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TNF Stitchless Fountainhead - Quick Test

More a technology showpiece than a jacket, the Fountainhead shows just what TNF can do.


Posted: 26 April 2007
by Jon

The North Face Stitchless Fountainhead - Quick Look

Price: £320

Weight: 594g (medium)

Features Top end mountain jacket made from Hyvent Alpha fabric using TNF's fully-welded construction with abrasion-resistant shoulder and arm panels, lazer-cut zippers, adjustable hood with peak, Hyvent Alpha stretch panels on upper back, two alpine pockets, napoleon chest pocket on lefthand side, bicep pocket, pit-zips wth water-resistant zipper, internal chest pocket, elbow welds for articulation, adjustable waist, hem and cuffs.


What's It For? The Stitchless Fountainhead is a high-end general mountain jacket, but just as importantly, it's a showcase for the company's advanced welding technology which eliminates stitching and the associated holes and is also used in the astonishing 200-gramme DIAD lightweight waterproof jacket.
The Techy Bits As you've probably guessed from the name, the Stitchless Fountainhead is stitchless. Every seam has been bonded and welded then taped with thinner 11mm tape to save weight. Overall, says the company, welded seams can reduce the total weight of a garment by 10-20 per-cent. The seams are also more compressible, making the jacket easier to pack down.

The company used the same technology for their DIAD - Done In A Day - lightweight waterproof with startling results, but in this case it's more about creating a lightweight, full-on technical jacket rather than just a lightweight one.

The fabric, the company's own brand HyVent Alpha, is sourced from one of the world's leading fabric specialists and in tests is apparently comparable in breathability to Gore's XCR.


How It Works What's nice about the Stitchless Fountainhead is how it has all the bells and whistles you'd expect from a top-end technical jacket and still comes in at just under 600 grammes on the OM digital scales. That means water-resistant zips all round, a full hood with a semi-stiffened peak - that's stiff by traditional TNF standards - and heavier duty fabric on the shoulders and forearms along with neat reinforcement on the hip areas.

It's all extremely neat and tidy as you'd expect from TNF, and inset stretch panels in the upper back and elbows look great. We liked the fleece pad on the rear inside of the collar too. Just right if you have short hair and a sensitive neck...

Cut is classic TNF, which means short and slightly boxy, which won't appeal to lovers of more traditional British hill jackets, but it is long enough to give reasonable protection with a slight drop tail keeping your butt covered.

We also noticed that the jacket does feel softer and sits comfortably bearing out some of the claims for the stitchless construction. What else? The hood's generally good, but the peak isn't quite as stiff as it might be and blows around easily despite being stiffer than previous peaks from the brand. It's fine for general use however.

The fabric seems indistringuishable from, say, XCR in use, though isn't quite as breathable as eVENT, and the pit-zips, with their double-ended zips opened and closed easily to give venting options. Simple, neat cuff adjusters were good too. We were less keen on the waist adjusters, accessed through the front pockets - the way they were routed on our jacket tended to make fabric ruck up at the front, but they're really redundant on a short-cut jacket anyway.

One thing worth bearing in mind is that while the main water-resistant zip is backed up with a flap, the ones on pockets and pit-zips aren't which means in really wet conditions, they might leak slightly as the area flexes, though it wasn't a problem when we used the jacket.

Finally, the stretch panels in the upper back area, don't really do anything other than look good.

Quick Verdict


The North Face sometimes gets knocked for being too 'high street', but in reality the company makes some excellent kit and uses cutting edge technology to do it. The Stitchless Fountainhead is actually a very impressive bit of clothing engineering albeit with a price tag to match.

The peak on the hood is still floppier than we'd like, though better than before, but otherwise it's a neat, effective jacket for general mountain use and well worth a pop if you can pick one up end of line as it's just been phased out.


The North Face web site


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