原帖由 <i>酱铺</i> 于 2007-12-26 15:02 发表<br />
"各有优缺点,抓绒比化纤棉要更透气些。"<br />
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这个不太理解。。<br />
化纤棉应该完全透气吧,可能不透气的只是面料而已。<br />
有可以解决透气问题的合适的面料吧? <br />
原文链接:
http://www.verber.com/mark/outdoors/gear/clothing.html
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Synthetic High Loft: I recommend using high loft synthetic insulation such as Polarguard, Primaloft, Climashield which is large enough to layer over all your clothing (aka a Belay Jacket). High loft vests and jackets tend to be lighter and pack smaller than the more commonly used fleece. They break the wind better than traditional fleece, but don't breath quite as well. I use a down sleeping bag and/or quilt... but for clothing I think there is too much of a risk getting it wet... so I want my clothing to be mostly functional if they get wet. Related to this, since my sleeping gear is down, having a high loft synthetic insulation garment can provide extra insurance. See BPL's High Loft Review for more info. For an insulation layer down to freezing I would normally recommend a high loft vest. In increasing warmth Montbell Thermawrap Vest (lightest, most minimalist), MEC Northern Lite 2 Vest (best value), or the Patagonia Micro Puff Vest. For colder conditions I would suggest a jacket (in increasing warmth) Montbell Thermawrap Jacket (lightest), MEC Northern Lite Pullover (best value), BMW Cocoon (best weight/warmth but fragile), Wild Things Primaloft Sweater, or Patagonia Micro Puffball Pullover (great weight/warmth ratio). I used to use a Patagonia Micro Puff pullover but it was just too warm for most of the conditions I faced. I was comfy sitting around wearing the Micro Puff with a medium weight base and warm hat when it was 15 F. When I am active I have to leave the Micro Puff partially unzipped until is it below -5F. I switched to the Montbell Thermwrap Jacket because it wasn't as warm as the Micro Puff but could be used by with Thermawrap vest when I needed to stay warm in 0F temperatures. There are a number of other high loft jackets (typically insulated with Primaloft) which are not quite as light weight such as the REI Gossamer, North Face Redpoint, and Mountain Hardware Compressor. For harsh conditions I would recommend a hooded "belay" jacket with a durable shell like the Patagonia DAS Parka, OR Synchro Hoody, Integral Designs Dolomitti Jacket, or the North Face Optimus Jacket. Note: a belay jacket should be large enough to fit over all your clothing. This way you can wear lighter clothing while active and put the belay jacket on over everything else when you stop and need the extra warmth without having to take anything off.
Down Insulation: for amazingly light, compressible and warm down vests or jackets take a look at Western Mountaineering, Montbell, Nunatak, and Feathered Friends. The updated Montbell Inner Down Jacket weights a mere 7oz with a full zipper and pockets. Historically I would have recommended avoid down clothing in all but the coldest conditions because there is a higher chance of clothing getting wet than a sleeping bag, and we all know how poorly down performs when it's wet, right? In a recent experiment done by BackpackingLight.com folks, it seem that even when you soak well designed ultra-light down garments with highly breathable shells such as the Western Mountaineering Flash Vest, that in less than an hour the Flash vest will have more loft than any synthetic vest which weights approx the same as the Flash when dry. In extreme cold, down wins hands down provided you wear a vapor barrier.
Fleece (typically 100, 200 or 300 weight) have been the most commonly used insulation layer for the last twenty years. Reasons to use fleece include: durability, breathability, and fleece dries very quickly if it gets wet. If you want a fleece which holds up for many years I would suggest looking at high quality fleece like those made by Mountain Hardware, Patagonia, Montbell, Arc'Teryx or semi custom jackets from Beyond Fleece. I think Polartec Thermal Pro High Loft (which first appeared in the Patagonia R2/R3) is the nicest fleece material in terms of comfort and insulation / weight since it's weight is similar to a 200wt fleece, but it's warmer than most classic 300wt fleece. WindPro is one of the few forms of fleece that is somewhat wind resistant while still being adequately breathable. I prefer high loft garments because they pack much more compactly, and because they provide significantly more warmth / ounce. That said, I will take sometimes take a 100wt fleece rather than my high loft vest if I expect the morning lows to be above 40F. There was a nice discussion about fleece as a staple for backpacking.
[ 本帖最后由 cachet 于 2007-12-26 18:55 编辑 ] |