Side straps - why forwards?
Posted: Tue Dec 09, 2003 11:13 am
Hi All!
I'm (another) new guy. Not yet a great Indy fan, but appreciate his style ("Uh oh, slippery slope..."). Following various "recommendations" I got a Wested goat "Raider" and I really love it! But 1 thing bugs me - why do the side straps end up facing FORWARDS? If "form follows function" they should go backwards so that they don't snag when creeping through undergrowth. Facing forwards doesn't seem efficient and I would have thought jacket evolution would have rendered this design extinct (as happened to the poor old Irish Elk with its 10 foot wide antlers which weren't a great success in Irish woodlands).
OK you guys will probably say "forwards 'cos thats how Indy's was" or "so you can pull the straps on tighter easily to adjust fitting".
But it doesn't seem right and proper to me.. they stick out a bit (and the more so after undergrowth escapades) and increase wind resistance ("How fast does this guy move?" you ask).
Better backwards!
Regards to All!
Striver
I'm (another) new guy. Not yet a great Indy fan, but appreciate his style ("Uh oh, slippery slope..."). Following various "recommendations" I got a Wested goat "Raider" and I really love it! But 1 thing bugs me - why do the side straps end up facing FORWARDS? If "form follows function" they should go backwards so that they don't snag when creeping through undergrowth. Facing forwards doesn't seem efficient and I would have thought jacket evolution would have rendered this design extinct (as happened to the poor old Irish Elk with its 10 foot wide antlers which weren't a great success in Irish woodlands).
OK you guys will probably say "forwards 'cos thats how Indy's was" or "so you can pull the straps on tighter easily to adjust fitting".
But it doesn't seem right and proper to me.. they stick out a bit (and the more so after undergrowth escapades) and increase wind resistance ("How fast does this guy move?" you ask).
Better backwards!
Regards to All!
Striver