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Mountain Equipment New Kit Scoop

We bring you a sneak preview of the Mountain Equipment kit that'll be in the shops later this year including a rather nice Paclite / XCR hybrid jacket and, erm, a furry hood...


Posted: 20 February 2004
by Jon

A bit of a snoopy scoop here from the guys at Mountain Equipment. We popped over to their Mancunian nerve centre earlier this week for a sneak preview of what's in the pipeline for the autumn / winter 2004 season - that's the kit that'll be in the shops at the end of this summer, so don't go pestering innocent retailers just yet.

So what's coming your way? Well, it's a mix of subtle modifications to tried and trusted ME favourites, plus a couple of new bits and bobs including a hybrid Paclite / XCR jacket and salopettes aimed at lightweight alpinists and intended to give a compromise between lightness and durability.


Insulated Clothing

Nowt dramatic in the insulated clothing line, but some neat cleaning up. The hardcore, super warm Annapurna down jacket has taken a leaf out of the sleeping bag book and now gets a double baffling behind the main zip fastener, just like a sleeping bag in fact.

Completely new though is the Helium Jacket (below). It's a down-filled jacket, also available in vest form, aimed squarely at lightweight minimalist types. With 215 grammes and simple stitch-through construction, it weighs in at under 400 grammes and packs away into its own internal stuff pocket, so no mesh sac to go missing with this one. the Dewline and the Lightline also have internal stuff pockets this year. The Helium Vest is, erm, a vest, again it's simple with just two handwarmer pockets and no hood and weighs in at 310 grammes. Price will be £120 for the jacket and £90 for the vest. Ideal for mountain marathons and lightweight alpinism we reckon.

Other developments are a women's version of the Lightline Jacket based on the established men's version complete with hood and a new double baffle over the front zip. Price is £150, weight around 730 grammes.

Last but not least, the Snowline Parka is a synthetic-filled jacket with a taped and waterproof Drilite Plus Taslan Outer designed to laugh in the face of damp, cold Scottish winter conditions. Curiously though, it sports a comedy artificial fur-trimmed hood, apparently because retailers wanted one... Hmmm... going at £160 with added fur :-)


Waterproof Shell Jackets

Mountain Equipment's current range of technical shells is one of the best around and the stuff for next season sees mainly tweaks rather than revolution. The top of the range Changabang Jacket has been rationalised. First, like other ME jackets, it gets a new 'Stealth Hood'. Basically that means the front tension adjusters are hidden, with the cord grips slotted away behind. Next, the water-resistant zips, which contributed to the current version being slightly stiff at the front - see OM test - have been narrowed down to 5mm width for neatness and flexibility and the pit-zips are back instead of core vents. These are now proper pockets with a half mesh, half waterproof lining to hold wet things more comfortably. P Price is down slightly to £270 as well.

Totally new is the Matrix Jacket also available as a women's specific version, the Trinity Jacket - nice, who's been to the pictures then? It's a new hybrid Paclite / XCR top which uses lightweight Paclite for most of the jacket, but with tougher XCR reinforcement panels in key areas - see picture below

That means the shoulders, tail, front of the hood and forearms should be more capable to coping with abrasion than a pure Paclite fabric. There's also a full Stealth mountain hood, an external map pocket, sleeve pocket and concealed draw cords at waist and hem. The weight is 474 grammes, which is light for an alpine jacket, and just 80 grammes more than the pure Paclite Firefly, which is unchanged. The price is £200.

To match the jacket, ME also has Matrix Salopettes made along the same lines. At 590 grammes, they're heavier than the jacket but fully specced with XCR in high wear areas, stretch XCR knee panels for mobility, braces, internal snow gaiters and crampon kick strips. Priced, like the jacket at £200 and a serious bit of kit.

Both are aimed primarily at technical climbers, but the reinforcements, should also appeal to weight-aware backpackers. Interesting stuff, the only other hybrid Paclite jacket we've seen is from Arc'Teryx.


Soft Shell

When we first tested ME's Gore Windstopper-based G2 Alpine Jacket, we liked the idea, especially for alpine use, but whinged at the lack of a hood. For this season ME introduced the G2 Teclite, a shorter cut version complete with, you guessed it, a hood. The original however continued unchanged.

So, for autumn winter '04, the longer G2 Alpine Jacket has nicked little brother's Gore-Tex Pongee hood and stabbed it in the back before chucking it bodily out of the range, so if you want a shorter G2, now's the time to buy it... Price of the G2 Alpine stays the same at £160 even with the hood fitted.


Baselayers Get Xstatic

ME's Comfort Zone baselayer fabric isn't bad at the moment, but for the autumn, they're climbing aboard the X-static bandwagon. Xstatic is the fabric which uses silver fibres to prevent odours. The antimicrobacteriologicalo or something effect, stops the nasties growing and causing bad smells. It'll come in two versions - a standard weight for general use and a heavier, expedition version for, erm, cold weather, expedition types. Men's and women's items. Looks nice too. See below.


Gloves

We won't go into the gloves in detail, but we particularly liked the look of the Modular Guide glove. It's only a fiver more than the standard Guide glove, but the pull-out Powerfleece inner makes for quicker and easier drying when things meet the moist side, plus it feels like a great fit. The Pittard-leather version aimed at, er, guides feels lovely too, very soft and supple. Mmm... Fully waterproof too. Below

Next year's ME gloves also get a cunning carabiner hang loop on the finger. The clever bit is that if you use it to hang them from a harness, the glove is inverted, so there's far less chance of spindrift getting into the glove.


Ronhill Bargain Jacket

Last but not least, we couldn't help noticing that the Ronhill range has had some serious attention. It used to look like it had been beaten around the head with the ugly stick, but its now much nicer, particularly colour-wise, with Patagonia-like burnt orange and the like dragging it into the 21st Century.

Most of the range is aimed at runners and bikers, but one interesting discovery was the 70-quid Summit Jacket - below. It's a lightweight waterproof jacket in a coated two-ply Storm fabric rather like Drilite. The hood has a full volume adjuster arrangement, pockets get water-resistant zips and it looks like a lot of jacket for your money. A few of the ME boys have been using them for climbing and really rate them as a budget buy. My word, there's even a map pocket...


More info

See the Mountain Equipment web site. Thanks to Mark at ME for his time and patience.


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Seems like the boys at ME have buggered their website up somehow!

Posted: 23/02/2004 at 09:16

I'm glad you said that as I am as many of you know pretty computer illiterate but all I got was a lot of little boxes with crosses in the top left?

However while we are on the subject of ME.

I have a wonderful Atlas 750 down bag for winter use but last time out I noticed it was very damp in the morning. So I was trying to get onto ME to ask about reproofing the outer because it used to shed water, it's about six years old. Can I just spray something like Nickwax or Grangers on? Or should I send it back to the experts?

Posted: 23/02/2004 at 09:36

Funny thing my job is a web designer and from what I can make out the ME site hasn't been uploaded correctly, even the homepage is called index.jpg. Either all the images are yet to be transfered or sometimes file associations get confused and its a bugger to sort out!

I believe somebody is for the high jump!

As for care to ME products or any other if I have a problem I always try to send it back to manufacturer, maybe I'm just too careful but at least ask them for some advice before you take the plunge.

Posted: 23/02/2004 at 10:18

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