rcaffin wrote:Hi blacksheep
> Comfort 2ºC / Limit -4ºC / Extreme -21ºC
I don't mind the 6 C drop in going from Comfort to Limit under the new EN Standard: that's quite common. But expecting us to believe a drop of 17 C in going from Limit to Extreme is a bit of an ask. I am not aware of many tested overseas bags which can claim that much of a drop. Do you have an
independent Test Lab report to substantiate this? In-house testing will
not suffice.
Actually, expecting us to believe that 400 g of '800+' loft down can keep you from hypothermia at -21 C under standard EN test conditions is ... hugely unrealistic. You would need a full down suit inside the bag, and a very good friend on either side of you for that. Been there with UL bags, and ...
May I assume that the '800+' loft is using the American IDFL enhanced down preparation techniques?
Just curious
Cheers
Hi Roger,
We test all our bags at Kansas State University, where I'm sure you'll find most of the US brands that test to EN standards also test...Personally,I'm not at all surprised by the temperature range, we see that limit of comfort and extreme ratings often differ by 20dgrees C when tested. (I don't make the EN standards, or define them, I just submit our designs for testing and report the test results. We do not have testing facilities here at Macpac, so we can only report EN 13537 tests that have been conducted independently.)
(for those here less familiar with EN 13537 Temperature ratings, the three temperatures given are defined as follows)
ComfortThe temperature at which the person in the sleeping bag is in thermal equilibrium; not feeling cold throughout the entire body. (reference: standard woman in standard conditions; in relaxed posture, such as lying on back).
Limit of comfortLower limit of comfort range. The temperature at which the person in the sleeping bag is in thermal equilibrium; not feeling cold throughout the entire body. (reference: standard man in ‘fighting against cold’ situation; such as rolled up body posture).
ExtremeLower temperature extreme where the risk of hypothermia occurs. Situation of high cold stress, which can be maintained for a limited duration of six hours. (reference: standard woman in standard conditions of use; rolled up in the bag to minimise thermal loss through the sleeping bag).
The loft ratings are all testing with IDFL (International Down and Feather Laboratory, based in Utah, USA), using the IDFB-10-B test method, which as you may know is the standard adopted by all of the USA companies, and most international brands.
Hope that clears up your queries? Perhaps some of your UL bags were only blessed with a down jackets worth of fill, and were never actually lab tested?
Cam