Ok, I may be nuking this out a little bit, but in the outer shell calculations, you take the baffle spacing times the number of baffles (that part I got), and then you took the height of the baffles times 2. Where does this extra measurement come into play? The outermost baffles? I'm currently marking out my outer shell right now and with the baffles marked, I'm at 48" total when the calculator says it should be 52"! Help!!
Corey Miller
"Some ships are designed to sink… others require our assistance."
That last "baffle height times 2" is the outside walls of the quilt. All of this measurement is part of the outer layer as the inner layer has no walls. It snugs completely against the hammock bottom. If you look at a picture of a deployed underquilt, this will make sense.
Mike
"Life is a Project!"
Yeah, many a time I have answered my own question just by asking it.
Mike
"Life is a Project!"
Thanks to MAD777 for helping out! I 100% appreciate you guys asking questions - anything that's unclear to you indicates a need to explain things better in the next revision.
does it matter what kind of material I use for the baffle walls
For practical application, all u need is a breathable material that will keep the down inside it's channels. Nano-seeum or no-seeum mesh is a fav because it's easy to use, easy to find,light, and keeps the down contained.
Others have used silk and nylon to success
Thanks Cat! I used your calculator spreadsheet this week for my quilt. You made something that was complicated into something easy. Way to go!
Sarge
"Live your life so that your children can tell their children that you not only stood for something wonderful- you acted on it"
-Dan Zadra
Anyone checked the Temp Rating calculation and know how 'accurate' it seems to be?
Just curious as I'm considering trying to build a light weight 20* UQ and I was hoping that this sheets calculations were likely, close enough to accurate to work.
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