What temperature sleeping bag required?

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What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Maxwell Hall » Mon 28 Jun, 2010 1:39 am

Would a -7c sleeping bag do for Tasmania in winter? What if I plan on going near the mountains?

I was told by an experienced hiker that the sleeping bag + tent + insulation pad thing will make it warm enough.
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby pazzar » Mon 28 Jun, 2010 7:09 am

-7 is fine, as long as you are sensible with it. Dont go crazy camping in a snow cave in it - it might not keep you warm. Using things like a thermarest matress and a silk sleeping bag liner will help to keep you warmer. I go out in my -3 bag and I'm fine, in saying that, I usually sleep in thermals and a jacket in winter.

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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Ent » Tue 29 Jun, 2010 12:20 am

Hi

Parks recommend as a minimum a -5 bags so -7 is on the money providing the sleeping mat is up to the job. In fact a -7 bag is probably the best all round bag for Tassie. I have a -3, -7, -10 and -12 bag and only found the -3 struggled at probably near that temperature when I roll over and the down did not loft immediately in the flat spot. I normally wear thermals to bed as I hate sleeping bag liners and this given me a more comfortable night sleep as well as middle of the night excursions.

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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby sthughes » Tue 29 Jun, 2010 1:14 pm

-7 limit of comfort or extreme survival? What brand?

I have a -8 Roman bag and it is damn cold well into the positives, so if it is a Roman I'd say no it isn't warm enough necessarily.

I also have a -1 (limit of comfort) Marmot bag and it is fine down to about that temperature (and perhaps beyond when in a small solid inner tent).
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby gorby » Tue 29 Jun, 2010 9:54 pm

I have a sleeping bag that was advertised that it was tested to minus 10.

pity it didn't pass that test :wink: :D
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Drifting » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 7:23 am

you have to make sure that the manufacturer's cold rating is accurate- a lot of them aren't.
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Ent » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 8:32 am

It is amazing the issue with rating given that a standard should apply. Sure I can accept a few degrees each side depending on the individual but more than a few appear overly optomistic. My One Planet ones and Western Mountaineering appear to be on the money but at -3, -7, -10 and -12 it is hard to find the days in the year that will push them. I would suggest going a few degrees warmer than what you plan so a true -7 comfort rating should be more than adequate for most nights in Tassie unless you sleep in snow caves on the mountain tops. Remember a good sleeping mat is worth its weight and as Sthughes mentions a double skin tent is worth a few degrees as well.

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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Biggles » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 10:50 am

My Snowgum Coloir 550 rated at —5° wasn't really warm enough for a recent alpine walk at 1660m when the temperature dipped to —7°c. I got my space blanket out at 2.45 in the morning and the wrapped it around the whole caboodle creating an incredibly snug coccoon — not cold at all after that. A winter alpine walk in the (expected) frigid conditions was some way out of my comfort zone but not too extreme: I just tagged along to gain experience with Tassie-seasoned walkers, and it was very valuable experience, despite the discomforts.

I am interested in knowing about the 'weighting' (in terms of importance of insulation vs comfort) of the type of sleeping mat that should be employed in cold conditions. Mine is a Thermarest NeoAIR (for sheer blissful comfort) and my walking friends said it is not appropriate for alpine conditions because it's not insulated. I do have a Thermarest ProLite but wanted a much smaller mattress 'in the pack'. If going alpine camping again, in winter, I'll heed the advice I think to take the ProLite.
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby photohiker » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 4:28 pm

I can't say that I've tried it yet, (I was ready, but the weather decided to go warm) but a thermal barrier under the Neo-Air is very well regarded to boost its rating into colder weather - see the Gossamer Gear ThinLite for more info. There is discussion here on BWT in one of the Neo-Air threads about this and a local Evazote alternative to save freight.

The Neo-Air is actually insulated, just not in the conventional sleeping mat sense, and certainly not in the 'filled with down' sense. It traps a goodly amount of air inside (more than most other mats) and it has a radiant barrier inside. According to moontrail, it has an R2.5 rating whereas the standard Prolite has R2.2 - the Prolite 'Plus' runs 3.8 and the Downmat 7 runs R5.9
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Nuts » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 4:50 pm

(Personally, I think you would need more than thin 1/2mm? cs foam under them in 'cold' weather. 4mm under and/or perhaps 2mm on top (and 2mm bottom) would be best if its seriously cold or camping on snow)
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby photohiker » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 10:20 pm

Nuts wrote:(Personally, I think you would need more than thin 1/2mm? cs foam under them in 'cold' weather. 4mm under and/or perhaps 2mm on top (and 2mm bottom) would be best if its seriously cold or camping on snow)


1/2mm? Huh?

www.gossamergear.com wrote:# Size:
# 19.5 x 59 x 1/8 in. (50 x 150 x .318 cm.)
# 19.5 x 59 x 1/4 in. (50 x 150 x .635 cm.)
# 41 x 61 x 1/4 in. (104 x 155 x .635 cm.)
# 19.5 x 59 x 3/8 in. (50 x 150 x .953 cm.)


So thinnest pad is 3.18mm, pretty close to your minimum.

You were saying?
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby Nuts » Wed 30 Jun, 2010 10:54 pm

yeah, those look ok then. Would be nice a bit wider.
I have tried the thinner (ie 1.6mm) mats top and bottom and imagine they would add enough insulation in winters (here). Had 4mm under and that was ok at -6 but just. Perhaps easier to pack two smaller(thinner) ones
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby NickD » Mon 05 Jul, 2010 5:02 pm

I have a sleeping bag that is rated to -5 and one to -25. It's a pain in the *&%$#!, because I need one in between :?

My minus 5 bag is okay in winter providing I'm in a tent with nylon walls, but wouldn't be sufficient for tarps or tents with mesh inners. It's getting a little old now too, has been used a lot and occasionally been drenched when the cord of my tarp has snapped under the pressure of snow build up or heavy rain :oops: so I'd be surprised if it's still holding that -5 rating.

My -25 degree is a Mont and it's fantastic!! It doesn't have a water-resistant outer so I think it breathes better allowing me to be comfortable/not too hot in above -10 temperatures.
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Re: What temperature sleeping bag required?

Postby corvus » Mon 05 Jul, 2010 7:15 pm

For what it is worth I have a -5 bag (real rating) and I slept the other night in freezing conditions in a Bivvy and was not cold ,
not happy but not cold :)
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