Used my quilt for the first time in anger on the WRT. (A Rev X 30 overstuffed) Saturday night was a touch chilly confirmed by the frozen water bottle in the morning...
So how do you set up your quilt and matt? I had mine on top the matt, but looking around there seems to be different ways.
Do you put your matt in the foot box and wrap the quilt under the matt or foot box on top and wrap it under the matt?
I've only used mine on my Scotland trip. Both nights were around 3 degrees. I sealed it up like a sleeping bag. I tried the mat inside the footbox and straps underneath but didn't like being "pinned" to the mat and the mat I was using wasn't the warmest.
I think in warmer temps, i'll slip the mat inside the footbox and then leave it open as a quilt. I don't think it's as warm as a conventional sleeping bag but it offers other benefits such as weight and as a hobo smock in place of a down jacket.
If I'm using one without a bivvy bag and it's a coldish night I do the straps up under the quilt and have the entire quilt on top of the mat. That seems to seal out any draughts better than having the straps under the mat. It also reduces any dead air space under the quilt.
If I'm using a bivvy bag then I don't bother with the straps ... mat inside bivvy bag, quilt on top and me between the two
Hopefully not a hijack but, while on the topic of quilts, some help please.
Problem; I sleep on my front & like to have the 'hood' bit of the bag above me to keep out bugs, light etc. (Most?) Mummy bags have a differential fill (thinner on the 'base') so flipping the bag to have the 'long' bit over my head means the 'thin' fill is on top so a colder bag.
Quilts would seem to be a great way to solve the 'thin fill on top' issue, but all the ones I've seen seem only long enough to come up to the neck. Can anyone point me in the direction of one that is longer (or an outfit that will customise)?
Down hood or hat is the usual solution, I believe. Think FF has one if you want opinions / sources. Personally I just use a merino beanie that's big enough to be pulled lower over ears and eyes. On One did a good one that was in sales a while ago (black with the star logo at front).
Do bag manufacturer's really make them with less fill on the bottom? Honestly curious, thought it was pretty uniform and "thinner"/less effective fill was because sleeping on it compressed it.
I have a rater natty balaclava for when it's proper cold ... should be a pic of it on the post man thread.
I'm sure Tim at Enlightened would be able to extend a quilt or modify one in some way. I recall that someone was selling MYOG quilt kits that had a hood but can't find any details at the minute but I'll keep looking.
the cumulus 250 quilt i have has elastic string which has the duel function of closing up the 'slit' on the underside of the quilt and has slidelocks so you can fasten it to your mat. it works well with either a thin foam ora full length neoair.
the straps mean the quilt stays still as i move about under it. also works well with a 'supplementary' sleeping bag inside it when its a bit colder...
Cheeky Monkey wrote:Do bag manufacturer's really make them with less fill on the bottom? Honestly curious, thought it was pretty uniform and "thinner"/less effective fill was because sleeping on it compressed it.
Good question.
I've 'assumed' that' differential fill' means just that. But, on the basis that assumptions are usually wrong, I thought best to at least have a good look at the 2 bags I use most (PD 600 & Mountain Hardware Spirit SL)...
Test (if you can call it that) was to cup my hands around a section and squash. So, while clearly not up to DIN standards, it did suggest that the PD was thicker on top than the bottom (Alpkit comment/confirm?). The MH was harder to tell - heavier outer fabric - but I'd 'say' it is slightly thicker on top too.
G*d, sorting sleeping bags is a right :?
Last edited by royAB on Wed Jun 05, 2013 11:37 am, edited 3 times in total.
Fair enough. Wait until (if) you ever have to go the TQ / UQ route of hammocks. Nerd heaven
Contemplating a splurge on a dedicated UQ for a Warbonnet Ridge Runner (Bridge Hammock) but whether to get the full length or 3/4s, the regular or winter fill, overstuff or not. Nevermind wondering whether, really, I could just keep jury rigging one of my existing quilts and whether to keep the bridge style or just run gathered end hammocks. Oh, and whether to wait for the sale and how to get it to the UK without getting screwed for import duty etc.
The differential fill thing doesn't suit my sleeping style. My bag seems always to roll with me, so as soon as I'm on my side the lower side is as much exposed as the front side.
Fairly certain my PHD bags aren't differential as such as you can shift the down 360' yourself through the baffles. Reportedly this is to allow users to set it to how they prefer.