Marmot Precip Rain Jacket Mens Review
Marmot Precip Rain Jacket Mens Feature
- Full-function men's rain jacket for both backcountry and urban adventures
- Patented Angel-Wing Movement technology gives your arms full range of motion
- PitZips underarm zippers let you vent the jacket; full-visibility hood
- DriClime moisture-wicking fabric protects your face from the zipper
- PreCip technology is waterproof and breathable
Additional Features
- Material: PreCip 2.8-ounce, 100-percent nylon ripstop
- Double storm flap: Located over the zipper, the storm flap offers a snap/Velcro closure
- Elastic draw cord hem: The adjustable hem is ideal for serious weather conditions
- Roll-up hood: The jacket's full-visibility hood includes peripheral cord adjustments and an integral collar
- DriClime-lined chin guard: The DriClime moisture-wicking fabric protects your face from the zipper
- PreCip technology: This dry-clip technology is waterproof and breathable
About PreCip Technology
PreCip is Marmot's "next step" technology. It allows the company to construct the lightest, most compressible, technical, waterproof, and breathable rainwear in the world. Ventilated and breathable to keep you dry from the inside, PreCip rainwear has plenty of pockets and custom fit features to keep you warm, dry, and comfortable. The key to PreCip is its barrier technology, a microporous polyurethane that is impregnated with silicon dioxide particles. These particles create small, numerous, consistent holes that allow small water vapor molecules to pass through the barrier but not the bigger liquid ones. This keeps the rain out while letting your sweat vapor work its way outside, away from your body, to keep you dry from the inside as well as from the outside. PreCip rainwear is compressible enough to stuff into a water bottle, and comes in enough colors and styles to travel with you anywhere--to the mountains, the city, or overseas.
About Marmot
In April 1971, University of California Santa Cruz students Eric Reynolds and Dave Huntley were visiting the Juneau Icefields in Alaska as part of a school project in glaciology. It was among their fellow students that Reynolds and Huntley came up with the idea of a Marmot club. To become a Marmot, you had to climb a glaciated peak with another Marmot. To help fellow club members deal with the cold, the pair began to make prototypes of down products in their Santa Cruz dorm rooms, starting with a down vest, a sweater, and a parka, and later branched into sleeping bags. The warmest bag was the PIKA (now known as the Cwm), which was rated at -45 degrees F. In 1974, the pair joined up with Tom Boyce in Grand Junction, Colorado, and opened a rental and retail shop under the name of Marmot Mountain Works.
Through the years, Marmot has passed many memorable milestones. The company debuted its Golden Mantle puffy jacket in the mid-'70s for a Clint Eastwood film called The Eiger Sanction. In 1976, Marmot helped introduce Gore-Tex to the public after testing a number of prototype sleeping bags in frozen meat lockers and under fire sprinklers (with the company founders snugly inside). Now headquartered in Santa Rosa, California, Marmot has offices in California, Colorado, Canada, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom, Sweden, and Germany. Its products are distributed in 27 countries.
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