When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
I have a LowePro Vertex 200 AW (bought from B&H in 2011, just looked up the order) that has been all over the world with me and fits perfectly in my chopped TP.
It holds two bodies (Nikon Z9, Z7), enough lenses, batteries, and various other odds and ends to work for me. If I remove the tripod head I can fit a compact tripod as well (there's enough headroom), but typically I'd put that in an SGS stretched sidecase. I also have a lot of more heavy-duty tripods and other gear from when I shot film (4x5, 617, 612) but these days with digital cameras I haven't touched any of that in maybe 15 years.
Before the SGS for 20 years I shot off a BMW GS with a Givi topcase.
Thanks for all the input. Final decision after reading bag specs until the cows came home was the VSGO 25 liter backpack from amazon. Its fits the tour pack perfectly. Do I carry too much? Yes I do, but its better than wanting something that you left at home.
7 Surprising Harley-Davidson Products that Are Not Motorcycles
Slideshow: The bar-and-shield logo shows up on far more than motorcycles, some of the company's most unexpected products have nothing to do with riding.
Slideshow: From the troubled AMF years to modern misfires, these bikes earned reputations for reliability issues, questionable engineering, or disappointing performance.
Crazy Bunderbike Build Looks Amazing, But Is It Impossible to Ride?
Slideshow: The Swiss custom shop has taken a Harley Softail and stretched it into something so long and low that it looks closer to a rolling sculpture than a conventional motorcycle.
Engraved Rebellion: Inside Bundnerbike's Glam Rock II
Slideshow: A standard cruiser becomes an intricate metal canvas in the hands of a Swiss custom house known for pushing Harley-Davidson platforms far beyond their factory brief.