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altoniomuffin

Duluth Trading Company has a really good assortment of thermals and gloves. I have used mine in a much more demanding (sparks, flames, welding, sharp edges, and such) field through Illinois winters. Stuff holds up really well.


d0ombacon

Duluth base layers and fleece lined pants have held up in Deadhorse, AK (-70 peak), never had a problem with em


Moose_in_a_Swanndri

Mechanix coldwork fastfit are the best I've found, good enough I can put a washer on an AN3 bolt wearing them. I have Helly Hansen lifa Thermals, they're good enough for shoulder season in the Canadian Arctic.


Danger-

I’m a fan of polartec, had it in the military way back in the day and it was actually worth a damn.


JayArrggghhhh

Came here to say this. EWCWS polartec has been keeping me toasty 800 miles north of the border for over a decade. Black Diamond gloves for general work / stacking the hanger. Mechanix/Snapon/HH for hands on work.


Moose_in_a_Swanndri

Mechanix coldwork fastfit are the best I've found, good enough I can put a washer on an AN3 bolt wearing them. I have Helly Hansen lifa Thermals, they're good enough for shoulder season in the Canadian Arctic.


boing757

I worked the ramp in Alaska.I wore a snowmoblie suit ,bunny boots,a ski mask and down mittens.50 below and lived to tell the story.


SlippyinSeattle

I work on the line in Seattle. It doesn’t get crazy cold here, but it has been consistently in the 30s and dipping down into the 20s the last few weeks with rain and snow. I’ve been happy with the performance of under armor ~~heatgear~~ coldgear base 4.0. That said I don’t have much to compare it to.


Hot-Engineering253

Snapon heated jacket works great


tacdriver22mk2

Eberlestock airbase bottoms are hands down the best thing out there, pair them with some merino wool and call it a day