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What experts actually look for when testing technical gear

When experienced hikers test gear,Β they’reΒ not just looking at features.Β 

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They'reΒ asking harder questions. How does this feel at hour six? What happens when the weather turns and I need to move fast? Does this system simplify my day or complicate it?Β 

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With the XT Series, testingΒ didn’tΒ happen in one place. It wasΒ wornΒ across Newβ€―Zealand’sΒ exposed alpine terrain, on multi-day hikes through Tasmania, and in Australia’s rough backcountry where scrub and rock quickly put materials under pressure. It was alsoΒ testedΒ onΒ 24‑hour adventure races, whereΒ you’reΒ moving for hours andΒ don’tΒ have the energy to keep adjusting layers.Β 

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What experts tested for:Β Β 

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Weight and PackabilityΒ 

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WeightΒ isn’tΒ just about whatΒ you feel when you pick somethingΒ up,Β it’sΒ about how it carries across a full day or multi-day trip.Β 

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AcrossΒ testing, the focus naturally shifted from individual pieces to the entire system as a whole.Β As Mowser described it, β€œthe whole system isΒ dialledΒ in for fast and light.”  

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PackabilityΒ mattersΒ too. Layers need to compress reliably, sit cleanly in a pack and be there when conditions change, not buried at the bottom when you need them most.Β Feedback consistently pointed to how easily layers could be added or removed without overloading a pack.Β 

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LayeringΒ 

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On the move, layeringΒ is a decision you make in real time, often whenΒ you’reΒ already too hot or too cold.Β The clearest takeaway from testing was how naturally the XT pieces worked together. Mowser noted that β€œyou can move through layers depending on conditions without anything feeling redundant or fighting each other.” 

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Comfort and movementΒ 

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Over time, comfort stops being about how something feels in the store. It becomes about how gear moves with you, through climbs, descents,Β scramblesΒ and the hours in between.Β 

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Across testing, this showed up in:Β 
β€’ Reduced bulk when layeringΒ 
β€’ Freedom of movement on climbs and descentsΒ 
β€’ Gear that stayed comfortable over extended useΒ 

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Gemma McCaw described it as balance,Β β€œtechnical performance, comfort and lightweight design” working together rather than competing.Β Β 

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BreathabilityΒ 

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At higher altitudes, breathability stops beingΒ a nice-to-have.Β 

TheΒ HybridΒ Octa Fleece stoodΒ out here, forΒ maintainingΒ warmth while allowing heat and moisture to escape during sustained movement.Β Β When stopping to adjustΒ isn'tΒ practical and your body temperature keeps climbing,Β that'sΒ the layer doing exactly what it should.Β 

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DurabilityΒ 

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Lightweight gear earns nothing if itΒ doesn'tΒ last.Β 

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Testers looked closely at how materialsΒ performedΒ in high-wear areas,Β where packs sitΒ andΒ where movement repeats.Β Β 

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For Ella Garbett, that practicality was clear straight away. She noted that β€œbeing able to move through rough scrub without worrying about tearing the fabric makes it far more practical for real-world trail conditions.”  

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Cordura reinforcement and material placement played a key role here, giving durability whereΒ it’sΒ needed without adding unnecessary weight.Β 

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Are there trade-offs with lightweight gear?Β 

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The approach with XT was never about removing weight at any cost.Β It was about reducing weight where possible and reinforcing where it matters.Β 

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That balanceΒ showed up inΒ how testers described the system as a whole - lightweight, but not delicate.Β 

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What stood outΒ Β 

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The XT SeriesΒ wasn’tΒ tested in one place, and itΒ wasn’tΒ designed for one either.Β 

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From New Zealand's exposed alpine terrain to Tasmania's remote multi-day wilderness and Australia's unforgiving backcountry scrub, the same thing kept coming back. A system that adapts as conditions change and keeps performing long after the easy part of the day is over.Β 

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Explore the XT SeriesΒ 

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  • XT Series Octa Fleece Base LayersΒ 

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