WINNER - Win a Mountain Hardwear Kor Preshell™ Hoody with Pertex Competition

© Pertex

To celebrate their new film 'A Feather in the West' Pertex are giving you the chance to win a Mountain Hardwear Kor Preshell™ Hoody.

In September 2019, a team of talented Irish climbers travelled to the small island of Owey to explore sea cliffs that local guidebook writer Iain Miller claims, have "enough new routing potential to last at least twelve lifetimes". 'A Feather in the West' is a film about their trad climbing experiences and the relatively niche pursuit of first ascents, set on the Wild Atlantic Way, off the west coast of County Donegal. You can watch the full film here.

Superlight and incredibly versatile, the Mountain Hardwear Kor Preshell™ Hoody is a do-it-all layer offering comfort and weather protection.

When a hardshell is too much and a midlayer is not enough, the Kor Preshell™ Hoody is the layer you've been missing. Made from Pertex® Quantum Air, it's both weightless and water-resistant⏤durable and pliable⏤roomy and stows in its own pocket. Call it an ultralight softshell or a super breathable wind shirt, but we just call it the do-it-all stretch layer for cool-weather trail runs, aerobic ski tours, big alpine rock routes, and...well, just about everything.

Features:

  • Lightweight Pertex® Quantum Air 20D Stretch Ripstop nylon.
  • Harness-compatible zip hand pockets.
  • Zip closure at front.
  • Packs into right hand pocket.

For your chance to win simply answer the question below:

This competition has now closed.

For more information Pertex


28 May, 2020

It's "weightless". Can they legally claim that?

28 May, 2020

In this day and age you can say anything and get away with it

28 May, 2020

It got your attention, which marketing team will be happy about. It’s made of Quantum Air, does anyone know the density of that?!

It is 140g by the way, but even after reading it on their website I’m confused what it is. Looks like a windshell. Sometimes less words is more descriptive.

28 May, 2020

Hard to imagine that anyone would take it literally, so doesn't seem deceptive to me. Not that common sense is necessarily a good guide to the law.

29 May, 2020

Technically 140g is the mass of the jacket. Its weight depends on force of gravity and in some circumstances could be zero ie weightless🤔

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