Helpful stuff, especially on how the weight sits/fits and affects posture. Thank you.jacob wrote: ↑Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:50 pmI have a GR2 from before they became a tacticool fashion brand, so I paid less. Goruck was initially intended to be daypack built to military specs but able to pass in a civilian setting. One advantage is that you can go rucking without looking like a mall ninja. (I get a kick out of when people try to pick up my otherwise normal looking "book bag"). As the plate sits in the rearmost slot w/o interfering with the rest of the space, rucking can become your default walk-around mode instead of having to pack a bag every time. I also use the GR2 as a weekender (w/o laundry services) or full-time travel (w laundry services).
Initially I just threw some dumbbells in there (it does 50lbs no problem), but I eventually splurged on a no-name 30lbs plate (which fits exactly in the slot as the pack is literally built for this). DBs sit rather low (lumbar), whereas the plate by design sits right between the shoulder blades and is close enough to the body to avoid moving the center of gravity more than a couple of inches away from its usual position if that. This affects posture. With weight more backwards (DBs or sandbags) there's a tendency or even a need to lean forward or use the head as a counterweight.
If the primary goal is to go rucking you could also look for a dedicated plate carrier or simply a weight west. (Check out @bsog's journal. He recently made his own.) This could be worn under regular clothes.
However, if you just want to try rucking, use any bag or backpack and load it up to the stitches. Then you can always upgrade as a reward for a milestone or some such. You definitely don't need a fancy pack. It's more like comparing a luxury car to a budget car. They'll both get you there.
Good plan... give it a try and maybe upgrade at a milestone. My hope is to build on the walking I'm doing to give it more 'bang for the buck'. Goal is to get down to 20% body fat - from about 36% now.
