and it is purple so I love it.
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Old Jun 29th, 2021 | 09:55 AM
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This is similar to the carryon I have, although this onehas the extra zipper for expanding (which adds weight but flexibility). Under $100 on sale and a 5-year warranty.

https://heysamerica.com/products/frontier-21-carry-on
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Old Jun 29th, 2021 | 09:10 PM
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I guess it is really what people want their luggage to say about them to others.

Whoa! What the heck are you talking about?

Is this what happens when thread are moved out of the Lounge?

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Old Jun 30th, 2021 | 05:18 AM
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Nah, from personal experience, it is bad, I had read a report, and it repeated the same stuff, you often lose things while travelling and especially when I travelled to Asia, my backpack was open at the airport by some dude. I recommend reading some tips on these, or perhaps you should go to a safe country where you dont have to worry about expensive luggage. Besides, expensive luggage is one thing and having luggage that is useful another. I usually prefer buying things in the country where I am going, that way it is easy.
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Old Jul 2nd, 2021 | 02:17 PM
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You haven't specified 'expensive' although when I saw the prices for Tumi, I figured that would fit the bill, no pun intended.

I think with packing cubes and other 'accessories' one can make fairly ordinary luggage perform pretty well although good zippers are a must.

And the wheels. I like the skate wheels on my Eddie Bauer, and the soft but pretty rugged fabric exterior. It wasn't very cheap, but I wouldn't call it expensive either.


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Old Aug 19th, 2021 | 02:42 PM
  #27  
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So my carryon roller board, which I stuffed until it bulged, developed a tear on one of the front compartment zippers, for the laptop padded compartment.

I can close it but I decided to look at similar carryons which fit the International definition and I found some which are lighter than the one I have but supposedly had greater overall capacity -- internal dimensions and calculated liters were greater somehow.

Just went to Macy's with a tape measure and was looking at them. First of all, Macy's has some 50% off signs but the prices are like over double what they are online.

For instance this TravelPro Versapack 19-inch carryon is $195 to $205 at Amazon, depending on the color.

Amazon Amazon

Macy's wants $460.

I checked it out in person though and it feels very light, though it's less than a pound lighter than my current carry on.

I looked at the IT luggage they had which is suppose to fit under the 22 x 14 x 9 international carryon limits. They have two with good reviews, both under $80. Some reviewers complained that they developed tears right away. These are ultra light though, like around 4 pounds while other international carry ons are 7-9 pounds and more.

I wanted to check them out in person though but TJ Maxx and Kohl's only lets you order them from their website. I couldn't tell if local stores carried them. Sounds like these chains, which I've never visited, will let you return to the local stores but they don't stock them. They also didn't have the same models as those on Amazon.

So I splurged and ordered the TravelPro, spending probably $150 more than the IT luggage. Or keeping my current one.

They all seem to ship out of NJ, regardless of which website you choose. And only one color guaranteed delivery in the next few days. Other colors were end of the month or in September, out here to CA. So I chose boring gray, as opposed to more boring black.


Macy's had Tumis and Victorinox and other brands of carryons for $600, 800. I wouldn't be predisposed to spending that much. I checked them out though and they're not organized the way I would prefer, which is an accessible padded laptop compartment outside the main compartment.

In fact the padded outer laptop compartment seems fairly rare. I guess people just throw their laptops in the main compartment, in a padded sleeve. Would be a PITA to get through security that way. OTOH, these days, they're having you take out anything electronic, including cameras and lenses (well they have focus motors I guess?).

So I went with expensive-ish but not truly expensive.
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Old Sep 24th, 2021 | 02:09 PM
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No, don't believe it is, but luggage has changed to being lighter and lighter. I invested quite a bit of money about 25 years for a large Hartmann vertical piece with shelves that was state of the art then, but the wheels were very tiny, and when packed, it was VERY heavy on Metro steps overseas etc. Then took a very large wheeled duffel for a 3 wk trip to Spain and it was so very heavy, swear my left arm got longer pulling it. Since then, have an inexpensive hardshell 24" case which is the MAXIMUM bag I take anywhere for any duration. If absolutely necessary, I add a 21" Lipault to take as carryon, but it's become more about lighter weight clothing -- silks, super light pants, and have a whole 'travel department' in the back of my closet . I decide what to pack depending on what they weigh -- truly. Merino & lightweight down are lifesavers, and still find myself packing 5-8 prs of shoes and coming out under 50 lbs. Luggage scale a necessity!
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Old Sep 24th, 2021 | 08:40 PM
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You know they make suitcases with a built-in scale these days.

