2019-11-01_Bicycling

(Ben W) #1
ICYCLING.COM 19

THE TEST ZONE

NOTES, OPINIONS, USEFUL TIPS, AND THE COOLEST GEAR FROM INSIDE THE WORLD’S MOST RIGOROUS BIKE AND GEAR TEST CENTER


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Tested: Waterproof Jackets

Most rain jackets are made
of waterproof materials,
but whether they keep
us dry is another matter.
Loose-fitting collars,
porous seams, and leaky
pockets are all places water
can seep through, leaving
us soggy despite the fact
that the high-tech fabrics
did their jobs.
So we put three water-
proof cycling jackets to a
real-world test. We picked
the shells by price: the
high-value $75 Aero Tech
Designs Waterproof Jacket,
the mid-tier $225 Pearl
Izumi PRO AmFIB Shell,
and the pricey $349 Assos
Equipe RS rain jacket. To
simulate a sudden down-
pour, I wore each jacket for
five minutes of hard trainer
pedaling while Bicycling
mechanic Joël Nank-
man showered me with a

garden hose. I wore a fresh
gray T-shirt beneath each
jacket; the wet spots on
each shirt show us where
the water got through.
The results: The
Aero Tech jacket had an
impressive three-layer
waterproof-breathable
membrane that kept the
water off my back and
didn’t trap sweat as I rode,
but a loose-fitting collar
let moisture drip down my
chest. The Assos shell had
the same vulnerability with
a loose-fitting collar, and
some moisture slipped
through the taped seams
on my back. The Pearl Izumi
jacket performed best,
shielding me effectively
and allowing just one small
moisture spot on my lower
back near the stitching at
the rear zipper pocket.
—Dan Roe

Aero Tech Designs
Waterproof Jacket / $75

Pearl Izumi PRO
AmFIB Shell / $225

Assos Equipe RS
Rain Jacket / $349

ISSUE 1|2020 • BICYCLING.COM 19
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