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💼 Elevate your outdoor routine with the sink that’s as mobile as your lifestyle.
The Sea to Summit Kitchen Sink is a lightweight, collapsible sink made from durable 70D waterproof nylon with fully taped seams, designed for backpacking, camping, and bike packing. It supports hot water use up to 140°F and features wide webbing handles and a zippered storage pouch with a drain hole. Available in multiple sizes (5L, 10L, 20L), it’s perfect for water hauling, meal prep, dishwashing, and personal hygiene on the move.





| Brand | Sea to Summit |
| Capacity | 5 Liters |
| Colour | Green |
| Handle material | Nylon |
| Item weight | 98 Grams |
| Material | Nylon |
I**.
Fantastico!
Usato per un viaggio in Patagonia zaino in spalla. Ci ha permesso di fare il bucato per 2 settimane. Robusto e versatile!
R**D
An excellent product as long as you understand what it is and what it isn't.
This is incredibly versatile product. It works great as an all purpos field cleaning and maintenance station. Even when not filled with water, I use it as a workspace for small items (this takes some practice). I find it's flexible construction makes it easier to completely fill with water from the shore than a comparable bucket, and I found it more convenient to carry. It also works as a great compact tote bag for wet and dry items. There's a lot of cool stuff you can do with it if you're even remotely creative. But it's not without its limitations. This isn't a 5 gallon bucket. So it's not freestanding unless it's nearly filled completely with water or other objects. This limitation is actually very easy to work around if you take the time to try. It's relatively wide but it's shallow so you shouldn't expect larger items to be fully immersed. It does take a bit to dry but the carrying bag does provide some built-in ventilation and drain hole you can also keep it all the way or partially unzipped for faster drying. The sink should stay within the bag as long as it's not jostled around too much. It does take some practice to compress it into the storage bag, watch the product video to see how to do it and once you get the method down it's pretty easy. I feel that the compromises are worth the advantages. I can strongly recommend this, just be sure to be an informed buyer and have a firm idea of what you want to use this product for.
小**聡
ありがとうございました
ありがとうございました
B**G
Brilliant product
Took it camping and used it as a wash bowl, water carrier, dish carrier. Super compact and perfect size for use
C**T
like I'm one of those annoying people who look down ...
So I am "A BACKPACKER." All-caps intentional....like I'm one of those annoying people who look down on car campers. I mean why would anyone go to the woods just to sleep next to other humans???? The idea seemed abhorrent to me (<---see, annoying). But then I went and married a "NON-BACKPACKER" (all-caps even more intentional) who, unless armageddon actually does come to pass—which seems more likely every day now that I think about it—will not be putting on an expedition pack in her lifetime. She will, however, go car camping with me. After I got over my initial horror I actually found the experience to be decent enough. But then one day this thing showed up in the mail. "Honey. What. The. Hell. Is. This?" I said. "It got good reviews!" she pleaded. "Pshaw!" I scoffed. But out it came at dishwashing time and lo and behold the darn thing actually works great. No more breaking the rules and washing your dishes at that gross bathroom sink plugged with other people's pasta, no more trying to balance 35 pieces of cookware on top of each other for hauling to the spigot—the water comes to you and you wash your dishes where you should wash them: nearby where you cooked. But here's where this thing really shines: when camping in primitive, "dispersed" sites without running water. In those situations water is especially precious because "what ya got is what ya got"—there's no running over to a spigot to get some more. This item excels in these situations. We usually use it as the rinse water after scrubbing dishes with soap and sponge, just dipping things in to rinse off the suds then setting them aside to dry. This allows us to use the minimum amount of water possible. Honey, if you're reading this—I was wrong, ok. I admit it.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago