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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

CamelBak bottle eases biker intake

Stephen Regenold Special to Outdoors The Spokesman-Review

As bikes, helmets, shoes and other cycling equipment get better every year, the humble bike bottle has stayed pretty much the same for decades. CamelBak is touting a new Podium Bottle as an upgrade to a design that’s been around since the 1950s.

“We set out to take away the bite-open, hip-slap-shut sequence that riders had to perform with other bottles,” said Jon Austen, a company product manager.

Significant upgrades include a self-sealing squirt valve, a shut-off switch for leak-proof transport, one-handed operation and an anti-microbial lining to eschew the build-up of bacteria and fungus inside the bottle.

The Podium’s squirt valve is made of medical-grade silicone, and the bottle is a polypropylene. Water gushes out with a slight squeeze. The self-sealing valve eliminates splatter while you’re riding.

It comes in two sizes:21 ounces of liquid capacity or 24 ounces. They cost $8 and $9, respectively. The smaller one weighed 2.6 ounces empty on my scale.

It is dishwasher safe. Camelbak ( www.camelbak.com) promises no leaching of plastic taste from the polypropylene bottle. In my test at home, where I let water sit overnight in the bottle, the H2O did not seem to absorb any taste from the liner.

The company designed the Podium, which measures about 7 inches high and 2.5 inches across for the smaller version, to fit in all common bike bottle cages on the market.

It’s easy to operate with one hand. The shut-off switch is mounted under the squirt valve. It requires a subtle twist with your teeth or lips to enable.

Turn the shut-off switch 90 degrees and it’s locked closed, ready to be put in a backpack or bag for transport something not possible with old-school bottles. I squeezed it hard in the shut position to test, and not a drop of water escaped.