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Tom Bihn Trinity Bag Review: Convertible Travel Briefcase | WIRED

 9 months ago
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Dec 7, 2023 8:00 AM

Review: Tom Bihn Trinity

If you’ve been searching for the perfect personal-item travel bag, Tom Bihn’s convertible travel briefcase is a strong contender.
Tom Bihn Trinity Bag
Photograph: Tom Bihn

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Rating:
WIRED
Built to last. Bomber hardware and fabrics. Many compartments. Multiple ways to carry. Lots of different color options.
TIRED
Heavy. Expensive. I would've liked compression straps. Limited use case. Traveling like this is exhausting.

When I was a child, shuttling back and forth between the United States and summers with relatives in the Philippines, I carried two months’ worth of clothes in a small duffel so that I could use my checked suitcase to bring gifts back and forth across the Pacific. Back then, being a light packer meant traveling with only a carry-on. If you had told me that even overhead bin space would someday be at a steep premium, I’m not sure I would’ve believed you.

That was a long time ago, when airlines gave you complimentary fresh baguettes with tongs and little bottles of wine (not to children) on international flights. Now many affordable airlines, including Spirit and Allegiant, charge you extra even for carry-ons. In addition to saving you money, traveling with only a personal item means that you're not one of those clowns trying to rush the gate to make sure you get overhead bin space.

The perfect "personal item" is a bag that's sturdy and organized enough to carry everything you need for several days, but small enough to fit underneath the seat in front of you. After five years of development, the Trinity is one of Tom Bihn’s leading entrants in this category. As a convertible briefcase, it’s not that flexible, but if you travel frequently for work, it's the perfect choice.

Hardest-Wearing Wares
Photograph: Tom Bihn

There are a few reasons why Tom Bihn consistently stays at the top of our Best Laptop Backpacks guide. There are bags that are cheaper, more stylish, or have more features, but none of them are made entirely in America, in one 16,000-square-foot location. It’s been a family-owned company for several decades, and direct oversight allows it to meet pretty exacting standards when it comes to manufacturing.

The Trinity is made from a heavy, abrasion-resistant 630-denier ballistic nylon, which is the same as my favorite backpack, the Synik. Just for fun, I once filled my Synik with cast-iron gym weights and dragged it around a parking lot, trying to tear through the fabric. It didn’t work. Rather than regular, small molded zippers—i.e., a zipper with teeth—the exterior zippers are coil zippers, like a Slinky. They have a gauge that’s about three times as big as any you might see in a regular daypack and are huge and run incredibly smoothly. You can stuff whatever you want in a compartment and the zipper is more likely to chop your finger off than get jammed.

The Trinity is called the Trinity because it has three main compartments and three ways to carry it. Two compartments open clamshell-style on either side, cushioning a slim work compartment with a laptop sleeve inside it. You can carry it as a backpack with shoulder straps; with an included shoulder strap at two attachment points; or with two padded grab handles, briefcase-style. Tom Bihn does suggest that if you want to carry it as a shoulder back, that you upgrade to the padded Absolute Shoulder Strap ($33), which is not included.

The second reason that people buy Tom Bihn bags is that the organization is thorough and completely unique to them, to the point where you can spend hours fiddling with different straps, O-rings, and pockets to find out the best way for you to use each one. Depending on your personality, this is either a huge plus or a very big minus. I did ask Tom Bihn what the first main compartment was for. The first main compartment has an optional fabric divider. It can zip along the interior of the compartment to divide it into two and doubles as a sleeve for a water bottle if you want to use this compartment as a gym bag.

The front of the bag also has three pockets, which work best for me when I’m carrying it as a briefcase. The main compartment on the front has the requisite Tom Bihn keychain lanyard, pen pockets, and small lip balm/headphone pockets. I miss these whenever I’m carrying a bag that doesn’t have them. It also has a luggage pass-through which fits on the handle of my Osprey roller bag. But come now, the point of this bag is that you’re not supposed to need a roller bag .

Small But Strong
Photograph: Tom Bihn

At 21 liters, this bag has a relatively modest capacity. When carried as a backpack, it’s 16 inches tall and 11.4 inches deep when full. On my 6'4" colleague Julian Chokkattu, it looks like a normal-size bag, but I’m 5'2". When I met my friend at a coffee shop carrying it, she remarked that it looked like I was lugging my entire life through the streets of San Francisco.

One interior main compartment does have internal compression straps, and I’m aware that external compression straps would make the bag look much more technical than many people might prefer for a work bag. However, discreet external compression straps really would help the bag look much less silly on me and help keep the bag’s weight closer to my back and my center of gravity.

If you thought this bag could be your one personal-item bag, for every trip, you are probably mistaken. Dividing 21 liters across three compartments means the bag is much less versatile. I took the bag on a weekend trip with my family, but I didn't end up using the middle laptop compartment. I tried to take it as my one bag on a three-day work trip, but I ended up bringing a roller bag so I could take running shoes. Nowadays, roller bags are so light that putting the heavy Trinity on the handle with the pass-through made everything fall down. Even when empty, the bag is made of durable fabrics and has massive hardware. It weighs more than 2 pounds.

After several months, I think I get more use out of a bag with a large main compartment that I can separate and organize with my own accessories for each trip. (It seems worth mentioning here that this is what Tom Bihn’s own Freudian Slip is for.)

Nevertheless, I did go on a few trips where it was indispensable. This year, I ended up making several cross-country flights in short succession, due to child/work/grandparent issues. I packed my work laptop and electronics pouch, a dopp kit and my Kindle, and a spare shirt and underwear in the Trinity. This is the exact right amount of stuff, and the exact right circumstances, to use a small, durable, convertible travel briefcase.

As I sat in the airport late one evening by myself, mulling over the life choices that had brought me there, I found myself rummaging through the Trinity for entertainment, or at least a granola bar. Was that … one hardcover book? Oh no, was it two? Three? Four? How had I acquired so many books over three days? I had absentmindedly shoved them all into the Trinity and the fabric and zippers hadn't given an inch. No wonder the bag was so heavy. I trudged on board the plane at 6 pm and kicked it underneath the seat in front of me, where it slid with plenty of room to spare. Then I sat down with a copy of Tamar Adler’s Everlasting Meal cookbook. Maybe I could be a personal item traveler after all.

Preorders are currently closed for the first round of stock, but Tom Bihn is usually reliable about restocking. You can get notified when Tom Bihn starts accepting them here.


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