Vespizzare
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 445
- Location
- Santa Monica, CA
Supposing, for the sake of argument, that one was using a warm lining like alpaca. Would a jacket with 4oz leather be warmer than the same jacket with the same lining using 2oz?
Leather jackets are windbreakers and not especially warm no matter how thick the leather. It's the lining or your layering underneath that keeps you warm. That said, if you live in a warmer climate, you may find that thicker leather is often uncomfortable to wear as it makes you sweat very quickly.
Oil stuffed leathers are not as insulating as drier leathers, as oil is wet [like water] and conducts cold. The trapped air between the leather fibers is what insulates.
So, therefore, a four ounce chromexcel leather might not keep you as warm as a lighter weight, drier leather. Which, by the way, also breathes better.
That being said, if you're comparing similarly tanned leathers, the thicker, heavier leather will keep you warmer.
Bob
Must be tough then being a cow or a horse for that matter
I reckon most cows and horses are comfortable in their own skins.
and another yep .....
Depends on what state they live in lol
I own a couple of FQHH Aero jackets, among others, and have to say that the warmest jacket I own, for cold winter temperatures, is my Schott 184SM, naked cowhide (with real custom mouton collar). It really does insulate better. The FQHH is great at keeping the cold in. I love them, but they're not good in sub-zero weather.
So if leather is such a crappy insulator, etc., how is it that Aero bills many of its models as "designed for harsh climates, winter wear", etc. Is that based on liners and collars? The descriptive of their half belt says exactly that ( or close to it).
Leather is a terrible insulator, but windproof.
If you ski, you know that nowadays most people ski with a windproof shell and layers undeneath. It's the windproof shell that allows you to be comfortable in very cold temps without looking like the Michellin man while skiing.
Leather is a terrible insulator, but windproof.