Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Anyone have experience cold-weather (single digits F or less) camping with a down quilt? Specifically I'm curious about Nunatuk quilts.

 

I've been thinking about this a fair bit. Some thoughts/questions:

* I imagine they're easier to layer than bags if you ever face desperately cold conditions

* can the head be kept warm enough?

* without a closed design, what about drafts?

* much lighter per degree of warmth rating than sleeping bags, since bottom-side down is useless anyway

  • Replies 12
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted

I have a down bag liner that has only a sleeve for a pad on the bottom. it has worked very well for summer and sometimes in winter when weight is key. (add a bivy and down jacket for winter) Not sure if this quilt thing is a just a sleeping bag without down on the bottom or a down blanket.

Posted

backpackinglight.com has a lot of down quilt fans but they seem to be mostly good weather, low elevation gram counters. For me I cant see how they are worth the few ounces of weight savings, everytime i roll over i would get a big draft. I roll over a lot when camping on snow...

Posted

My understanding is that it has straps to keep it in place over a pad. I guess the idea is similar to the Big Agnes bags that have no down on the bottom, since bottom-down is just about useless anyway.

 

The weight savings are pretty good. Seems you can save at least 1 lb for a cold setup (-10 or 0 F or so) over high fill count bags.

Posted

Tvash, It's no wonder you can't stay warm because it is taun taun.

 

In my opinion, down was once disregarded and is now respected again. But as a sleeping bag and not a base. I prefer Thermarest but have dealt with thinner in certain situations, including spooning when necessary.

 

 

Posted
no down on the bottom is not useless unless your pad is really thick. no insulation on the bottom bags suck ballz

 

the insulation on the bottom of a sleeping bag does very very very little compared to the sides and top. I don't know what the R value is but for the reason down is lauded for its weight&compression to warmth ratio makes it that much less useful when it is actually compressed. As a stomach sleeper in a down bag I compress a ton of the down under there and those spots offer probably less insulation to my pad than synthetic bag would. That said there are definitely small areas, pockets [like vert or horiz indentations of the sleep pad) where you are not compressing it that puff out and certainly helps.

 

What I have found when one doesn't have down on the bottom of a mummy bag, actually means that it isn't at the sides really either--just kind of on the top draped over but not tucked in like a quilt. then it certainly feels colder.

Posted

What I have found when one doesn't have down on the bottom of a mummy bag, actually means that it isn't at the sides really either--just kind of on the top draped over but not tucked in like a quilt. then it certainly feels colder.

 

Exactly. A quilt you can at least wrap up in

Posted

Yeah, I do this. Gotten down to the minus teens Fahrenheit. My winter quilt weighs 28 oz - 20oz of that is down. It is warmer than I've ever needed, while being lighter than many 20º bags.

Posted

I agree with Gene. Sleeping bags are the bomb. Why wouldn't you want something enclosed? When you are camping out at -25 or so the hardest part is bodily functions and putting up with your tentmate for endless nighttime hours from inside your nice bag which has been the norm for decades.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.




×
×
  • Create New...