JStephen
Mechanical
- Aug 25, 2004
- 8,706
My hobby and sport is bicycling. I recently ran across a discussion of bicycle clothing that presented an interesting problem. If any of you are in academia, this might be a good lab project for someone.
The issue was whether you can actually stay cooler in hot weather with an additional layer of fabric- a base layer. Evidently, cycling clothes are sold for this purpose. The idea is this: If you sweat on bare skin, the sweat is in droplets, not a film. You can put a layer of wicking fabric over the skin, spread the sweat out, evaporate more of it, and actually keep cooler. So we kicked it back and forth in the cycling forum with no definitive answer. What do you all think? Smart idea or snake oil?
(For what it's worth, the proponents of this idea claimed it worked better in drier climates than in humid.)
The issue was whether you can actually stay cooler in hot weather with an additional layer of fabric- a base layer. Evidently, cycling clothes are sold for this purpose. The idea is this: If you sweat on bare skin, the sweat is in droplets, not a film. You can put a layer of wicking fabric over the skin, spread the sweat out, evaporate more of it, and actually keep cooler. So we kicked it back and forth in the cycling forum with no definitive answer. What do you all think? Smart idea or snake oil?
(For what it's worth, the proponents of this idea claimed it worked better in drier climates than in humid.)