I like how you could have done a fair comparison with the equivalent Hydro Flask and Yeti bottles- but didn’t. The equivalent Hydro Flask would be the wide mouth version- not the standard mouth. The tests would have been far more useful if you had actually chosen equivalent bottles. The narrower opening of the standard mouth Hydro Flask is obviously going to have very different insulating properties to the wide mouth of the yeti- or for that matter the equivalent Hydro Flask.
Hydroflask is made of thin cheaper metal while the Yeti is built more tough. The Hydroflask will dent super easily and looks like crap after a year or two of use.
Yup and they even have a even thinner metal one for more money. For thinner bottle hydro is way to go though. Their new chug cap is easier to hold while drinking too. I still prefer yeti if I could only have one
I’ve got a lot of strong feelings about this. For me, Yeti is easily the winner. My wife EDCs a HydroFlask while I have a Yeti. We’ve both had them for 5ish years. She brings hers to her desk job and I am quite a bit rougher on mine. Her bottle is absolutely beaten to hell while my bottle has a minor dent and some scratching. Let’s not forget ease of use HF states that their product has to be hand washed, at least hers was labeled as such, not sure if that’s changed. Yeti, just chuck it into the dishwasher. Dunno, everyone has a different use-case but I’m not keeping my water in there for hours and hours, it’s going in and getting drank within an hour or two, so the day-long ice-retention test is not really accurate to the end-user experience, in my opinion. These pieces of gear are meant to be long term companions and HF, in our experience, can’t live up to it. The yeet off of the building might be far-fetched but a bunch of waist-height drops from an average person will turn a HF into an old Pepsi can.
I own both and travel a lot for work. While I prefer the weight and footprint of the HydroFlask, the Yeti is my go-to because the chug cap is easier to drink out of without a solid block of ice sloshing around and it can be removed to make filling the bottle much easier.
I have had my hydroflask for around a year now and it has so many dents and scratches just from falling off a 3 foot desk a few times at school. Meanwhile I have had my yeti for 2 years now and the only thing damaged is the cap with just a few scratches. The obvious winner is a yeti, hydroflasks are a waste...
I use a Ozark Trail water bottle that looks and performs very similar to the Hydro Flask, even has the same flexible handle, but my Ozark Trail was $9.00.
Did u fill bottles with water on hot water test? That would be the only fair way to do it imo. The ice test is the same. You have got to fill each with ice. The amount of air inside will be the factor that kills insulation.
Not really a fair test as well. Only because they Yeti chug cap is not insulated and the hydroflasks is. Should of gone with the hotshot cap from yeti to make it fair.
I know this is old but... you did not preheat the bottles before putting hot water in. Yetis inner steel walls have almost double the thickness compared to the hydro flask. Not preheating really does hurt it in that test. Even if you would measure the temp just couple minutes after filling the bottles up yetis temps would be worse.
I have a 20oz metal yeti cup I use it in the house with a straw. I don't have a yeti bottle. I have a 32oz stainless steel Owala bottle & I put 2 bottles of water in it to go out. My meds make my mouth dry so I have to drink something so my mouth will quit being dry & with that I'm more thirsty. So it depends how long I'm out & how much I drink will I'm out. I've left my bottle in the car overnight & my water was still cold. Can you make a video comparing the Yeti, Hydro Flask, Tal, & Owala Stainless steel bottles?
Yeti all the way for me. I have a 40oz hydroflask that ended up losing the insulation somwhow so it no longer keeps cold drinks cold for long. I'll still warranty it, but it's disappointing. Yetis are built like tanks and I absolutely love the chug/mag dock caps. You can really feel the difference in build quality; the hydroflask feels "hollow" and very light when empty. Just by feel, you can tell the yeti is made of a much thicker stainless steel. All of my water bottles going forward will be yetis. Anothger thing, I absolutely love that yeti makes a gallon jug with the chug lid. That's my main water bottle.
As soon as he took a shot at Yetis Chug Cap by calling it "unnecessary" I already knew how this was going to go lmao... Guess this guy likes ice & water all over his shirt
When you buy yeti dont forget to put that decal you get with your purchase on your vehicle so everyone knows you buy yeti products. I mean you paid for the brand name right? Lets not beat arround the bush. Yall spend more money on junk from the gas station in a month than a yeti or hydro flask bottle. Dont drop your stuff might be a good thing to remember? I will choose hydro flask over yeti for the range of products. My kitchen has all matching hydro flask dishes and its way nicer than any other dishes ive owned. Sure it costed a pretty penny but well worth it. Last set ill buy in at least 10 years. Home use and camping.
neither. Stanley makes the best insulated bottles. I've tested my stanley bottle out with things that can go bad very fast (milk, for example) and even it remained cold for several days. Like the milk i used (I added some ice cubes) was still ice cold after like 3 days. It was insane lol.
