raisins
FNG
Hi All,
I got a new Sitka Downpour (gore tex) jacket for a steal in fall 2018 and have been running it this fall season. The most outer layer is a fleece that provides quiet for bow hunting. I have noticed that this jacket wicks moisture into the inside of the sleeves. So, even in light to moderate rain, you end up getting wet arms. Saturday, I was wet past my elbows. I was in a tree stand with my bare hands in a muff attached around my waist, so gloves or holding my arms to catch rain are not to blame.
The problem I think is that the fleece outer layer absorbs and spreads (wicks) water. Also, the fleece layer at the cuffs wraps around into the jacket all in one continuous piece of fabric and then extends a few inches into the inside of the jacket. I think water absorbs into the fleece then makes the curve around the cuff and then up into the jacket. If you are then wearing a wicking base layer (polypro etc) that touches this inner cuff material, you have a circuit that transmits water. More traditional rain jackets have a nylon or other outer layer that does not so easily absorb water.
All Sitka had to do was somehow break this circuit (maybe make the very end of the cuff a rubber and attach the fabric to it?). I'm considering emailing them with this concern.
This jacket is too expensive and otherwise nice to give up on, so I ask the group here: How would you fix this?
Not letting my under layers touch that inner cuff will be tough, and I'll still have clammy wrists.
I could turn the cuff up, but then the jacket will be shorter in the arms and not function as well.
My thoughts are to either totally saturate the inner and outer cuff area with a water repellent spray OR apply a waterproofing boot dressing to the inner and outer cuff area and really push it into the fabric (making it greasy, oh well).
Thanks - R
PS. Ironically, I was wearing old LL Bean gore tex stowaway nylon pants on bottom with $10 fleece camo pajama bottoms over them for silence, and my lower body was X10 more comfortable than my top wearing a $300+ jacket.
I got a new Sitka Downpour (gore tex) jacket for a steal in fall 2018 and have been running it this fall season. The most outer layer is a fleece that provides quiet for bow hunting. I have noticed that this jacket wicks moisture into the inside of the sleeves. So, even in light to moderate rain, you end up getting wet arms. Saturday, I was wet past my elbows. I was in a tree stand with my bare hands in a muff attached around my waist, so gloves or holding my arms to catch rain are not to blame.
The problem I think is that the fleece outer layer absorbs and spreads (wicks) water. Also, the fleece layer at the cuffs wraps around into the jacket all in one continuous piece of fabric and then extends a few inches into the inside of the jacket. I think water absorbs into the fleece then makes the curve around the cuff and then up into the jacket. If you are then wearing a wicking base layer (polypro etc) that touches this inner cuff material, you have a circuit that transmits water. More traditional rain jackets have a nylon or other outer layer that does not so easily absorb water.
All Sitka had to do was somehow break this circuit (maybe make the very end of the cuff a rubber and attach the fabric to it?). I'm considering emailing them with this concern.
This jacket is too expensive and otherwise nice to give up on, so I ask the group here: How would you fix this?
Not letting my under layers touch that inner cuff will be tough, and I'll still have clammy wrists.
I could turn the cuff up, but then the jacket will be shorter in the arms and not function as well.
My thoughts are to either totally saturate the inner and outer cuff area with a water repellent spray OR apply a waterproofing boot dressing to the inner and outer cuff area and really push it into the fabric (making it greasy, oh well).
Thanks - R
PS. Ironically, I was wearing old LL Bean gore tex stowaway nylon pants on bottom with $10 fleece camo pajama bottoms over them for silence, and my lower body was X10 more comfortable than my top wearing a $300+ jacket.
Last edited: