frank_in_oz wrote:Good one Nik,
Not sure of the validity of the experiment BUT nicely written up!
My only "objection" would be the thought that the moisture reduced from both the effect of having it against your polarfleece jacket (like wicking) and that you were "warm" and vertical (like a mobile warming / drying cabinet), hence it dried on the inside.
Fair? or bulldust?
photohiker wrote:It would be interesting to duplicate the experiment with a 'control' such as someone else wearing a rainbird jacket with the same layers underneath.
Son of a Beach wrote:frank_in_oz wrote:photohiker wrote:It would be interesting to duplicate the experiment with a 'control' such as someone else wearing a rainbird jacket with the same layers underneath.
Yes, it would be interesting to do such a comparison. But I'm not volunteering to do this in the rain, snow and gale force winds again!
Son of a Beach wrote:Yes, it would be interesting to do such a comparison. But I'm not volunteering to do this in the rain, snow and gale force winds again!
Penguin wrote:I did. I was on the hike with SoB and as my "experiment" carried a woven nylon Katmandu raincoat. I was trying to be all clever and light weight.
On the way in, when the weather was not too bad, I wore a polyprop shirt and the rain coat (anorak style) Comfy and no sweat.
On the way out, shirt 100 weight polar-fleece jumper and jacket. Also warm and no sweat. My Jacket was dry on the inside. I would certainly wear a jacket such as this on an open track (no off track work in brush), in cold weather and whee ther was not a heap of up hill. A 520gm weight saving is significant. On the other hand the Ranbird over trousers were useless and my trousers were saturated. So I am looking for a pair of light, WATERPROOF over trousers for similar conditions.
Anything rough or for warmer wet weather - taking the Gortex.
P
frank_in_oz wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:Yes, it would be interesting to do such a comparison. But I'm not volunteering to do this in the rain, snow and gale force winds again!
Toughen up Nik, toughen up! Thought you were a local and used to that sort of weather??
Son of a Beach wrote:But did you soak your jacket inside out in a puddle first?
My jacket was sodden on the inside to start with, from lying in a pool of water all night (and that mesh fabric on the inside holds a lot of water).
Penguin wrote:Son of a Beach wrote:But did you soak your jacket inside out in a puddle first?
My jacket was sodden on the inside to start with, from lying in a pool of water all night (and that mesh fabric on the inside holds a lot of water).
What interested me was that I thought I would get all sweaty in the non breathing fabric. I did not. Hence my feeling that in cold weather the "breathability" is not as critical. And I sweat easily.
I agree that the Gortex in your case dried from the inside out with time. Impressive.
P
sthughes wrote:Kathmandu NGX raincoat - I don't know if it was sweat or more likely water but I was drenched above the waist. It has kept me dry in warmer, wetter conditions in the past but not on this walk. It doesn't bead at all anymore so breathability is non existent in the rain. Will try tumble drying it - that's what Kathmandu suggest.
alliecat wrote:sthughes wrote:Kathmandu NGX raincoat - I don't know if it was sweat or more likely water but I was drenched above the waist. It has kept me dry in warmer, wetter conditions in the past but not on this walk. It doesn't bead at all anymore so breathability is non existent in the rain. Will try tumble drying it - that's what Kathmandu suggest.
Umm, if the water doesn't bead on it then the DWR has worn off and the jacket will leak. All the WPB membrane fabrics require a functioning DWR not just for breathability but to be waterproof. I don't know where this idea came from that the DWR is just needed for breathability, but it's simply not true. If the water isn't beading, it's time for a new DWR treatment.
Cheers,
Alliecat
I think you are quite wrong on this point. DWR is just that- a durable water repellent treatment, completely seperate toany lamination or coating which is used. the function of a DWR is critical to allowing moisture vapour to pass through (especially on inefficient "wet" system,s that use PU like Goretex and hydranaut and NGX). if the face fabric is sturated then there is no humidity gradient to drive moisture through. any perception of wet on the inside is simply sweat condensing on this inside of the fabric.
sthughes wrote:That's a YES I take it - Nothing wrong with a one word answer![]()
Thanks, I appreciate the info.
Brett wrote:
PS (delete who) how does a sheep stay so warm and dry
blacksheep wrote:alliecat wrote:sthughes wrote:Kathmandu NGX raincoat - I don't know if it was sweat or more likely water but I was drenched above the waist. It has kept me dry in warmer, wetter conditions in the past but not on this walk. It doesn't bead at all anymore so breathability is non existent in the rain. Will try tumble drying it - that's what Kathmandu suggest.
Umm, if the water doesn't bead on it then the DWR has worn off and the jacket will leak. All the WPB membrane fabrics require a functioning DWR not just for breathability but to be waterproof. I don't know where this idea came from that the DWR is just needed for breathability, but it's simply not true. If the water isn't beading, it's time for a new DWR treatment.
Cheers,
Alliecat
I think you are quite wrong on this point. DWR is just that- a durable water repellent treatment, completely seperate toany lamination or coating which is used. the function of a DWR is critical to allowing moisture vapour to pass through (especially on inefficient "wet" system,s that use PU like Goretex and hydranaut and NGX). if the face fabric is sturated then there is no humidity gradient to drive moisture through. any perception of wet on the inside is simply sweat condensing on this inside of the fabric.
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