When and if I get enough money, I want to make my own speer snugfit. I just wounder If I should use DWR or silnylon for the bottom of the quilt. If it were DWR, the down could get wet, while if it were sil, there would be cond. issues.
When and if I get enough money, I want to make my own speer snugfit. I just wounder If I should use DWR or silnylon for the bottom of the quilt. If it were DWR, the down could get wet, while if it were sil, there would be cond. issues.
“I think that when the lies are all told and forgot the truth will be there yet. It dont move about from place to place and it dont change from time to time. You cant corrupt it any more than you can salt salt.” - Cormac McCarthy
A DWR quilt would dry in a day if you got it wet. A sil quilt might dry in a week if your lucky. None of the bag or quilt mfg's use sil for this reason.
i would go w/ the DWR.
I too will something make and joy in it's making
My vote is DWR too... Most down suffers more from not being able to dry out from the inside than from getting wet from the outside.
Another vote for DWR.
Let us know how it goes with the DIY SnugFit. I think that would be a nightmare to reproduce a DIY equivalent. It's very complicated.
“Light thinks it travels faster than anything but it is wrong. No matter how fast light travels, it finds the darkness has always got there first, and is waiting for it." -Terry Pratchett
Cool... I just checked out the snugfit... Its what I had in mind for making as a down underquilt... Now I know its already out there...
here's an "end view" of how i plan to basically lay out my next down underquilt (if i ever get around to it).
http://www.hammockforums.net/gallery...5/PB300117.JPG
this would be an end view of the center area of the under quilt.
i got this by laying out strings on a table in a way that the inside string matched the shape & size of the occupied hammock.
it wont have all the pleats that dave & ed worked into the snugfit to give it the nice hammock shape, but will probably just taper toward both ends.
the basic principal that allows it to keep it's full loft even when pulled tight is that the inner "liner" is smaller, while the outer "shell" is larger & doesn't get pulled tight.
i talked to dave about that concept & even sketched it out on paper at the NYE on springer (05-06). i'd like to think that i at least helped to cement that method into his plans for future under quilts... but it was probably already there
I too will something make and joy in it's making
That's what I had in mind.
We were discussing doing basically this with the Bridge hammock since its got virtually no end to end curve its the same section along its length and no pleats needed! Thats what really made it make sense. Making it becomes a simpler process then since you only need the differential in one direction.
Designing it isn't hard if you know the sizes and shapes of the curves you're dealing with. The hard part is knowing that stuff...
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