Tasmanian Tiger Stuffbag 48 WPV – 48 L Waterproof Compression Sack

Description
Tasmanian Tiger Stuffbag 48 WPV – 48 L Waterproof Compression Sack
Got bulkier kit? This XXL dry bag swallows winter sleeping systems, body armour or a week’s worth of trail food—then vents the excess air for a compact haul. Welded laser-cut lash slots make strapping it to boats, pickups or pulks dead easy.
Key features
- IP64 ratingⓘ – shields gear from sand storms and deck wash.
- Roll-top closure with side-release buckle for a quick, watertight seal.
- Compression valve – purge air, save pack volume.
- PFC/PFAS-free DWRⓘ – eco-friendlier water beading.
- 420 D Nylon TPU Ecoⓘ – tough, flexible, PVC-free.
- Laser-cut welds – no stitching = no pinholes.
Tech specs
Volume | 48 L |
---|---|
Dimensions | Ø 35 cm × 52 cm |
Weight | 340 g |
Fabric | 420 D Nylon TPU Eco (100 % polyamide) |
Closure | Roll-top + SR buckle |
Waterproofing | IP64 (dust-tight / splash-proof) |
Perfect for…
Canoe portages, snow-mobile sleds, roof-box overlanding, expedition med-kits or just corralling tent/insulation layers that never fit in smaller bags.
How to use
- Load gear, keeping space to roll.
- Open the valve, roll the top 3-4 turns, buckle tight.
- Bear-hug to vent air, then close the valve.
- Lash via the welded slots or stash inside a larger duffel.
Manufacturer & GPSR compliance
Tasmanian Tiger (tactical division of Tatonka GmbH)Robert-Bosch-Str. 3, 86453 Dasing, Germany
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Product meets EU General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR) requirements.
Glossary:
DWR (Durable Water Repellent) – surface treatment that makes water bead and roll off while shunning PFC/PFAS chemicals.
TPU Eco coating – solvent-free Thermoplastic Polyurethane; recyclable and stays supple even in freezing temps.
IP64 – “6” = dust-tight, “4” = splash-resistant from any direction.
420 D – denier count; higher numbers mean thicker, more abrasion-resistant yarn.
Rinse with fresh water after salt-water exposure; avoid dragging across sharp coral or lava rock.