How about don't drop your stuff? Drop your phone often? Just because something is less durable doesn't mean it's not comparable. I own water bottles from every company I can think of and none of them are dented just lightly scratched from setting it on the pavement. Owned all of them for 5 years. No caps broken. It's all on how you use them, wash them and ultimately take care of them. If you drop something on the ground don't expect it to not break. Be respectful to your stuff and it will last you many many years. Things happen and can always buy a new one if you make the mistake of dropping it. Hydro flask has a far greater range of products that all match eachother. Disclaimer I don't use my products for camping but my entire kitchen set is hydro flask. A 400 dollar set for 2 people and it beats any other dishes out there. Hand wash every time almost right away after use. Not hard. Don't be lazy.
Dumb test nobody throws cups like that nor who cares about customizing at the end of the main purpose of the product is keeping your drinks hot and cold for hours + days… so the question is what is better for that… all you do in the video is explain about how strong it is
As owners of both, yeti is better. The chug cap emulates plastic water bottles better, and is more durable
Yeti is so durable you’ll probably lose it before anything else. Can confirm, I’ve lost 2
@@Bruh-wb3qw And but lost really they tend to “go missing”. Ie stolen
Cold water do be nice though
Yea but the chug cap doesnt lock in temperature as well.
@@evanhernandez5378it’s not even that big of a difference, I’d rather have a bottle that lasts longer than having to buy a whole new one
I like how you could have done a fair comparison with the equivalent Hydro Flask and Yeti bottles- but didn’t. The equivalent Hydro Flask would be the wide mouth version- not the standard mouth. The tests would have been far more useful if you had actually chosen equivalent bottles. The narrower opening of the standard mouth Hydro Flask is obviously going to have very different insulating properties to the wide mouth of the yeti- or for that matter the equivalent Hydro Flask.
I have 3 yeti's. Love em. Very durable, easy to use and I like the top handle. Tanks!
Hydroflask is made of thin cheaper metal while the Yeti is built more tough. The Hydroflask will dent super easily and looks like crap after a year or two of use.
Yup and they even have a even thinner metal one for more money. For thinner bottle hydro is way to go though. Their new chug cap is easier to hold while drinking too. I still prefer yeti if I could only have one
I’ve got a lot of strong feelings about this.
For me, Yeti is easily the winner. My wife EDCs a HydroFlask while I have a Yeti. We’ve both had them for 5ish years. She brings hers to her desk job and I am quite a bit rougher on mine. Her bottle is absolutely beaten to hell while my bottle has a minor dent and some scratching. Let’s not forget ease of use HF states that their product has to be hand washed, at least hers was labeled as such, not sure if that’s changed. Yeti, just chuck it into the dishwasher. Dunno, everyone has a different use-case but I’m not keeping my water in there for hours and hours, it’s going in and getting drank within an hour or two, so the day-long ice-retention test is not really accurate to the end-user experience, in my opinion.
These pieces of gear are meant to be long term companions and HF, in our experience, can’t live up to it. The yeet off of the building might be far-fetched but a bunch of waist-height drops from an average person will turn a HF into an old Pepsi can.
I own both and travel a lot for work. While I prefer the weight and footprint of the HydroFlask, the Yeti is my go-to because the chug cap is easier to drink out of without a solid block of ice sloshing around and it can be removed to make filling the bottle much easier.
I have had my hydroflask for around a year now and it has so many dents and scratches just from falling off a 3 foot desk a few times at school. Meanwhile I have had my yeti for 2 years now and the only thing damaged is the cap with just a few scratches. The obvious winner is a yeti, hydroflasks are a waste...
I use a Ozark Trail water bottle that looks and performs very similar to the Hydro Flask, even has the same flexible handle, but my Ozark Trail was $9.00.
Did u fill bottles with water on hot water test? That would be the only fair way to do it imo. The ice test is the same. You have got to fill each with ice. The amount of air inside will be the factor that kills insulation.
Not really a fair test as well. Only because they Yeti chug cap is not insulated and the hydroflasks is. Should of gone with the hotshot cap from yeti to make it fair.
Mean it’s insulated in top half.
YETI is the way to go, honestly!
