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JerkyKen
136
Nov 3, 2016
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I have heard of a couple that uses two wide, torso sized pads sideways. Back in the day Thermarest sold couplers that were made of grippy fabric strips that you slipped your pads through. What about grosgrain and some appropriate ladder locks?
Nov 3, 2016
tjacques
0
Nov 4, 2016
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JerkyKenHow about just gluing some high quality Velcro strips on the fabric area that you've put the holes in?
Nov 4, 2016
DannyMilks
4557
Nov 4, 2016
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JerkyKenI have tried gluing Velcro strips and have yet to find a glue that sticks for more than a few trips. The Velcro is fantastic, but the glue is the failure point. @tjacques
Nov 4, 2016
DannyMilks
4557
Nov 4, 2016
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JerkyKencan you share a picture a ladder lock example @jerkyken? I'm having trouble envisioning how that would work. Thanks!
Nov 4, 2016
bmyton
10
Nov 4, 2016
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DannyMilksThis seems like the simplest solution, if you were worried about air leakage in the seam you could fill that space with extra clothes. Regardless I would not try to attach the pads by only focusing on the edge, you have the whole pad to work with. http://www.zpacks.com/accessories/pad_straps.shtml
Nov 4, 2016
DannyMilks
4557
Nov 4, 2016
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bmytonI usually don't have any extra clothes for camping at night, but if by chance I do have extra, I certainly stuff them between the pads.
I've tried straps and have not found that they work well for my uses. I have tried up to four straps and it's just ok. I think they work well for fully inflated pads, because it's like strapping 2 boards together. But I like to have my pads at like 90-95% fill, so they have more give and are more comfortable. Enough so that my hip just barely doesn't touch the ground. Under this use case, the straps are either too loose that they don't eliminate the air gap, or they're so snug that they eliminate any "give" in the pad, thereby making them hard like a board. I haven't found a sweet spot, and I don't think it exists. The straps need to pull tight on a hard edge to keep together.
Also, I should have mentioned that I use a 1.5 person quilt with my wife. A double quilt, like EE Accomplice, has two people laying side by side with a huge toe box. My quilt is more like an extra wide EE Enigma, where we cuddle and share a regular footbox. So, the air gap between our two pads is more uncomfortable compared to a more typical 2-person setup when each person stays on their own pad. In fact, we could probably get by with a pad that is 40" at top but tapers to 25" at the foot, to mirror our quilt shape and sleepy style.
Nov 4, 2016
bmyton
10
Nov 4, 2016
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DannyMilksThat makes total sense now, thanks for the clarification. Keep in mind this is not a problem I've tried to solve myself, I toss and turn at night which means that my wife enjoys the comfort of her own sleep system thank-you-very-much.
Is maintaining the single-person function of the sleeping pads a requirement here?
The Klymit pads can heat-seal to themselves on the inside, some people use this to shorten the pad (iron closed the bottom and re-trim). You might be able to use the same technique to turn one of the pads into a long wedge, full width at the top and tapering down to 4-5" wide at the bottom. If you left most of that excess material on the pad it would create a flap that you could lay over the main pad creating a draft shield and giving you a total pad area that matches your bag a bit better.
Nov 4, 2016
JerkyKen
136
Nov 4, 2016
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DannyMilksLike a belt
Nov 4, 2016
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