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Rab 2008 - Sneak Preview

Two-layer eVent, a new Alpine pant, down mitts, and much more from Rab next year ...


Posted: 9 October 2007
by Susan

More news from the Outdoor Trade Show in Friedrichshafen earlier this summer, and this time Rab's future appears in the crystal lense of, erm, our digital camera...

Two-layer eVent

Rab have been using eVent fabric for a while now but next spring will see the birth of the first two-layer eVent Rab jackets - the Jet for women and the Pinnacle for men. They both retail at £160 and features include two high outer pockets that don't interfere with your harness or waist belt, as well as everything you'd expect from a fully-specced Rab shell jacket - wired hood, map pocket, storm flap, and so on.

The men's Pinnacle jacket comes in five colours - lemongrass, black, burnt orange, graphite and stratos, although we can only visualise the black version with any certainty right now. Women apparently don't like stratos, graphite or burnt orange though, so they get an anti-freeze version instead - that's blue to you or I.

There's also a longer-length two-layer eVent jacket due to hit the shelves at the same time, called the Pioneer, and it features five pockets in total - that's two on the chest and two on the waist as well as the internal map pocket. The damage to your pocket is £200.

Here's our chosen victim from Rab modelling the Pioneer, and looking decidedly in the zone into the bargain, if we may say so :-)

Pioneer Jacket

Alpine Trek Pant

To go with your new Pioneer jacket you must need a new pair of trousers, so Rab are bringing out the Alpine Trek Pants. They're softshells this time, made from Teklite fabric, and they're fully articulated at the knees for Alpine use.

Features include Cordura abrasion resistant panelling on the knees and thighs, a high back with belt loops, thigh pocket, abrasion resistant ankle scuff patch, two hand pockets, and one back pocket. Looks good for next summer's Alpine season, or wherever our next venture takes us ...

Alpine Trek Pants

Down Mitts and Boots

Now we've sorted out top and bottom, it's time to turn to the fingers and toes, and a fair bit of attention they require too when the temperature plummets...

To tackle nippy extremities Rab are bringing out some new down mitts, which have been built in two separate sections. Either you can wear them as they stand or, if things are feeling a bit moist inside, you can remove the inner pile insulation for drying. This also means that the outers can be worn over normal mountaineering gloves, without the insulated inner.

The outer is made of Pertex Endurance fabric and the inner is 90% goose down with a 660+ fill power, which sounds pretty cosy to us. Hmmm, what's santa's address these days, we wonder?!

Down Mitts

And in case your feet are feeling left out of the insulation game by now, there are not one but two pairs of down boots to think about. Firstly, the existing expedition boot has had a makeover so it now comes with a detachable bottom, and there's also a new lightweight down slipper in the equation.

Rab Down Expedition Boot

A Downy Night's Sleep

A few changes are on the cards for the sleeping bag range and the most significant concerns the Quantum Top Bag. This will be re-branded as the Quantum Top Bag AR and, as Rab never give you style over substance, there are a couple of notable changes to the features too.

The first is the use of Primaloft in the insulation under your feet, instead of down. The thinking behind this one is that anyone using a Top Bag is probably trying to keep weight to a minimum and so they might well be using a three-quarter length Therm-a-Rest instead of a full length version. That's all well and good except that if your feet are poking off the end of your Therm-a-Rest then they might get a bit damp, which makes for seriously unhappy down.

Primaloft, on the other hand, hangs on to its insulating properties when it's wet, and so it's a better option.

The other update is an inbuilt sleeve on the underside of the bag where you can slot in a three-quarter length Therm-a-Rest. That way, you can't roll off in the night and get cold. The sleeve can also be extended to fit a full-length Therm-a-Rest.

Best of all, the new features all come without any increase in weight.

Slight humilitaion of Rab's staff is involved in this pic too - we apologise. You aren't really supposed to smile for photos, are you?

Quantum Top Bag AR

And more ...

Those are the main changes to the range, although there are plenty more where they came from, including:

Drillium Jacket - Two new colours for this one next year - green and burnt orange.

Vapour Rise Jacket - This now has a detachable hood so it can be layered more easily.

Atlas Sleeping Bags - These return to a Pertex Microlite outer instead of using Rab's own fabric.

Ladakh Sleeping Bag - This becomes the High Atlas sleeping bag, available in 600 and 800 fill-power, with a women's 800 and a short-length 800 beefing out the range.

Summit Sleeping Bags - This range is joined by a women's 900 bag, while the Summit 300 becomes the Summit Alpine, with fill-power ratings of 300, 400, and 500, and a generally more robust make-up than the Quantum bags for Alpine use.

That's all for now, but look out for all the upgrades, and new itmes, in the shops early next year. In the meantime, visit Rab's website for full details of their current range.


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Discuss this story

Alpine trek pant? Isn't that what you do when you've got to the top of Mont Blanc & are a bit out of breath? They're trousers, not a bl**dy pant. [/pedant mode]

Sorry.

Posted: 10/10/2007 at 19:50

Pants: One would not expect a word for a modern article of clothing to come ultimately from the name of a 4th-century Roman Catholic saint, but that is the case with the word pants. It can be traced back to Pantaleon, the patron saint of Venice. He became so closely associated with the inhabitants of that city that the Venetians were popularly known as Pantaloni. Consequently, among the commedia dell'arte's stock characters the representative Venetian (a stereotypically wealthy but miserly merchant) was called Pantalone, or Pantalon in French. In the mid-17th century the French came to identify him with one particular style of trousers, a style which became known as pantaloons in English. Pantaloons was later applied to another style that came into fashion in the late 18th century, tight-fitting garments that had begun to replace knee breeches. After that pantaloons was used to refer to trousers in general. The abbreviation of pantaloons to pants met with some resistance at first; it was considered vulgar and, as Oliver Wendell Holmes put it, "a word not made for gentlemen, but 'gents.'" First found in the writings of Edgar Allan Poe in 1840, pants has replaced the "gentleman's word" in English and has lost all obvious connection to Saint Pantaleon.

trousers  1612, earlier trouzes (1581), extended from trouse (1578), with plural ending typical of things in pairs, from Gaelic or Middle Irish triubhas "close-fitting shorts," of uncertain origin. The unexplained intrusive second -r- is perhaps by influence of drawers.

They are the same then.


Posted: 10/10/2007 at 20:25

But I think that pants, the abbreviation of pantaloon, is an American evolution of the word. Interesting, isn't it, how we view words which were exported to the 'colonies' when perfectly acceptable English, then when they return, sometimes in a mutated form, we sometimes despise them as 'un-English'. Strictly speaking, then, they should be Alpine Trek Pantaloons.

Posted: 10/10/2007 at 20:42

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