I don't know how people can handle 50 lb. luggage?? There's no way I could deal with that on my own. My max. is 25-30 lbs. total weight packed (suitcase under 5 lbs empty) and that is for staying in a single location. For a moving around multiple cities trip, I'd make sure it was even less.

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Old Sep 28th, 2021 | 06:33 AM
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Been thinking about getting a Rimowa as a carry on but check in trips, the Samsonite soft luggage is definitely reliable. Been using ours for 6 years. We also had a Rimowa checkin luggage but it got trashed during our trip from PHL to Guam. We used a luggage cover, but it still didn't work so it might be more practical to get an expensive carryon luggage.
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Old Sep 28th, 2021 | 03:54 PM
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I never buy expensive luggage. I mostly care about the weight empty. And the fancy name brands are super heavy.
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Old Sep 29th, 2021 | 11:19 AM
  #32  
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Luggage brand signaling:

https://thepointsguy.com/guide/what-...ays-about-you/

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Old Dec 4th, 2021 | 12:00 PM
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A lot of others have said the same, but I'll throw another vote out for Samsonite luggage. It's pretty sturdy and durable in my experience.
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Old Nov 27th, 2025 | 05:52 AM
  #34  
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There is a good Black Friday sale on Briggs and Riley. Not all styles.
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Old Nov 27th, 2025 | 06:15 AM
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It took every corpuscle of energy in my body to heft our pair of pregnant hogs suitcases up onto the TGV storage rack last month.
We snagged the final 2 spots.
And we always try to book seats right next to that rack and the WC.
Noticed yesterday that our local Staples stationary/tech shop now offers some suitcases for sale.

Bill Maher recently rightly observed, "Why the fuck did it take sooo long for someone to think of inventing wheels-added-to-that-heavy-case?!"

I am done. the old man and the huff and puff
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Old Nov 27th, 2025 | 09:02 AM
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I alway look at the listed weight of the suitcases when I shop.

There's more variation in weight between brands or model at the same or similar size than one would suspect.
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Old Nov 28th, 2025 | 09:48 AM
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I agree. For me the weight empty is the most important thing. Many (most? all?) the expensive, high-end bags are heavy! I don't need 10 pounds before I've even put anything in the bag -lol!

My picks are light-weight, less expensive suitcases that I buy one at a time and am happy to replace every few years.
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Old Dec 13th, 2025 | 10:18 AM
  #38  
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At which points on your trips are you all finding that you have to carry heavy luggage?

I know that's necessary if you are taking a train, but if you are flying point to point, and staying in hotels, , where does the carrying for long distances come in?

For me, it's a taxi to the airport...short trek to check-in counter. Very rarely, pay extortionate fee in US airport to rent cart.

Flight...on rare occasions when help is needed, flight attendant or kind fellow passenger helps lift carry-on into overhead compartment.

Arrive at destination airport; retrieve carry on, with help if necessary.

Retrieve checked luggage at carrousel (if in fact, it shows up); use free cart (many/most airports outside US) to bring bag(s) to taxi rank

Arrive at hotel, taxi driver takes bag(s) out of trunk and inside hotel.
Staff takes luggage to room.

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Old Dec 13th, 2025 | 11:33 AM
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As it happens, I watched Hard Knocks on HBO, which shows behind the scenes at NFL teams.

They show them boarding a charter plane to fly them for their next road game.

One NFL player complains about having to lift his carry-on sized suitcase up the stairs to board the plane -- apparently these charters aren't parked at regular airport terminals with jetways.

These carry on suitcases are at most 20 pounds, unless they stuff it with gold bars or something? A big NFL player, who is used to training with huge weights, complaining about lifting a suitcase up maybe 20 steps to board a charter where every seat has plenty of leg space, if they're not all lie flat seats.

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Old Dec 13th, 2025 | 12:14 PM
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SCRB,
Much as I love me some football, it never ceases to amaze me when members of the 1% or near-1% complain about such trivial matters such as your above scenario.
As for the topic, Mrs Z just today ordered one of those wheeled carrying carts with a strap. That, to make our airporting easier. We used the wheelchair option for our most recent trip but have both recovered from those injuries.

I am done. the whining NFL millionaire
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