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Mountain Hardwear Stance Pant - Men's
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Mountain Hardwear Stance Pant - Men's
The Mountain Hardwear Men’s Stance Pant includes a full-length side zipper to help you vent, add, and remove layers as necessary. Integrated gaiters keep snow out of your boots when you have to summit the day after a big storm, and Mountain Hardwear used waterproof breathable Conduit fabric to keep you dry even in the season’s worst storm. This versatile pant also handles a weekend of winter backpacking without a second thought.
Bottom Line: The versatility to handle any day in the snowy mountains.
Talk shop with all the gear freaks out there: ask 'em questions, upload/browse photos, and give your 2¢.
Leaking Pants
By: Yehuda Farkas
November 21, 2008
These pants were really disappointing. I have lots of MH stuff, but after getting these really cheap at the end of the season, am very disappointed. I just used them for the first time, and even though it's Rai****, these pants leaked terribly. I got really wet on my bum. The pants seem strong, but I already have a pull on my left leg. Bottom zipper and snap are good, and kept snow out, but would not recommend these unless you seriously waterproofed them or wore gaiters underneath. Color's nice though.
Should have listened to negative reviews
By: Seth Spartan
February 20, 2009
It's mountain hardware, how bad can they be? Really?
Bad if you're using them for skiing. And not worth the cash if you're mountaineering.
Wind blows right through them. No warmth whatsoever. And the wet snow melted and soaked them so fast that within 1/2 the lift ride they were wet to my base layer. For skiing, I say they're terrible. I normally ski in hard shells and boxers 'cause I run warm, and for my first season in 10 years I'm wearing thermals. I don't normally want insulation, but shesh, how about a little wind protection?
I've sliced through the ankles in the second month of owning them, but I'm learning tele this season. If you're a better skier you may not have that issue.
Full length zips might be nice if you were mountaineering, but they're more of a pain in the butt for skiing. Fortunately (as noted above) I don't want any ventilation either. The fabric does that for me. Possibly the worst outdoor gear purchase I've ever had.
is this a downhill skiing pants. I am looking for shell pants
is this a downhill skiing pants. I am looking for shell pants for spring skiing, end of March.
By: Tom Nielsen
March 7, 2009
yep these are skiing pants and are just shells
By: Cyrus Baumgarten
March 7, 2009
BIG TIME SUCK
By: ada2544652
November 10, 2008
I bought these pants last year and I am about to throw them in the bottom of the drawer and buy GoreTex ProShell pants. I do not know how MH can say these pants are waterproof...when these things get wet they are really heavy. I have used them for back country skiing and ice climbing and I am very dissatisfied.
Do these pants provide much insulation?. More intrested in keeping
Do these pants provide much insulation?. More intrested in keeping heat in than keeping water out !.
By: DJ.
December 13, 2008
If you glance at the Tech Specs you'll note "Insulation: None" displayed prominently. That should help.
By: Upton789
December 23, 2008
not what i expect from MH
By: wes2996044
May 11, 2009
These pant look nice and fit a tall frame well, but they are cheaply made. No scuff guards on the cuffs and they provide little protection from the wind.
Great Spring Skiing Pant
By: Brian Firstbrook
March 16, 2009
I was looking for a good light weight spring skiing pant that breathed well and these fit the bill. I didnât really expect these to be 100% water proof as one reviewer criticized I have TNF 3 ply gore pants that are bomber for the cold and/or wet but just like how light theses were compared to 3 ply pants. Side zip was great and easy to open and close for venting while on the lift. The suspenders look cool and would be great to relieve yourself but at the longest length they were still short for me (6â2â) and I did need them. The pant length was great and I usually need a large long (34â in street pants) but the regular are plenty long enough.
The waterproof/breathable rating isn't stated. Can anyone
The waterproof/breathable rating isn't stated. Can anyone comment on the waterproof rating? The breathable thing should be taken care of via the side vents/zips. Thanks
By: Justin Latessa
November 10, 2008
20K Waterproofness / 20K Breathability minimum is where these pants rate and that is standard for any 2-layer Conduit from Mountain Hardwear. Hope this helps.
By: Jon Webb
November 11, 2008
Light too thin, good breathing...
