
Originally Posted by
mrkbrnblm
Few comments for anyone looking. First, I think a 2-pant quiver is critical if you're touring. I tour 90% of the time in OR Trail Breaker Bibs and they're incredible. Very breathable, ventable, and waterproof in the areas that matter (knees, ankles, butt). I also use them 50% of the time I'm riding lifts (any day other than very windy, rainy, or snowy ones). My second pair is an Arc'teryx Beta LT that I would also highly recommend. This is my second pair. The last pair lasted 13 years. I probably could have had Arc warranty my old pair, but felt I'd gotten my money's worth and should support them by buying another pair. I also consider Mammut, Patagonia, and Norrona and all had good options. I found the Mammut pants to fit very weirdly but really liked the design and materials. Everything else seemed to be in a second tier in terms of quality.
Regarding the Trew Capow stuff... i skied with the Capow guides 2 seasons ago and asked them what they thought of the trew kit that they all had to wear. Overwhelming response seemed to be they love the folks at Trew, but that the quality and durability was not as good as the premium brands (Arc, Patagonia, etc). They also seem to use very heavy fabrics. Just hold a pair of 3-layer gore-tex Trew bibs vs. a pair of Mammut or Arcteryx ones and you'll see what i mean. There's just a lot more substance to the fabric. Maybe that makes them more durable, in theory, but the texture of the fabric seem to catch a lot of dirt and their kits all looked dirty and abraded (granted, they're wearing them pretty much every day, so perhaps durability is comparable). The thick face fabric also absorbs water the second your DWR treatment starts to wear. That doesn't make it less waterproof, but it makes it 0% breathable (the waterproofing of the GT membrane keeps working, but the breathability is lost 'cause the vapor pressure difference isn't high enough after the face fabric is saturated to push the moisture inside your jacket/pants to the outside).
But long story short, softshell pants are way better than hardshells almost all of the time (even if you run cold, as I do), and the OR Trailbreakers are the best I've found in that department.
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