D
Deleted member 16014
Guest
Did not do a lot different, mostly have things how I like them. I did try just a couple new items backpacking, hiking around, and in a variety of conditions.
Worked:
--BD Alpine Start. It's more breathable than the Patagonia Houdini, which has been my go-to windshirt the last several years. If packing as my only shell, which I do on most sub 3-day trips with a decent forecast, I'll still typically take the Houdini. If I'm packing a wp/b hardshell, the 8 oz BD is perfect for shedding light rain and enough wind to stay comfy while moving. It's much better at pushing moisture inside-out and allows your body to function more naturally in temp regulation. 8 oz well spent if hiking hard in mixed conditions where you'll overheat in a shell, or even the very calendared Houdini fabric.
--Polartec Alpha. I've long been a big grid and micro-grid fleece hoody fan (i.e. Patagonia R1, Thermal Weight Cap, lots of good cheaper EB/REI type spinoffs). This fall I just started messing around with Polartec Alpha. It's just a different weave in 60/90/120 g/m2 weights, but I'm really liking the moisture management aspect so far. Like the breathable windshirt it's just doing a more efficient job of moisture transfer than other fleeces I've had. It's essentially 0% wind resistant, which is perfect paired with a windshirt or hard shell as an outer. An example would be the FarPointe Alpha Cruiser.
When a roughly 40 CFM windshirt and a sorta-proprietary version of polartec alpha had a baby, they named it the Arcteryx Proton FL, which is now discontinued. It's hardly been cold enough to use recently. I'll be putting it to work this weekend on a little overnight snowshoe based hunt.
None of this is really new, shelled micropile has been around for a good 30+ years (Rab Vapour-Rise, Buffalo UK, etc.). The difference is just more options in fabric technology for the face fabrics and insulation weaves themselves.
Worked:
--BD Alpine Start. It's more breathable than the Patagonia Houdini, which has been my go-to windshirt the last several years. If packing as my only shell, which I do on most sub 3-day trips with a decent forecast, I'll still typically take the Houdini. If I'm packing a wp/b hardshell, the 8 oz BD is perfect for shedding light rain and enough wind to stay comfy while moving. It's much better at pushing moisture inside-out and allows your body to function more naturally in temp regulation. 8 oz well spent if hiking hard in mixed conditions where you'll overheat in a shell, or even the very calendared Houdini fabric.
--Polartec Alpha. I've long been a big grid and micro-grid fleece hoody fan (i.e. Patagonia R1, Thermal Weight Cap, lots of good cheaper EB/REI type spinoffs). This fall I just started messing around with Polartec Alpha. It's just a different weave in 60/90/120 g/m2 weights, but I'm really liking the moisture management aspect so far. Like the breathable windshirt it's just doing a more efficient job of moisture transfer than other fleeces I've had. It's essentially 0% wind resistant, which is perfect paired with a windshirt or hard shell as an outer. An example would be the FarPointe Alpha Cruiser.
When a roughly 40 CFM windshirt and a sorta-proprietary version of polartec alpha had a baby, they named it the Arcteryx Proton FL, which is now discontinued. It's hardly been cold enough to use recently. I'll be putting it to work this weekend on a little overnight snowshoe based hunt.
None of this is really new, shelled micropile has been around for a good 30+ years (Rab Vapour-Rise, Buffalo UK, etc.). The difference is just more options in fabric technology for the face fabrics and insulation weaves themselves.