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i'd suggest Ibex or Smartwool. I've had both and never felt cold in either. On really cold days i wear a ski helmet and goggles and that combo seems to work great.
Ditto Ibex or nice wool in general. On the other hand, two winters ago got so bad that I had to resort to synthetics. I switched to a Craft windstopper balaclava and continue to use it when the temperature dips more than 5 degrees below freezing or there's wet precipitation. It's basically a super wicking base layer with hollow fibers (like wool) for warmth... but most importantly, there's a very thin Gore Tex covering over the mouth and neck. So it basically blocks the wind like beefier neoprene designs but pulls moisture and sweat away from your skin like a good base layer, keeping you dry and happy.
Kelvin Mulcky said:i'd suggest Ibex or Smartwool. I've had both and never felt cold in either. On really cold days i wear a ski helmet and goggles and that combo seems to work great.
good thread.
my rule : "LAYER"
and you can even put a wind/waterproof layer between layers (think shower or swim cap).
and it doesn't show either !
DB
J said:Ditto Ibex or nice wool in general. On the other hand, two winters ago got so bad that I had to resort to synthetics. I switched to a Craft windstopper balaclava and continue to use it when the temperature dips more than 5 degrees below freezing or there's wet precipitation. It's basically a super wicking base layer with hollow fibers (like wool) for warmth... but most importantly, there's a very thin Gore Tex covering over the mouth and neck. So it basically blocks the wind like beefier neoprene designs but pulls moisture and sweat away from your skin like a good base layer, keeping you dry and happy.
Kelvin Mulcky said:i'd suggest Ibex or Smartwool. I've had both and never felt cold in either. On really cold days i wear a ski helmet and goggles and that combo seems to work great.
Ditto Ibex or nice wool in general. On the other hand, two winters ago got so bad that I had to resort to synthetics. I switched to a Craft windstopper balaclava and continue to use it when the temperature dips more than 5 degrees below freezing or there's wet precipitation. It's basically a super wicking base layer with hollow fibers (like wool) for warmth... but most importantly, there's a very thin Gore Tex covering over the mouth and neck. So it basically blocks the wind like beefier neoprene designs but pulls moisture and sweat away from your skin like a good base layer, keeping you dry and happy.
Kelvin Mulcky said:i'd suggest Ibex or Smartwool. I've had both and never felt cold in either. On really cold days i wear a ski helmet and goggles and that combo seems to work great.
On shorter rides, this works. But on longer or wetter rides, non-breathable wind blockers actually make matters worse. I think that's what the original poster is referring to, how moisture gets trapped on the inside. Dry = happy.
daniel brown said:good thread.
my rule : "LAYER"
and you can even put a wind/waterproof layer between layers (think shower or swim cap).
and it doesn't show either !
DB
J said:Ditto Ibex or nice wool in general. On the other hand, two winters ago got so bad that I had to resort to synthetics. I switched to a Craft windstopper balaclava and continue to use it when the temperature dips more than 5 degrees below freezing or there's wet precipitation. It's basically a super wicking base layer with hollow fibers (like wool) for warmth... but most importantly, there's a very thin Gore Tex covering over the mouth and neck. So it basically blocks the wind like beefier neoprene designs but pulls moisture and sweat away from your skin like a good base layer, keeping you dry and happy.
Kelvin Mulcky said:i'd suggest Ibex or Smartwool. I've had both and never felt cold in either. On really cold days i wear a ski helmet and goggles and that combo seems to work great.
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