ultra light down - is it worth it?
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Interesting point about fit. I knew that but wasn't thinking about it. |
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Patrick Shyvers wrote:Interesting point about fit. I knew that but wasn't thinking about it. Unfortunately for me the inexpensive jackets tend to fit like trash bags. Skinny mofo. Would you spring for the "fancy-brand" and pay the huge price premium, if that was the one that fit? patrick ... yes i would if it was for stuff that mattered and nothing else fit ... |
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bearbreeder wrote: lol ... so im "encouraging knockoffs" no on MP !!! everyone knockoffs everybody in the outdoor industry ... do you only use a nanopuff? ... all the other 60g/m synth jackets would be a "knockoff" including ones such as the rab xenon, montbell, etc ... metolius TCUs knockoffs wired bliss ... id love to hear you disparage them and their users as knockoffs you do realize that MEC makes perfectly serviceable and well respected gear ... and they publish the results of their labour and environmental standards, and give 1% back to the planet .... and here you are throwing around "knockoff" everyone knockoffs everyone in the outdoor industry again i await the reference to the ll bean bankruptcy which you stated ... im looking forward to the report oh and i take it you only use genuine apple products, not those "knockoff" ipads, iphones, macs ... you know the kind that runs windows and android ... you wouldnt be a hypocrit would you now? with your participation i anticipate this thread will run to 20+ pages of trolls ;) Apple didn't invent the laptop, smartphone, or tablet. On the other hand, Patagonia did originate the R1, Nanopuff, etc. |
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Yuup, I've got a cheap Uniqlo UL down jacket that's the ducks nuts. |
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For the most part the only people who truly need the performance of ultra light down get it free or are loaded. |
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Ray Pinpillage wrote: Apple didn't invent the laptop, smartphone, or tablet. On the other hand, Patagonia did originate the R1, Nanopuff, etc. I enjoy watching you try to legitimize knock off products by claiming "everyone does it". There's really only a small handful of companies driving innovation in the outdoor clothing industry, the rest just copy. Your excuses are just laughable. I like innovation and reward it with my dollars when I can. Perhaps if you didn't want to have this discussion you wouldn't have brought it up? Cheap knockoffs are your swan song though so I don't think you could help yourself. blah blah blah blah |
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i like being light. I'm a gear dork in that regard. play nice guys :) |
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bearbreeder wrote: oh and i do believe apple "invented" the iOS and original use friendly interface on the mac ... They stole that from Xerox... Of course Apple "invented" iOS, since that's an Apple trademark, but iOS itself had nothing technically ground breaking (Steve Jobs was sweating balls when he saw Palm's WebOS). Just like Microsoft didn't invent DOS and Google didn't invent internet search. Commercial success are hardly based primarily on the merit of technical innovation. |
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reboot wrote: They stole that from Xerox... Of course Apple "invented" iOS, since that's an Apple trademark, but iOS itself had nothing technically ground breaking (Steve Jobs was sweating balls when he saw Palm's WebOS). Just like Microsoft didn't invent DOS and Google didn't invent internet search. Commercial success are hardly based primarily on the merit of technical innovation. When the Mac came out in 1984 there was nothing else like it ... It was instantly recognized as something truly unique and revolutionary than this ... Apple has revoltionized the world with 4 successive products that worked and sold well and greatly influenced the imitators - the original apple 2 which was THE personal computer from the late 70s and early 80s - the mac which introduced the graphical user interfaces to the masses, any computer historian will freely acknowledge the debt and shameless copying that microsoft did - the iPhone which wiped out not just all previous smartphones but also "dumb" phones ... The current growh and profitability of apple, the data usage growth in telecoms and the success of imitators (samsung) bears witness to this - the iPad which absolutely and utterly redefined tablets ... Before the iPaD tablet computing was a joke, after it even young kids and old family members use then easily ... Again most new succesful tablet imitates the ipad in practical operation But dont worry, if you use one of the imitators (or successors) i wont preach about tht evil on MP Now where can i find a buy a xerox GUI computer these days i wonder !!!! ;) |
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Ray Pinpillage wrote: On the other hand, Patagonia did originate the R1, Nanopuff, etc. bearbreader wrote:do you only use a nanopuff? ... all the other 60g/m synth jackets would be a "knockoff" I think the Wild Things EP jacket preceded the Nanopuff by more than a decade. There must have been others. REI had an excellent light primaloft jacket in the early 2000s as well. MEC had their own primaloft offerings of varying weight. |
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Crotch Robbins wrote: I think the Wild Things EP jacket preceded the Nanopuff by more than a decade. There must have been others. REI had an excellent light primaloft jacket in the early 2000s as well. MEC had their own primaloft offerings of varying weight. no doubt there were others that produced and sold similar gear earlier .... however the nanopuff is the one that folks remember and was/is successful for those who have better things to do than to read through the coming pages of senseless arguments ... |
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so in conclusion |
