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Topic: Kilimanjaro or hold out for Olympia AST 2 or Moab?  (Read 3429 times)

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kennywiz
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« Reply #40 on: September 09, 2011, 03:59:32 PM »




Beg to differ. Olympia sizing depends on the product line. The AST was baggy, it was meant as a cold weather jacket suitable for layering or using the liners.

The Airglide + Bushwacker was very euro slim cut.


I wear 3xl in everything else and wear 2xl in Airglide. ?????????
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« Reply #40 on: September 09, 2011, 03:59:32 PM »

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« Reply #41 on: September 10, 2011, 03:08:21 AM »

Yup, I really like the AST, but the Airglide sleeves are about 2 inches short, whereas the AST fit's perfect in the riding position.  Both are a size large.
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« Reply #42 on: September 16, 2011, 04:49:43 PM »


 UGH, Thumbsdown, I may opt for a Kilimanjaro then, i can get one 175 + 10% off


Where are you getting the 10% discount?
I'm shopping the fall blowouts for some goodies.
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« Reply #43 on: September 17, 2011, 03:44:31 PM »

My Kilimanjaro 5.0 is a great piece of kit.  But I would not call it 4 season or even 3 season.  It is too hot (even without the liner) for me to wear it until temps are consistently below about 55.

I wear my FG Torrent Jacket about 2 1/2 seasons of the year and the Kili for about 4 months.
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« Reply #44 on: September 18, 2011, 03:42:31 PM »




Where are you getting the 10% discount?
I'm shopping the fall blowouts for some goodies.
AMA member at bike bandit,
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« Reply #45 on: September 18, 2011, 07:18:35 PM »


My Kilimanjaro 5.0 is a great piece of kit.  But I would not call it 4 season or even 3 season.  It is too hot (even without the liner) for me to wear it until temps are consistently below about 55.

I wear my FG Torrent Jacket about 2 1/2 seasons of the year and the Kili for about 4 months.


+1  I can't stand the Kilimanjaro (no liner, vetns open) much over 60. It is a great late fall/winter/early spring jacket. so may a 2 season???
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« Reply #46 on: September 18, 2011, 07:18:50 PM »

Love my Kilimanjaro. Nice thing for me are the "Tall" options with First Gear...
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« Reply #46 on: September 18, 2011, 07:18:50 PM »


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« Reply #47 on: September 19, 2011, 09:58:36 AM »

I tried on a Kili at a cycle dealer up here once. It was one thick heavy SOB. I couldn't even imagine riding with that thing in the hot weather, liner or not.
Probably a very good cool weather jacket, but I like the versatility of my Darien jacket which vents fantastically, and is easy to layer up or pop a Gerbings in when it's cold.  Thumbsup
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« Reply #48 on: September 19, 2011, 07:17:11 PM »


I tried on a Kili at a cycle dealer up here once. It was one thick heavy SOB. I couldn't even imagine riding with that thing in the hot weather, liner or not.
Probably a very good cool weather jacket, but I like the versatility of my Darien jacket which vents fantastically, and is easy to layer up or pop a Gerbings in when it's cold.  Thumbsup


I guess this is where we should acknowledge that what is gear that is solid 3 season for some is apparently only 2 or 4 season wear for others.

I tend to heat up rather quickly.  In the 2+ years I've owned my Kili5.0 I've used it from 14 degrees (with a heated liner) up to the low 90's.  I'm not going to lie, it sucked in the 90's and Hydratex is brezzy when the mercury plummets, but this is a great jacket.  I've routinely used it on 80 degree days and had plenty of ventilation (the only place on the jacket that could use better ventilation is the arms).  The vents on this jacket work.

Certainly I think its more than a little unfair to compare a $300 hydratex jacket (often available for far less-I paid $140 shipped for mine) against a $450 Gore-Tex jacket (sans liner-even though I use a gerbings instead its a nice liner that comes with the Kili);  I'm pretty certain the Darien is a 3-layer Gore construction (therefore not needing a mesh scrim like a 2 layer gore garment would) whereas the Hydratex is definitely a 2 layer construction.  If a 2 vs 3 layer in gore product differentiation= more weight then its definitely going to mean a heavier jacket in the Hydratex Kili.

The dozen or so people I know who have Darien jackets universally say they're uncomfortable as hell above the upper 80's, which is right about where I say my Kili begins to suck.

I'm not gonna lie, I will almost certainly be buying Gore-Tex riding gear for my next cool weather set.  Windproof +Waterproof wins, to be sure.  But while I'll probably get the Darien pants you couldn't pay me to purchase a Darien jacket.  Its too damn ugly and not enough of an improvement over my Kili to be worth my attention.  Just my 2 Krugerrand, mind you.
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