Rayleigh_Scattering
Regular
- Location
- Under the arch
Cabelas is hiring part time staff, which suggest to me that many others (like me) are thinking about outdoor clothing for the cold season.
For your amusement I attach a link to a DRDC report from a DND scientist whoose job it was to test and evaluate cold weather clothing in the 1990s.
Your tax dollars paid for it (assuming you are old enough), and there's some really good basic physics here even if you skip over the math. Thereès a heavy layer of sales-BS covering everything at the store. Rivet on a handle onto an 18" section of this knowlege and use it to hack your way through at least some of that.
http://cradpdf.drdc-rddc.gc.ca/PDFS/unc112/p48076_A1b.pdf
This is a general paper on heat transport in clothing. Highlights are:
-Cold Goretex works about as well as a plastic bag
-All mostly-dry fibers (wring them out) of the same thickness transmit heat at about the same rate.
-Layer-to-layer wicking could not be demonstrated in any realistic heatépressure situation.
-Water vapour transport and condensation are a major complicator, and it gets worse once the outler layer drops below zero and water starts to condense as frost inside your clothing/sleeping-bag.
-Water repellent coatings, assuming they didn`t come off the first time you wash the item, make a major difference to insulation performance by reducing the weight of absorbed water.
The hard problem, he says, is not keeping the user warm. It is adapting to the widely differing thermal power and water transport issues caused by human activity cycles (80W and dry when asleep, 10x that and sweating at max effort). That's what takes the time and effort to get right.
There's a bunch more from the same author, all of which I found both educational and entertaining.
For your amusement I attach a link to a DRDC report from a DND scientist whoose job it was to test and evaluate cold weather clothing in the 1990s.
Your tax dollars paid for it (assuming you are old enough), and there's some really good basic physics here even if you skip over the math. Thereès a heavy layer of sales-BS covering everything at the store. Rivet on a handle onto an 18" section of this knowlege and use it to hack your way through at least some of that.
http://cradpdf.drdc-rddc.gc.ca/PDFS/unc112/p48076_A1b.pdf
This is a general paper on heat transport in clothing. Highlights are:
-Cold Goretex works about as well as a plastic bag
-All mostly-dry fibers (wring them out) of the same thickness transmit heat at about the same rate.
-Layer-to-layer wicking could not be demonstrated in any realistic heatépressure situation.
-Water vapour transport and condensation are a major complicator, and it gets worse once the outler layer drops below zero and water starts to condense as frost inside your clothing/sleeping-bag.
-Water repellent coatings, assuming they didn`t come off the first time you wash the item, make a major difference to insulation performance by reducing the weight of absorbed water.
The hard problem, he says, is not keeping the user warm. It is adapting to the widely differing thermal power and water transport issues caused by human activity cycles (80W and dry when asleep, 10x that and sweating at max effort). That's what takes the time and effort to get right.
There's a bunch more from the same author, all of which I found both educational and entertaining.




















