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bearbreeder wrote: no doubt there were others that produced and sold similar gear earlier .... however the nanopuff is the one that folks remember and was/is successful which all goes to show that insisting folks only buy from the company that originally made, or at the very least succeeded in selling the first popular models ... well thats pretty absurd Here's is your original statement that I responded to: bearbreeder wrote:one thing to remember is that the outdoor clothing industry is driven by marketing ... most of the well working products are commoditized (notice how mec, cabelas, ll bean, everyone else makes perfectly functional R1,nanopuff, houdini, etc copies) ... so marketers need to come out with marginal "improvements" and things that make their products "special" to justify the premiums and makes sure the gullible know that these minor improvements are "revolutionary" ... happens every year ;) R1, Nanopuff, and Houdini are all trade names owned by Patagonia. Those are products that Patagonia brought to the market with unique selling features (least of which are the materials). According to you Patagonia needs to improve the R1 to justify the premium while ignoring they invented it. Using the trade name only drives the point that you're shilling intellectual dishonesty. |
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Ray Pinpillage wrote: Here's is your original statement that I responded to: R1, Nanopuff, and Houdini are all trade names owned by Patagonia. Those are products that Patagonia brought to the market with unique selling features (least of which are the materials). According to you Patagonia needs to improve the R1 to justify the premium while ignoring they invented it. Using the trade name only drives the point that you're shilling intellectual dishonesty. I don't expect to change your mind, this is who you are as a person. The rest of the thread is all yours. oh dear ray .... still trolling on a sunday night? |
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just so folks have a more things to read bout in these 20 pages other than fun and games ... as the chart above shows while very generally jackets with a lower CFM are a bit more "downproof" there are plenty of low permeability jackets that arent as well ... heres the IDFL take on the matter |
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bearbreeder wrote: When the Mac came out in 1984 there was nothing else like it ... Because the bosses at Xerox did not know the gold mine they were sitting on...and Steve Jobs did, but he sure as hell did not invent it. bearbreeder wrote:When the iphone came out the same happened...Where is palm and blackberry now? It was a very good product, and Steve Jobs thought to use capacitive touch technology (which again, he did not invent) for the iPhone. But the iOS itself? It wasn't all that. It did work reasonably well, and Steve Jobs was able to convince people to develop for the platform. bearbreeder wrote:Your are typing your MP post on eithet an apple or one of its imitators ... And you are typing using a Xerox GUI imitator, and interacting with MP.com with a Mosaic web browser imitator, so what? |
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reboot wrote: Because the bosses at Xerox did not know the gold mine they were sitting on...and Steve Jobs did, but he sure as hell did not invent it. It was a very good product, and Steve Jobs thought to use capacitive touch technology (which again, he did not invent) for the iPhone. But the iOS itself? It wasn't all that. It did work reasonably well, and Steve Jobs was able to convince people to develop for the platform. WebOS was technologically superior to the original iOS, just like OS/2 was to Windows 3x, but as history repeatedly show, it does not guarantee commercial success. And you are typing using a Xerox GUI imitator, and interacting with MP.com with a Mosaic web browser imitator, so what? Apple nearly folded before Steve Jobs took over (and while away, developed the far superior NeXT OS which the current Mac OS X is based off of). In the mid-late 90s, I had the "pleasure" of occasionally using Mac OS 7-9 and was wondering why this obsolete POS hasn't been deprecated. hows posting through the DOS prompt on MP going? than this ... or than this ... heres one of the closest and most popular "alternatives" to the iPhone its evident where its form and function comes from ... for all practical purposes swapping out from and iphone to one of the more popular "knockoffs" requires minimal re-learning as the interfaces and functions are very similar ... folks do it all the time when upgrading/swapping their handsets time to pick up some old palm treos so i can post on MP with em without being a "intellectually dishonest shill" for using "knockoffs" !!!! i predict 20 pages still =P ;) |
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Come on guys, I don't care about the history of operating systems... Tell me more about down. |
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Anson Call wrote:Come on guys, I don't care about the history of operating systems... Tell me more about down. How come no one tells you your UL down is only going to have "800" fill power for one or two seasons?? Until recently, marketing tricked me into believing that high fill power down was superior in every way to lower fill powers. After watching my 800 fill jacket lose a lot of its puffiness over just one year, I'm wishing I had gone with synthetic or, maybe, lower fill power?? Does a jacket with lower fill power down, and therefore more down per volume, retain loft better? It seems like my 800 fill down used to fill out the baffles of my jacket well, but now the baffles seem like they're only stuffed 3/4 full. Would a 650-fill jacket hold up better? And yes, I've tried all the tricks - nikwax down wash, tumble drying, picking at the baffles to re-fluff the down, etc. The puffiness just isn't ever going to be like new again. how often do you wear your down (daily in town?) and wash it? one big unknown is that these new DWR down MAY help with the loss of loft due to humidity, in other words keep 900 fill power 900 in the real outdoors ... there is no real published evidence i can find with this ... but thats one of the reasons patagucci claims to have used their DWR down |
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