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Base Layers

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Started by Richyspeak in Ski Hardware - 25 Replies

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Dave Mac
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

bandit wrote:I mostly use HH stuff, if it's really cold I have some of their Pro-wool zip neck tops. Keep me nice and toasty :D
I don't like the soggy patches that cotton T-shirts and jumpers get. I think it's preferable to have a material that wicks perspiration away from the skin.
Not that I perspire, I glow, of course )


I've noticed you glower a lot. :wink:

Edited 1 time. Last update at 11-Dec-2009

Trencher
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

I forgot to say that a good rule of thumb is how much clothing weighs comming out of the washing machine. Good thermals will have shed nearly all the water on the spin cycle. The exceptions to this are wool, and silk.

Dave is a living example, that people were surviving in the mountains in cotton and wool for centuries :lol:

Trencher
because I'm so inclined .....

Edited 1 time. Last update at 11-Dec-2009

Ian Wickham
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

What do you need that gear for , have you not heard of global warming :lol:

Dave Mac
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

Trencher wrote:I forgot to say that a good rule of thumb is how much clothing weighs comming out of the washing machine. Good thermals will have shed nearly all the water on the spin cycle. The exceptions to this are wool, and silk.

Dave is a living example, that people were surviving in the mountains in cotton and wool for centuries :lol:
Trencher

Just the one century Trencher, if you don't mind!

Errm, what's a washing machine?

Bandit
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

Dave Mac wrote:
Trencher wrote:I forgot to say that a good rule of thumb is how much clothing weighs comming out of the washing machine. Good thermals will have shed nearly all the water on the spin cycle. The exceptions to this are wool, and silk.

Dave is a living example, that people were surviving in the mountains in cotton and wool for centuries :lol:
Trencher

Just the one century Trencher, if you don't mind!

Errm, what's a washing machine?


New fangled stuff, requires electrickery :D

I thought you scrubbed your clothes in a stream or summat )

Brandyaitch
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

Huwcyn wrote:

What material should I be looking for then? I have some 'thermal underwear' from M & S already, and if I can see myself OK with some more of those, then I would get away with it far cheaper than having to buy some of the 'base layers' marketed by some of the 'outdoor' people. Some of them seem to be at a loss to know how high to take the price, for something that nobody except myself (and my good lady) will see.


I had my first ski trip 3 years ago (at your age) and kitted up with cotton thermals - I hadn't found this site to know that alternative material 'base layers' existed.

In four trips I have only worn leggings twice (reported wind chill -25C), and have never found cotton T-shirt/thermals under a thin fleece uncomfortably sweaty.





Bandit
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

The reason that wicking thermals were developed, was to transport moisture away from the skin, and out through the breathable layers of outer garments. If you get hot skiing and perspire in cotton thermals, then the weather changes to become cold, the moisture is trapped in the fibres and undergarments can feel chill.
It's not necessary to pay a fortune to get a reasonable level of technical performance from thermal underwear. The HH stuff I use, washes out and drip dries overnight, probably harder to achieve with cotton gear.

Dave Mac
reply to 'Base Layers'
posted Dec-2009

I think you just need to wash the garment armpits, Bandit. Errm, well not, you, as such, more one needs to...., Oh damn, maybe its just me that needs to.

As you were. :wink:
Whoops, there was a smilie available, progress.

Topic last updated on 13-December-2009 at 08:35