By: Tel2506095
February 11, 2009
The size is still ok, colour is nice. Good breathing material for warmer days, but the gaitors are misfitting and leaking, bad construction. The material itself is not bad, but to weak for rough ground and the reinforcements at the boots area are to thin/weak, already torn up by the telemark skis. Why is there no possibillity for a real belt at this price ?
Sorry I am really disappointed by this product, I think it was produced in china ??? cheap stuff - sold expensively, I´m very angry ! :-(((
Long and Light
By: CARLA BEST
March 18, 2009
These pants are extremely long in length, which would be a bonus for some. I'm short and stumpy, so I wasn't to happy about that. But these pants faired well on both a warm spring day and a cold snowy day. Grab these up while they are so cheap, well worth the price and then some!
How adept are these pants for alpine climbing/mountaineerin g?
How adept are these pants for alpine climbing/mountaineering? I'm looking for something that's waterproof and a little beefier than a winter backpacking shell.
By: Pancho
November 9, 2008
You could alpine climb or mountaineer in these pants just fine. Consider them an all purpose waterproof/breathable shell pant. The shell fabric is a nylon dobby weave that is pretty tough (3 seasons of skiing for me) and would do just fine as a climbing pant. They are a little more generously cut than other shell pants in the Mountain Hardwear line... so, if you are looking for a more climbing specific pant check out the Argon Ice Pants. They are a Proshell Gore pant and area bit more pricey. Hope this helps.
By: Jon Webb
November 9, 2008
Worked great for me
By: vercan
April 14, 2009
I am a late March / early April skier. I've just returned from a four day skiing trip in which we had all sorts of weather: sunny, cloudy, windy and snowing. I am reviewing this pants, taking into account that I use them in Spring.
The pros: 1. they are light, 2. they are wide on the bottom which is great because I use really wide boots, 3. I never got wet and 4. they are comfortable.
The cons: 1. if the wind blows a little you might feel cold, but after the first run you forget all about that, 2. they are too long.
All in all, if you don't fall often or ski in deep powder or in a bad weather, this pants work just fine. In my case, they were great. I gave them only four stars, because in my opinion they are too long.
Not bad
By: bukake
March 18, 2009
These are not as bad as described by some of the other reviews. For less than $50 they are actually pretty good. The full side zips allowed me to air out while riding the lift. They were water resistant enough. I would not use these in storm conditions. Hoping to get some good use out of these as spring riding picks up. I think they do an adequate job at minimizing humidity south of the border.
Great Pant
By: Ben
April 14, 2009
I am a ski patrol member in Fairbanks Alaska. I ended up wearing these pants from -20 degrees with wind, up to 55 and sunny. They preformed wonderfully. Never once did I have a leak and the only reason I marked them down is because they are scuffed up and cut a little more than I would have liked. But that could have been from the constant use and abuse I put them through.
I did remove the suspenders and added a pair of my own. The ones that came with it were a little goofy.
Bottom line: these are some fine ski pants and if you can find them on sale jump on it.
Good Pant for skiing
By: slick_ride1704297
February 16, 2009
These pants are great. I ski in southern colorado and have had no problem with these pants. On warm days and times of hiking they have a great side zips for vents. On the colder snowy days I am plenty warm. These are great ski pants. The suspenders are a little wierd, but work. I don't know what the other people are complaining about unless they are just using them in the rain and expected a $400.00 pant for $150. You get what you pay for and for a $150 these pants are much better than the Marmots I just replaced.
These do the job.
By: Daniel Torres
January 29, 2009
I think these pants are getting a bad rap. So I'll address a couple of things.
A. They are full zip snow pants, not rain pants, if it's raining, you'll probably get some water through the zippers.
B. Waterproof pants need to be taken care of differently than normal pants, if you are going to be washing them, make sure you use a detergent and restorer. Mtn Hardwear can recommend what kind.
That being said,
They have been great for me so far. I have used them snowboarding, snowshoeing, and have done some light mountaineering in them. When I got them one of the zippers wouldn't release, MH took care of that for me fast. They are a bit baggier than a typical mountaineering pant, but not excessively, like snowboarding pants would be.
I have used gaiters with them, so really can't comment about the gaiters. The suspenders take a little getting used to, but weren't really much of a bother.
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