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#435728 - 02/07/05 02:36 PM
Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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veteran
Registered: 11/29/00
Posts: 1438
TRs: 27
Photos: 308
Loc: Bellingham
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So I'm looking to buy a pair of lightweight (<< 1lb) waterproof-breathable pants for alpine climbing. I want then to be waterproof, more importantly I want them to be breathable. They'll probably spend most of their time in the pack but once they're on they're not coming off and it's clammy enough down there already. Every company seems to make at least three different styles of said pant. In the $150 range they're made of Gore Pac-Lite or Gore XCR. Around $80 or so each company has their own special laminate. Mtn Harware has Conduit, Montbell has Versalite, Marmot has Precip, etc. So I'm looking for informed (and uninformed) opinions on how breathable these various fabrics are, i.e. I once had a Precip coat and it was the clammyest least breathable POS I ever owned. So...spray away!....whatcha got? hate it or love it? Thanks Darin 
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#435729 - 02/07/05 02:43 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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consummate douchebag
Registered: 03/05/02
Posts: 5095
TRs: 20
Photos: 320
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I second the  on Precip. I've got the pants and they are NOT breathable and don't have full sidezips which pretty much means you either wear them all day or not at all. I only use them for hiking in pouring rain or through wet brush. The good thing about them is that they only weigh 7oz.
I like thin Schoeller pants for climbing. I haven't often felt the need for more waterproofness on my legs than the DWR coating provides and you can't beat the breathability and functionality.
If I were going to get a WPB shell jacket today, I think my first choice would be the Integral Designs eVENT Jacket . Maybe they make pants too? I dunno.
BTW: NOLSE courses - 0, Retail Experience - 0. 
_________________________
I'm wild about america!
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#435731 - 02/07/05 02:48 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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Sick Spray Bird
Registered: 02/08/01
Posts: 30030
TRs: 29
Photos: 304
Loc: Collapsing State Vector
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skin is waterproof and highly breathable. go naked!
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t3h v01d, b1 d3f1n1t10n 4mless, there4 pr3d8s 4ll 4m & w1ll r3m41n
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#435733 - 02/07/05 04:31 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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enthusiast
Registered: 11/09/00
Posts: 215
TRs: 1
Photos: 0
Loc: variable
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I don't find that pants need to be made of the most breathable fabric. I use Marmot full zip precip and oracle pants a lot and they are fine. If you are too hot, take your pants off! On the other hand, pants that are not really waterproof are very disapointing when it is cold and wet. Schoeller pants are great, but won't keep you dry in a downpour or in deep wet snow (but they do dry fast after the rain). I have a gore tex pac lite shell jacket that breathes quite well, and the new "Mithril"soft shell from OR breathes very well, but is a bit heavy at 24 ounces for a size large jacket. The only time I have real problems with any WB shell is when I wear too much clothing. Have not tried e-vent yet. Is it great?
_________________________
The sunlight on the garden hardens and grows cold.
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#435734 - 02/07/05 04:52 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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veteran
Registered: 10/21/02
Posts: 1448
TRs: 3
Photos: 80
Loc: Bellingham, WA
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#435735 - 02/07/05 04:57 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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sprayer
Registered: 12/04/00
Posts: 8219
TRs: 0
Photos: 13
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#435736 - 02/08/05 12:34 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 01/15/02
Posts: 2129
TRs: 0
Photos: 24
Loc: Russia With Love
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eVent is supposed to me more breathable than Gore-Tex. How about these? Not cheap, though.
_________________________
Don't believe everything you think.
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#435739 - 02/08/05 04:32 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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spray'prentice
Registered: 02/13/02
Posts: 2718
TRs: 18
Photos: 199
Loc: The Cheeseburger Picnic
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You know, this is really where an unlined nylon pant comes in handy; no WPB pant is gonna feel much better than another IMO and besides, once the DWR is worn off nothing breathes at all.
_________________________
Never has your Buick found this forward a gear. -Richard Hugo, "Driving Montana"
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#435740 - 02/08/05 06:55 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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addicted to cc.com
Registered: 07/22/02
Posts: 445
TRs: 3
Photos: 49
Loc: Mariposa, CA
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anyone know where to get paclite or xcr ultralight pull-on pants with no zippers at all? or very short ankle zips? i want to do my own tailoring.
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#435741 - 02/11/05 12:50 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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stranger
Registered: 02/09/04
Posts: 14
TRs: 0
Photos: 0
Loc: CA
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Redledge pants are extremely light and extremely cheap. They claim that their "TH4" fabric is WP/B. I have a pair and sliced through it easily with a crampon, but that's a price to pay for the light-weight. Haven't been in real wet or sweaty conditions yet to verify the WP/B. I think their website is temporarily down. I got the pants at the Army Surplus store in Boulder, CO for $30. Not a bad deal if you think you'll be keeping them in your pack most of the time. redledge.com
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#435742 - 02/11/05 07:02 PM
Re: Breathibility of various WP/B fabrics?
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enthusiast
Registered: 07/12/04
Posts: 302
TRs: 0
Photos: 1
Loc: formerly pdx, now sjc
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Red Ledge thunderlight TH4 is reputed to be on the "less breathable" end of the scale, according to data posted on backpackinglight.com a few years ago. I like the stuff because it's fairly cheap, sturdy and light - it takes being thrashed through brush pretty well. Have gotten mine from www.campmor.com, but I'm sure google/froogle would turn up other sources.
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