Had two hydroflasks fail with no drops etc almost from new now, super unimpressed! Vaccum just gave up
I know this is old but... you did not preheat the bottles before putting hot water in. Yetis inner steel walls have almost double the thickness compared to the hydro flask. Not preheating really does hurt it in that test. Even if you would measure the temp just couple minutes after filling the bottles up yetis temps would be worse.
klean kanteen and the yeti would be an interesting comparison
I think I will go with the Yeti. As I work at a school, and can use it as weapon too if anyone comes in and tries to harm me or the kiddos. 😊
Problem is that the lids of the hydro flask are almost impossible to assemble back after cleaning 😳
I have a 20oz metal yeti cup I use it in the house with a straw. I don't have a yeti bottle. I have a 32oz stainless steel Owala bottle & I put 2 bottles of water in it to go out. My meds make my mouth dry so I have to drink something so my mouth will quit being dry & with that I'm more thirsty. So it depends how long I'm out & how much I drink will I'm out. I've left my bottle in the car overnight & my water was still cold. Can you make a video comparing the Yeti, Hydro Flask, Tal, & Owala Stainless steel bottles?
Yeti all the way for me. I have a 40oz hydroflask that ended up losing the insulation somwhow so it no longer keeps cold drinks cold for long. I'll still warranty it, but it's disappointing. Yetis are built like tanks and I absolutely love the chug/mag dock caps. You can really feel the difference in build quality; the hydroflask feels "hollow" and very light when empty. Just by feel, you can tell the yeti is made of a much thicker stainless steel. All of my water bottles going forward will be yetis.
Anothger thing, I absolutely love that yeti makes a gallon jug with the chug lid. That's my main water bottle.
F in the chat for butter fingers
could you do a video on MiiR?
This is the best video of its kind I've watched so far.
Thank god I got hydro fask I love keeping my water cold plus I just use a normal water bottle when I work out.
As soon as he took a shot at Yetis Chug Cap by calling it "unnecessary" I already knew how this was going to go lmao... Guess this guy likes ice & water all over his shirt
Stanley is my go to for water bottles. Would be interested to see how they compare.
Man is 6ft. and wearing a white coat so basically there is no arguing with the conclusion. Double Jeapordy
2:44 everything else is irrelevant. I don’t want to be walking around with a dented bottle and replacing it every 2 months. Yeti for the win
Sounds to me like irresponsibility on your part. Got 10 bottles from different companies and not one is dented.
Hilarious to find that Yeti does not perform well for its intended function despite its price. I guess durability is important though.
Can you do more I love this so much I subscribed!!!
It’s like straight forward and amazing camera pics :)
MiiR needs to be here
of course there is more melted ice in yeti bottle when the bottle is literally bigger
More of this type of video
When you buy yeti dont forget to put that decal you get with your purchase on your vehicle so everyone knows you buy yeti products. I mean you paid for the brand name right? Lets not beat arround the bush. Yall spend more money on junk from the gas station in a month than a yeti or hydro flask bottle. Dont drop your stuff might be a good thing to remember? I will choose hydro flask over yeti for the range of products. My kitchen has all matching hydro flask dishes and its way nicer than any other dishes ive owned. Sure it costed a pretty penny but well worth it. Last set ill buy in at least 10 years. Home use and camping.
neither. Stanley makes the best insulated bottles. I've tested my stanley bottle out with things that can go bad very fast (milk, for example) and even it remained cold for several days. Like the milk i used (I added some ice cubes) was still ice cold after like 3 days. It was insane lol.
You should have dropped them full of water not empty 🤔
Thanks. I walk like a tank, and my g-shock gets hit so many times becuase i missed the doorwayxd
Yeti is much more durable. The Hydro, dents when dropped.
How about don't drop your stuff? Drop your phone often? Just because something is less durable doesn't mean it's not comparable. I own water bottles from every company I can think of and none of them are dented just lightly scratched from setting it on the pavement. Owned all of them for 5 years. No caps broken. It's all on how you use them, wash them and ultimately take care of them. If you drop something on the ground don't expect it to not break. Be respectful to your stuff and it will last you many many years. Things happen and can always buy a new one if you make the mistake of dropping it. Hydro flask has a far greater range of products that all match eachother. Disclaimer I don't use my products for camping but my entire kitchen set is hydro flask. A 400 dollar set for 2 people and it beats any other dishes out there. Hand wash every time almost right away after use. Not hard. Don't be lazy.
@@mcchristenson How about mind your business!
Yeti looks much better
"refined scientific experiments." wtf
Yeti is better
He has no idea what he is talking about yeti all the way
329 Keith Forest
He’s lying
Does yeti have a straw?
I like bottles fitting in sides of purse...hydro does that
Dumb test nobody throws cups like that nor who cares about customizing at the end of the main purpose of the product is keeping your drinks hot and cold for hours + days… so the question is what is better for that… all you do in the video is explain about how strong it is
Your dumb review on the web didn't mention anything about how long each keep the water cold duhhhh
Hydro flask keeps water cold 24 hours and hot 12 hours I don’t know how long for yeti bottles though