SILO Crew Drop One + Roll Drop Organizer
You've been there. Thirty miles into a hundred-miler, hands shaking, vision blurry, desperately digging through a bottomless black hole of a bag trying to find your headlamp while volunteers wait and precious seconds tick away. Here's what most ultrarunners don't realize: chaos at aid stations doesn't just waste time—it derails your entire race rhythm.
The SILO Crew Drop One and Roll Drop are the world's first modular ultramarathon drop bag system designed by actual ultrarunners who got sick of the chaos.
Nine Elastic Interior Pockets That End the Digging Forget dumping everything into one main compartment. The Crew Drop One features nine strategically placed elastic mesh pockets around the interior perimeter so you can see every single item the second you unzip. Electrolyte capsules, first aid, gels, gloves, buffs—everything has its place and stays there.
Separate Waterproof Shoe Compartment Your muddy, soaked race shoes live in their own zippered external compartment made from waterproof 500D Tarpaulin fabric. Access them without opening the main bag, and when you don't need it, the compartment rolls up and straps down inside to create more space.
The Roll Drop: Your Secret Weapon Inside This 9.2-ounce organizer holds four detachable mesh pouches that snap perfectly into the Crew Drop One. Pre-pack your nutrition by aid station in the clear pouches, see exactly what you need without thinking, grab and go. No more dumping out your entire drop bag at mile 60.
The Crew Drop One's 500D Tarpaulin construction handles everything—rain at Hardrock, dust at Western States, mud at UTMB. Water-resistant zippers keep the elements out. Two grab handles and an adjustable shoulder strap mean you can carry it however your tired body needs. At 26 liters and just 2 pounds, it's sized perfectly for drop bags without taking up unnecessary space at crowded aid stations.
How to Use It: Pre-Race Packing: Use the Roll Drop's four mesh pouches to organize nutrition and small items by aid station or mileage. Slot the Roll Drop into the Crew Drop One's main compartment, then fill the nine perimeter pockets with items you might need—headlamp, extra batteries, dry socks, anti-chafe, pain relievers. Put shoes or a jacket in the bottom main compartment.
Aid Station Strategy: Open the top, scan your organized perimeter pockets, grab what you need without unpacking. Pull out the entire Roll Drop if you need to access multiple items fast. The separate shoe compartment means clean hands when handling food.
Race Tested: This setup is trusted by ultrarunners crushing everything from 50Ks to 200-milers. Athletes report shaving 2-3 minutes per aid station stop simply by eliminating the frantic search through poorly organized bags.
Stop settling for bags that turn aid stations into disasters. This isn't just another drop bag—this is the system that keeps you moving when every second counts.



Description
You've been there. Thirty miles into a hundred-miler, hands shaking, vision blurry, desperately digging through a bottomless black hole of a bag trying to find your headlamp while volunteers wait and precious seconds tick away. Here's what most ultrarunners don't realize: chaos at aid stations doesn't just waste time—it derails your entire race rhythm.
The SILO Crew Drop One and Roll Drop are the world's first modular ultramarathon drop bag system designed by actual ultrarunners who got sick of the chaos.
Nine Elastic Interior Pockets That End the Digging Forget dumping everything into one main compartment. The Crew Drop One features nine strategically placed elastic mesh pockets around the interior perimeter so you can see every single item the second you unzip. Electrolyte capsules, first aid, gels, gloves, buffs—everything has its place and stays there.
Separate Waterproof Shoe Compartment Your muddy, soaked race shoes live in their own zippered external compartment made from waterproof 500D Tarpaulin fabric. Access them without opening the main bag, and when you don't need it, the compartment rolls up and straps down inside to create more space.
The Roll Drop: Your Secret Weapon Inside This 9.2-ounce organizer holds four detachable mesh pouches that snap perfectly into the Crew Drop One. Pre-pack your nutrition by aid station in the clear pouches, see exactly what you need without thinking, grab and go. No more dumping out your entire drop bag at mile 60.
The Crew Drop One's 500D Tarpaulin construction handles everything—rain at Hardrock, dust at Western States, mud at UTMB. Water-resistant zippers keep the elements out. Two grab handles and an adjustable shoulder strap mean you can carry it however your tired body needs. At 26 liters and just 2 pounds, it's sized perfectly for drop bags without taking up unnecessary space at crowded aid stations.
How to Use It: Pre-Race Packing: Use the Roll Drop's four mesh pouches to organize nutrition and small items by aid station or mileage. Slot the Roll Drop into the Crew Drop One's main compartment, then fill the nine perimeter pockets with items you might need—headlamp, extra batteries, dry socks, anti-chafe, pain relievers. Put shoes or a jacket in the bottom main compartment.
Aid Station Strategy: Open the top, scan your organized perimeter pockets, grab what you need without unpacking. Pull out the entire Roll Drop if you need to access multiple items fast. The separate shoe compartment means clean hands when handling food.
Race Tested: This setup is trusted by ultrarunners crushing everything from 50Ks to 200-milers. Athletes report shaving 2-3 minutes per aid station stop simply by eliminating the frantic search through poorly organized bags.
Stop settling for bags that turn aid stations into disasters. This isn't just another drop bag—this is the system that keeps you moving when every second counts.





















