Best rain jacket that works??

I have a sitka dewpoint and I have zero complaints. Good hood stays put and water runs off without getting too hot. I usually try to wear the pants because it runs off so good my pants get wet.
 
I use an ultralight Event jacket by Mt. Hardware along with an silnylon poncho for extra rain protection. It's wider and shorter than a typical poncho. Don't remember the brand - out of business anyway. If heavy rain is expected I bring a Helicon-tex military-style poncho for the second layer. Not that heavy but is waterproof. For riding/packing nothing works better than rubber. Also been looking at a Packa - zipped poncho/jacket/pack cover hybrid that may cover all the bases without the poncho shortcomings - https://www.thepacka.com/
 
I'm another that has moved away from 'waterproof breathable' gear in the last few years. I've moved to a poncho and been way happier with it.
Even on boots. I had a conversation with a boot manufacturer about their Gore lining and he told me straight that it usually breaks down within a year. So I've moved to full waxed leather boots and just take a break or two in the day to air them out.
 
I bought an OR Foray 3L recently, and after some initial testing, and seeing some funny patterns on the face fabric, I called & spoke to OR about it. The customer service agent said they believed that this particular jacket had a defective membrane, and advised that I return it or file a warranty claim.

They were very helpful & knowledgeable, and I have a massive respect for OR for keeping their customer service local, using smart, knowledgeable, native English-speaking Americans to help customers... - I was very pleased by that.



I'm on the fence if I replace it with another Foray, or go a different direction.

I'm starting to question whether a Nylon face-fabric is wise at all, since it's hydrophilic by nature. I may be wrong about this, but it seems like Nylons are going to wet out quicker, once heavy rainfall overwhelms the DWR treatment.

Polyester by nature shouldn't be as hygroscopic once the DWR is overwhelmed, and I would expect them to recover faster.

And then of course, there's options like Columbia's "OutDry" that uses no outer face fabric at all, so there's no exterior fabric to wet out. These are looking better & better.




(I say all that with the self-admitted caveat, that "a little bit of knowledge is a dangerous thing," and I've barely acquired "a little bit of knowledge..." So take everything above with a grain of salt...)
 
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