Glad to help!Hey Brigham - really appreciate the engagement and you explaining the design intent. Goes a LONG ways for someone like me. Reasoning makes total sense to me - helmet thing felt off, so glad you confirmed I'm not crazy. Cheers.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Glad to help!Hey Brigham - really appreciate the engagement and you explaining the design intent. Goes a LONG ways for someone like me. Reasoning makes total sense to me - helmet thing felt off, so glad you confirmed I'm not crazy. Cheers.
With the standard caveats that it is dependent on individual physiology, metabolism, layering system, wind, humidity, duration of stationary status, cloud cover, etc..... the low end should be in the range of 30-45 degrees F.@Brigham @ Outdoor Vitals what would you say is the target temp range?
Hi Brigham. Can you comment on the use of duck down vs goose down. My understanding is the duck down is much less expensive to source. Is it really as good of an insulator, or is it mostly for cutting cost on the jackets?With the standard caveats that it is dependent on individual physiology, metabolism, layering system, wind, humidity, duration of stationary status, cloud cover, etc..... the low end should be in the range of 30-45 degrees F.
I won't have the details that Brigham can share, but I think it was a specific species of duck that allowed a high loft and excellent properties. Not a normal duck down. They discuss in the Outdoor Vitals podcast around the Zulu jacket. I find the jacket very comfortable personally.Hi Brigham. Can you comment on the use of duck down vs goose down. My understanding is the duck down is much less expensive to source. Is it really as good of an insulator, or is it mostly for cutting cost on the jackets?