Mike Islander
WKR
TONGUE IN CHEEK MODE ON:
Please don't take this personally. Just some thoughts on quilts.
Watching the latest "innovations" in quilts, they seem like a bit of a joke. The newest have cinch at top and bottom, but no hood. You wear a warm head covering instead...which negates some of the weight savings. They have straps and a footbox that you maneuver into, which negates the "quick entry and exit" that quilt manufacturers like to tout as a feature. They have bottom zippers and lots of little clips, which negate some of the weight savings. You have to tuck the edges under you on the pad to meet the temperature rating, which absolutely negates the ease of use that you get with a bag. Roll over? Rearrange your quilt. Side sleeper? Rearrange your quilt. While you are at it, don't let your arm slip to the side of your pad, or it's going on the tent floor or ground. How about that on a really cold night?
So, not to be completely closed-minded, it seems to me that a bag with a full zipper will do everything a quilt will do, and it will do many things better, and many things that a quilt can't do at all. For a pound of weight savings (oops! Subtract the weight of a full head cover), I'll take a bag anytime. I can unzip my bag and use it as a quilt. I could add a couple of clips along the zipper for about an oz of weight added and a bit of ventilation.
I know guys love them. So I'm not saying they aren't something good for some people. For me personally, not something I want or need. I think warmer weather and back sleepers, along with those counting ounces, are the target market for quilts. But except for the weight, I don't see any advantage attractive enough to switch. I know those who use them will have plenty of good reasons, for them. And am happy to see what they are, in light of my objections above.
Please don't take this personally. Just some thoughts on quilts.
Watching the latest "innovations" in quilts, they seem like a bit of a joke. The newest have cinch at top and bottom, but no hood. You wear a warm head covering instead...which negates some of the weight savings. They have straps and a footbox that you maneuver into, which negates the "quick entry and exit" that quilt manufacturers like to tout as a feature. They have bottom zippers and lots of little clips, which negate some of the weight savings. You have to tuck the edges under you on the pad to meet the temperature rating, which absolutely negates the ease of use that you get with a bag. Roll over? Rearrange your quilt. Side sleeper? Rearrange your quilt. While you are at it, don't let your arm slip to the side of your pad, or it's going on the tent floor or ground. How about that on a really cold night?
So, not to be completely closed-minded, it seems to me that a bag with a full zipper will do everything a quilt will do, and it will do many things better, and many things that a quilt can't do at all. For a pound of weight savings (oops! Subtract the weight of a full head cover), I'll take a bag anytime. I can unzip my bag and use it as a quilt. I could add a couple of clips along the zipper for about an oz of weight added and a bit of ventilation.
I know guys love them. So I'm not saying they aren't something good for some people. For me personally, not something I want or need. I think warmer weather and back sleepers, along with those counting ounces, are the target market for quilts. But except for the weight, I don't see any advantage attractive enough to switch. I know those who use them will have plenty of good reasons, for them. And am happy to see what they are, in light of my objections above.
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