![]() Measurements refer to body size, not garment dimensions, and are in inches, unless otherwise noted. Fabric is certified as bluesign® approved.Insulation: 60-g FullRange® 100% polyester (40% recycled) with 4-way stretch. Cuffs: 4.9-oz 100% polyester snag-resistant stretch knit with a DWR finish. Materials: Shell and lining: 1.7-oz 100% polyester (87% recycled) plain weave with four-way mechanical stretch and a DWR (durable water repellent) finish.Sleek, snag-resistant Variable Conditions Cuffs use stretch knit for versatile coverage and comfort elasticized hem seals in warmth Fair.Two handwarmer pockets and a left-chest pocket are zippered, low-profile and low-bulk to wear comfortably with a harness or pack hoody self-stuffs into left-chest pocket.Center-front zipper has zipper garage at chin for next-to-skin comfort.Stretchy hood with binding easily pulls on or off, even when jacket is zipped.Stretch fabrics and insulation, articulated patterning, and strategically placed, low-profile quilting provide full range of motion for unhindered movement.Revolutionary 60-g FullRange® insulation (now 40% recycled) warms and stretches, and combined with the shell and lining, supplies outstanding mechanical stretch and air permeability (40CFM), so excess heat can escape.100% polyester (now 87% recycled) plain-weave shell and lining fabric offers generous mechanical stretch, exceptional breathability and improved abrasion resistance microtexture creates excellent next-to-skin comfort features a DWR (durable water repellent) finish.When the belay goes from chilly to downright cold, pull on a lightweight shell and feel the Nano-Air’s thermal properties skyrocket. The Variable Conditions Cuffs have sleek, stretch-knit insets that allow you to easily push up your sleeves. ![]() The center-front zipper has a zipper garage for comfort on your chin. Two above-harness handwarmer pockets and two chest pockets all close with trim, low-bulk zippers. The trim, stretchy hood is designed for next-to-noggin use, though it’ll still fit snugly over low-profile helmets. Full mechanical stretch creates a close, sculpted fit over baselayers and an uninhibited range of motion. The woven textured yarn face fabric is soft and durable, and better resists pilling than the original. It’s a new standard for technical insulation, merging the comfort and breathability of open fleece with the protection and warmth of a puffy while using recycled inputs to the greatest possible degree. Even better, we’ve upped the recycled material content throughout the Nano-Air, from the lightweight, weather-shedding shell, to the comfortable plain-weave liner, to our warm-when-wet FullRange® insulation-all with zero sacrifice in performance. Fair Trade Certified™ sewn.Īpproach, climb, belay, repeat until the post-climb beer-all in the Nano-Air® Hoody, a warm, stretchy, breathable layer you can put on and leave on through high-output, stop-and-go activities in cold weather. Now built with significant recycled content in the shell, liner and insulation, the Nano-Air sets another new standard for technical insulation. Warm, stretchy and breathable FullRange® insulation dumps excess heat when you’re working hard and keeps you warm when you’re not. ![]() The Patagonia Men's Nano-Air® Hoody was made to be worn for the entirety of your aerobic, start-stop alpine missions, so you’re never slowed down by changing layers. Water Bottles, Containers, Bladders Etc.Gear Cleaners and Waterproofing Treatment.Note: I have no access to most OR stuff where I live, so I can't try before I buy. It's also a bit on the heavy side considering a light drizzle would ruin it.Ī) Ferrosi? Cathode? Good? Bad? Limitations?ĭisclaimer: Not a shill for OR, just have access to some OR specific money (full price still, not a pro deal sadly). Basically when my Thorium puffy is overkill, or too rain-risky without a shell (which would make it too warm/sweaty). For example around a campfire on cold windy fall days, or during slower hikes in early winter when I can expect a bit of drizzle or wet snow. One hole in my laying system I've noticed is the lack of a lightweight jacket that's warm enough to wear -5*C and up. I live in rainy, cold, buggy Ontario, so I have to keep that in mind. I've heard good things about the Cathode and Ferrosi, in particular, anyone have any experience? ![]() What would you get? What OR gear do you like in particular? Let's say you have a certain amount of money to spend on OR gear specifically. ![]()
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