In spite of its drawbacks, the 1.3 ounce Sawyer Mini lands on my favorite gear list. It's the lightest and best water filtration system currently available.
By Will Rietveld
Personal water treatment is always a hot topic among
lightweight backpackers. We ditched the heavy pump style filters for personal
use long ago, but perhaps they still have a role for small groups. Now the
personal water treatment debate is about which is the best lightweight
effective water treatment system: Aqua-Mira drops, Aqua-Mira tabs, Ultra
Violet, or the Sawyer filters. Other “lightweight” filters on the market
require expensive replacement cartridges, so I omit them.
Following up on their 2.4-ounce Squeeze Water Filter, Sawyer
introduced the Sawyer Mini in September 2013. Weighing just 1.3 ounces
stripped, it’s hard to imagine a water filter any lighter than this. However,
as you will see, the choice is not that clear cut, each method has its
drawbacks.
Specifications and Features
Manufacturer
|
Sawyer Products (www.sawyer.com)
|
Product
|
Sawyer Mini Water Filtration System
|
Included
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Filter, tip cap, drinking straw, cleaning plunger, 16 oz
squeeze pouch
|
Weight
|
Whole kit 4.85 oz, filter without tip cap 1.3 oz, tip cap
.05 oz, drink tube 0.2 oz, plunger 1.15 oz, squeeze pouch 0.8 oz
|
MSRP
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$25
|
Description
The Sawyer Mini at 1.3 ounces stripped is the lightest water
filter currently available. That’s roughly the same weight as using Aqua-Mira
drops in small dropper bottles! The beauty of the Mini is it filters to 0.1
micron (the same as the best pump filters) and it doesn’t use expensive
replaceable cartridges. It comes with a heavy-duty syringe for backflushing,
and it can be backflushed indefinitely; Sawyer guarantees it for 100,000
gallons.
The technology used by Sawyer is adapted from medical
dialysis; water is drawn through the side walls of a cluster of micro-tubes
into their hollow center and out the end of the tubes. Sediments and organisms
are trapped on the outer walls of the tubes. Backflushing (using the included
syringe) removes the filtered out debris and the system is ready to use again.
The Mini can be used four ways to filter water: 1) screwed
onto any plastic beverage bottle with a standard 28 mm opening; 2) directly from
a stream or lake using the included straw, 3) inline in a hydration system, and
4) using the included squeeze pouch to filter water into a bottle for drinking.
The Sawyer Mini does not screw onto a Platypus flask. The Platy
threads are different from a common soda bottle, so that’s why Sawyer provides
flasks that work with their filters.
Field Testing
I tested the Mini screwed onto a lightweight plastic soda bottle on several backpacking trips. A bottle is easy to fill from a stream or lake and is easy to insert into a side pocket of my pack. |
I didn’t use the straw, but I have used the previous Squeeze
Water Filter inline in a hydration system, which is a similar concept. I
personally did not use method #4 above, but I have observed fellow hikers use
that method.
The advantage of using a plastic beverage bottle is that you
squeeze the bottle and suck at the same time, which increases the flow rate.
Methods #2 and #3 above are suction only. With method #4 above one can roll
down the squeeze pouch to put a tremendous amount of pressure on the water
within to force it through the filter into another container, then you can gulp
it down freely.
Backflushing is essential, and I can’t emphasize that
enough. I used both the Sawyer Squeeze Water Filter and Mini on many, many
trips over several years and found that backflushing is necessary after every trip;
otherwise it is progressively harder to suck/squeeze water through the filter.
If you go on an extended trip, take the syringe with you.
Another thing I learned is the filter can become “plugged”
if it sits around for an extended period. After using it all summer (and
backflushing it after every use, including at the end of the summer), the
filter was unused over the winter. On the first trip the next summer it was
very difficult to suck or push water through it, which was a pain since I was
dependent on it. When I got home I soaked it in water overnight and backflushed
it with hot tapwater and was able to restore it to its “normal” performance.
Now for the downside. After using the Mini on several trips,
and especially in hot weather, I got tired of sucking hard to get water. I
wanted to gulp water down instead of sucking it through a filter; it was too
much sucking and not enough drinking. So why not go to method #4 (using the
included squeeze pouch to filter water into a bottle for drinking) instead, you
ask? That would require an extra bottle to collect the water and pour it into
the flask, so extra weight and bulk. It’s hard to fill a flask directly from a
minimal water source without stirring up debris.
Another drawback is the Sawyer filtering micro tubes can be
damaged by freezing, resulting in an impaired ability to safely filter water.
So you can be drinking unsafe water without knowing it. If temperatures are
likely to drop below freezing, it’s important to put the filter in a pocket or
someplace where it won’t freeze.
Finally, the Mini (or any water filter) is not recommended
for turbid water or water with a lot of algae in it. Backpacking in Southern Utah is where I learned that the hard way, and I
should have known better. After successfully using the Mini on one trip, where
we found clean water, I (and my companions) took it on another trip there where
we found only scarce cruddy water. Our filters quickly plugged and were
unusable. Fortunately I had some Aqua-Mira tabs along as a backup and that
saved the trip.
Assessment
It seems there is no “perfect” lightweight water treatment
method currently available – every method has some drawbacks – so it’s a
personal choice based on how one weighs the following factors: effectiveness,
weight, convenience, wait time, taste, reliability, and cost.
My personal history with water treatment is probably
typical:
- Aqua-Mira drops are very light weight, but I get tired of the mixing and wait time.
- Aqua-Mira (and other brands) tabs is the lightest system but they are expensive and you still have the wait time.
- Iodine tabs are cheap but it tastes bad and you still have the wait time, and iodine doesn’t kill all organisms; chlorine even less so.
- The Sawyer Squeeze and Mini Water Filters are lightweight and there is no wait time, but I got tired of sucking to get my water, and they clog from cruddy water.
- The rechargeable SteriPen Freedom (2.65 ounces) is very lightweight, but it’s not recommended for turbid water, and requires a wide-mouth bottle for treatment (see my article on using a zip-lock bag with a Steripen), a full charge may not last through a trip, and electronic devices can fail (which happened to me on one trip).
Ah...but there is another solution for the Sawyer system. Use a squeeze bottle, a rock and a pot. Lay the squeeze bottle on a flat rock or tree stump with the sawyer dangling over the edge and a pot below. To speed the process put some rocks on top of the squeeze bottle. Then put the clean water in whatever container you are using for clean water. Voila, you have a gravity system. It is slow - but this is a personal water supply, and I found I got a litre of clean water in about 20-30 minutes. You can finish up with a bit of a squeeze. Yes, you will need one extra bottle for this (marked dirty water!), which adds a few oz. but you still have a very light system, and now no sucking - I never suck!
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ReplyDeleteGreat blog! When choosing a water filter for outdoor trips, it's important to consider both the weight and ease of use. One tip is to always have a backup purification method in case conditions make one option less effective.
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