The Safeback SBX avalanche survival system hasn’t even officially hit the market, and it’s already won an ISPO innovation award and is up for another innovation award at the Outdoor Retailer Snow Show. We got our hands on the system to take a close first look at the new technology.
When a person is buried in an avalanche, a countdown starts. They only have 10 minutes before they start to run out of air. A study from Canada found that after 35 minutes, they only have a 10% chance of survival, with almost certain brain damage.
It’s why you’re supposed to cup your hands over your nose and mouth if you find yourself in that terrifying situation. It creates a small pocket of air that you can breathe from. And with any luck, that could extend your chances of survival — and when you’re under snow, every second counts.
Safeback is taking that concept to the next level. After years of innovation and design, Safeback has developed a system that can extend a buried person’s survival time under snow up to 90 minutes. It’s a system that essentially turns your entire backpack into an air pocket to breathe from.
“Five years of advanced research and development ended up with an elegant and simple solution,” William Sherman, the CMO of Safeback, told GearJunkie. “[It’s] an air pump in your backpack that is supplying your breathable air.”
We connected with Sherman to get our hands on the Safeback SBX system and see the new technology for ourselves. And from what we learned, this could be a seriously disruptive device in the world of backcountry skiing.
It’s not hyperbole to say that this system could save hundreds, maybe even thousands, of lives.
Hands-on With Safeback SBX

GearJunkie covered Safeback’s 2022 ISPO innovation award and its recent partnerships with Db and Bergans. It’s linking up with those brands to design backpacks and vests that incorporate the Safeback SBX system.
But this was the first time we’d interacted with the device in person. And when Sherman opened the box and pulled the Safeback SBX out, we were immediately surprised by its size and weight. It’s small. And in total, with the batteries, it weighs just 513 grams, or 18 ounces.
Two hoses extend from the battery pack and air intake. Those will run up through the shoulder straps of one of Bergens’ bags or Db’s vests. The intake remains in the bag on the wearer’s back. It pumps air in from the surrounding snow to your backpack, up the tubes, and out of the vents on the shoulder straps.
“When the system was being designed, a group of medical researchers in Norway conducted an experiment with 20 live burial victims who were buried twice: once with no air, and once with 2L of supplemental air per minute,” Sherman explained. That study showed significant improvements in survivability of snow burial.
“So the engineers used 2L per minute as the minimum requirement for air supply in situations where your head is as far away as 10in. from an air outlet,” he continued. “If your mouth and nose are closer to the outlet, then the effect of our system improves drastically.”

Safeback SBX Battery Life


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