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#11 |
![]() Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Western Washingtong State
Hammock: Warbonnet Black Bird
Tarp: BWDD Winterdream
Insulation: Speer Snugfit
View my gallery 14
Posts: 815
Images: 14
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I found my silk liner to be too slippery to use with my sleeping bag. I could never tell if I was all the way in it or not,where it was, what was top/bottom, where the side opening was... I got a synthetic one and it works fine for me. I forget which one I got but I got both at REI. I keep the silk one for traveling and sleeping in hotel beds.
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Bad spellers of the world Untie! |
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#12 |
![]() Join Date: May 2007
Location: Smyrna, DE
Hammock: various homemade Speer type
Tarp: 10' X 11' Cuben
Insulation: CCfoam, Down quilt
Suspension: various
View my gallery 9
Posts: 258
Images: 9
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I have a silk liner (haven't used it since I started sleeping above ground)
but I wouldn't count on it adding 10 degrees of warmth. For me it didn't add more than 5. YMMV |
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#13 |
![]() Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Defiance, Missouri
Hammock: Warbonett BB 1.1 DL
Tarp: BWDD Winter Dream2
Insulation: Crowsnest on order
Suspension: whoopieslings.com
Posts: 389
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I too have a Coccon brand silk liner. I have used it like a top quilt in warm/hot weather with low temps like 70-80 degrees F. It works good for that and I'm just one who likes to have something on top of me when I sleep. Have never tried using it in the winter months to increase warmth though.
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#14 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Upstate SC
Hammock: Byer Moskito
Tarp: Speer Winter Tarp
Insulation: Varies by season
Suspension: Whoopie Sling
Posts: 212
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I made one from dress liner material. Two ounces more, but much cheaper and I made it myself! :-)
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#15 |
![]() Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Taos, Missouri
Hammock: ENOS Doublenest
Tarp: ENO Dry Fly
Insulation: Body fat!
Suspension: Eno Slap straps
Posts: 108
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A little different take on the liner thing from Marmot. Kind of pricey, but I think this would make a great summer bag at least where I live. It's on sale at Rock Creek: http://www.rockcreek.com/marmot/tres...g-bag-regular/
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#16 |
![]() Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Western Washingtong State
Hammock: Warbonnet Black Bird
Tarp: BWDD Winterdream
Insulation: Speer Snugfit
View my gallery 14
Posts: 815
Images: 14
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My Mom made me what basically was a sleeping bag liner years ago out of suit lining material (shiny stuff), and it worked great as a light weight sleeping bag when I slept on floors at friends houses and such inside. Then I took it on a 2 week trip to St. John Island (USVI) camping, and in the humidity it didn't breathe at all and I was miserable. I went to one of the tourist shops and got a very lightweight cotton gauze sarong and used it, and it was great. I got a second one, and when I got home she sewed them together as a liner, and that's what I used for years when I went back there in the humidity. I tried to use that as an actual sleeping bag liner in my hammock, and had the same problem as with the silk one, not enough body to the material that I could keep it from turning into just a lump of twisted fabric and impossible for me to figure out how to get into it.
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Bad spellers of the world Untie! |
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#17 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Cranford, NJ
Hammock: Hennessy explorer
Tarp: Hennessy hex
Insulation: Crows nest!
Suspension: Whoopie sling
View my gallery 3
Posts: 54
Images: 3
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I own a sea to summit reactor bag. It really worked and saved a trip that went down 15 degrees lower than my sleeping bag rating. Yeah I was a little chilly, (did I say 15 degrees lower??) but not miserable.
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Jerzybears - The gentle reader will never, never know what a consummate ass he can become until he goes abroad. I speak now, of course, in the supposition that the gentle reader has not been abroad, and therefore is not already a consummate ass. If the case be otherwise, I beg his pardon and extend to him the cordial hand of fellowship and call him brother. -Mark Twain If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can read this in English, thank a soldier. |
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#18 |
![]() Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Novi, MI
Hammock: ENO DBN
Tarp: Noahs Tarp 12
Suspension: Whoopie Slings
Posts: 60
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Silk Sleeping Bag Liners
I too have a Cocoon silk mummy liner. In my humble opinion, you would be in a real world of hurt if you had to get out of it in a hurry.
Doesn't seem to add any noticeable improvement other than keeping the draft off when you have your sleeping bag partially open. |
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#19 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Macon GA
Hammock: Eno double
Suspension: Webbing, Rings
Posts: 153
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Quote:
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The hardest thing a man will ever have to face is his own reality. Jons4real http://www.youtube.com/user/jons4real |
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#20 | |
![]() Join Date: May 2010
Location: Boston, MA
Hammock: HH Expedition Asym
Tarp: HH - HEX, Camo
Insulation: DIY UQ : CCF
Suspension: DC's; Whoopie
View my gallery 13
Posts: 412
Images: 13
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Quote:
Worth it to me, as I sleep cold.
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SkyPainter - "... and then the police came." All these years people said,"He's acting like a kid!" He did not know that he could not fly, and so, he DID! Live Purposefully; Dare Greatly; Land Gently "Never knock on Death's door - just ring the bell and run! He hates that!" ![]() "Remember - shoot low! They're ridin' Shetlands!" |
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