Sheltering in a bothy after a day of heavy rain on the Southern Upland Way in February. Rab Neoshell jacket |
Waterproof/breathable (W/B) clothing has been controversial since Gore-Tex first appeared some forty years ago. Outdoors folk argue vigorously about its merits and failing, about whether it works at all, about whether it's a complete con, about whether it's actually waterproof let alone 'breathable'. Most recently this debate was stirred up again by Jörgen Johansson, author of the excellent Smarter Backpacking, in this article on the Fjärderlätt website. Jörgen referenced long-distance backpacker Andrew Skurka's hard-hitting views, which appeared on his website last year. Also worth reading are climber and writer extraordinaire Andy Kirkpatrick's forthright opinions. These are three highly experienced mountain men whose views I respect. That doesn't mean I always agree with them though. Here, anyway, are my thoughts, based on far too much experience of wet weather. (For the purpose of this piece by W/B fabrics I mean ones with a coating or membrane not two-layer materials like Paramo which aren't technically waterproof though they do keep out most rain).
Firstly let’s make clear where
I stand on a couple of points. W/B fabrics have certainly been grossly
over-hyped and their performance talked up ridiculously in the marketing. That
doesn’t mean they don’t work but if you believe the exaggerated claims you’ll
be disappointed. Then there’s that word ‘breathable’. I don’t know who first
came up with it but I wish they hadn’t. It’s silly. Fabrics cannot breathe.
They’re not alive. ‘Breathable’ suggests they do something active. They don’t. They’re
inert. We’re stuck with the word now however.
What the fabrics do is allow
moisture vapour (not liquid water) to pass through. The jargon for this is
Moisture Vapour Transmission or MVT. The rate of this – MVTR – determines just
how breathable the fabric is. That measurement is for 24 hours of steady vapour
transmission in the lab. Of course in the real world you don’t transpire
regularly, the rate goes up and down enormously depending on activity levels.
Walk vigorously on a wet humid day and you’ll be putting out an enormous amount
of moisture, almost certainly too much for any W/B fabric to allow through fast
enough, resulting in condensation forming on the inside of the garment. However
a difference between W/B and non-breathable waterproof fabrics is that the
condensation in the latter will be far more copious and it won’t shift until
you can vent or remove the garment. With a W/B garment once you’re not
exercising so hard and/or the rain eases the inside of the garment can dry out.
Rain beading up nicely on a new Montane Air jacket, made from Pertex Shield AP, earlier this year |
For moisture vapour to escape
it helps if the outer of the fabric isn’t saturated. Pushing moisture vapour
through a film of water is difficult. To counter this the outers of W/B
garments are given a water repellent treatment that makes rain bead up and run
off. This is the DWR or Durable Water Repellency, a misnomer if ever there was
one. Durable it isn’t, and now that the stuff that’s been used for years has
been found to be environmentally unfriendly it’ll be less so in the future as
the replacement treatments are not yet as effective. When the DWR wears off it
doesn’t mean the garment is leaking, though many people think that’s what’s
happening. It means that it will be less breathable. Only less breathable
though, not non-breathable. The DWR can be replaced with wash-in or spray-on
treatments from Nikwax and other companies. This is worth doing though it never
seems to last as well as the factory treatment. It’s not practical to do on a
long walk however and I’ve finished a few of those with garments with no DWR
left. They’ve still kept the rain out and allowed some moisture through though.
After many days of rain on the Pacific Northwest Trail in a Rab Demand Pull-On made from eVent that has lost it's DWR but which still kept me comfortable and only a little damp inside. |
Whilst ‘breathability’ varies
between fabrics and in performance waterproofness doesn’t. These fabrics are waterproof.
I’ve never had rain come through a W/B garment that wasn’t worn out and I’ve
spent many, many days and weeks walking in rainy weather. Even on wet
multi-month walks my W/B clothing has been as waterproof at the finish as at
the start. Does this mean I always stayed dry inside? No, and any dampness wasn’t
only condensation. Heavy driving rain will find its way inside a hood and up
sleeve cuffs and the hem of a jacket however tightly they are closed. And once
inside it will start to spread out, which can make you think the garment is
leaking, especially if it’s merging with condensation too. When carrying a pack
you’ll almost certainly get very damp under the shoulder straps and hipbelt and
anywhere the pack touches your back too. Put a thick layer of foam and nylon
over a W/B fabric and it doesn’t matter how breathable the latter is, moisture
can’t escape.
At the end of a day of rain I
expect to be slightly damp inside W/B clothing. At the end of many rainy days I
expect to be more than slightly damp. The constant rain and high humidity leads
to slowly creeping wetness. What I don’t expect to be is cold and that’s the
key. Getting wet won’t harm you, getting wet and cold can. Try wearing a
non-waterproof top in cold rain and see how quickly you start to feel chilly,
especially if it’s windy. Much safer and more comfortable to be warm and a
little damp from sweat than cold and wet from rain.
The performance of W/B
garments can be enhanced by how you use them. Firstly, don’t wear them if it’s
not raining. That extends their life, reduces wear of the DWR, and means you’ll
be more comfortable. Windproof tops are far more breathable than any W/B fabric.
Next unzip anything you can – far more moisture vapour can escape at the neck,
cuffs, hem and through pit zips or mesh pockets than through the fabric. And
don’t wear too much underneath. If you’re comfortable when the rain starts you’ll
probably be too warm if you add a W/B garment over your clothing without taking
a layer off. Being too warm means you’ll produce more moisture vapour resulting
in more condensation. The type of
garments you wear under W/Bs matters greatly of course, especially the next to
skin layer. This needs to be one that doesn’t feel too cold when damp and that
allows moisture through – either a wicking synthetic or wool or a blend of the
two. Never cotton, which absorbs moisture and then feels cold and clammy. If
you want to find out just how damp you can get in a W/B jacket go out with just
a cotton shirt on underneath and see how wet it gets. If you need a midlayer
light fleece is excellent as it allows moisture through. If that’s too warm a
thin windproof works well. In fact in cool rainy weather base layer, windproof,
waterproof is my usual clothing system.
So W/B clothing then? It works
but not as well as claimed. It is waterproof. Breathability varies. It won’t
keep you perfectly dry. But it will keep you more comfortable in wet weather
than anything else, especially if you use it sensibly.