Fill power is a measure of the loft or "fluffiness" of a down feather product that is loosely related to the insulating value of the down. The higher the fill power, the more air a certain weight of the down can trap, and thus the more insulating ability the down will have. Fill power is commonly given as a specific volume (the inverse of density), expressed in cubic inches per ounce. Common fill power values range from about for feathers to around for the highest quality goose down. The rare and relatively expensive down of certain wild waterfowl species such as the Muscovy duck or Common eider can have higher fill powers than goose down. Higher fill powers are associated with a larger percentage of down clusters and a larger average down cluster size.
US 2013 norm:
Cylinder diameter: 288 mm. Cylinder Height: Minimum 500 mm. Weight plate: 284 mm diameter, load weight for cylinder 94.25 g, 128 holes at 3mm.
Conditioning: Steam conditioning followed by heated drying. Down quantity: 30 grams. Results expressed in cubic inches per 30 grams.
EN norm:
cylinder diameter: (289 ± 1) mm,
conditioning: tumble dry +2–5 days in a screen box
compression cylinder: Lorch machine = mechanized cylinder weighing 94.25 grams,
Mass of the sample:(20,0 ± 0,1) grams.BS EN 12130:1998 Feather and down - Test methods - Determination of the filling power (massic volume)
750+ fill is quite different from 400 fills. Almost all down commercially available is a secondary product of geese raised for consumption. It would be prohibitively expensive to raise geese for down alone. The geese that are the source for lower fill down are about four months old when they are killed for food. Down from these geese can be carefully sorted, washed, and blended, but it will never loft like really mature down. The 700+ down fill comes from a small number of birds kept for breeding purposes throughout the year. These geese molt naturally in the spring. While their down is loose it is collected by hand. It is very rare and, of course, expensive. The larger individual plumules are what gives the greater loft. The only way to get down of this quality is by careful hand selection which is the major factor in its scarcity. The higher the fill number, the warmer the product is, given that the total mass remains the same.
Down (or any insulation) provides warmth by trapping a layer of air that separates the cold side from the warm side. A thicker layer of trapped air gives more insulation. This thickness is often called "loft." A comforter that uses 550 fill power down, for example, would have to use approximately 40%-50% greater weight of down than a similar item that uses 800 fill power down to provide the same loft.
Insulation and weight
European sleeping bags
US sleeping bags
Washing and restoring
See also
External links
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