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GORE C5 GTX Thermo Jacket: Quick Review

GORE C5 GTX Thermo Jacket: Quick Review – by Grannygear

GORE has had some misses with me in the past, but of late there have been more hits than strikeouts.  Tally up another hit in the C5 GTX Thermo Jacket. I have had this for quite some time, but it only recently got cold enough to use it. So apologies to GORE, but it is So Cal after all. We have standards to meet. Can’t be too cold too soon or we lose our minds here.

Grannygear in the GORE C5 Thermo Jacket

I have sampled this techy fabric before and been pretty happy with it, especially in some GORE gloves I really have enjoyed using. Infinium seems to do a pretty good job of allowing excess moisture out and their Windstopper technology is super effective at keeping a cold wind from stealing precious body heat. Here’s a bit of background from GORE on the Infinium fabric from their webpage:

Products made with GORE® WINDSTOPPER® technology are totally windproof and deliver maximum breathability to keep you comfortable in cool and windy weather conditions. The totally windproof, yet extremely breathable membrane blocks the wind and allows vapor to escape. This combination of protection and breathability minimizes the wind’s chilling effect while reducing the risk of overheating when you are active. A durable outer fabric treatment provides you additional protection of water repellency.

The thing is, I am not quite sure what is Infinium on this garment and what is not. And the GORE website is no help at all. There are panels that are fleece backed fabric and others that are not. The sleeves are a mix of both, etc. So however it maps out, it looks like GORE has used the different panels where they feel it best applies. In fact I see what I would say are three different fabric types. Here’s what GORE has to say about the C5 GTX Thermo Jacket on its webpage:

Fleece lined WINDSTOPPER® soft shell for warmth and wind protection designed to work when in your cycling position. A tight to body fit and excellent night time visibility with reflective logos and panels makes this jacket perfect for those determined to keep road cycling even on cold, dark winter days.

The retail price of the C5 GTX Thermo Jacket is $220.00USD.

The cut is close but not stupid close to the body. I have a size LG sample (US…not Euro) and it is just right for my 180 pound, long armed, decently broad shouldered yet slim build. Think Tarzan, but with clip-in shoes.

Grannygear appreciated the lenght and styling of the cuff on the Thermo Jacket.

The arms are perfectly long for me with enough sleeve to work with a glove and the cuffs are cut at an angle to work well when handling a handlebar. The cuffs are also thin fabric, slightly stretchy, so they tuck under gloves easily and fit close to the wrist. Nice. The collar is so well done too; high enough to offer decent draft protection in cold winds but without a choke hold effect at the Adam’s Apple. 

There are four pockets, all on the back of the jacket. Three are the standard array in a roadie jersey…all are quite deep yet none are very wide, the middle pocket being the widest. The fourth is a right side zipped security pouch that sits over the right hand, third pocket.

OK…so, how does all that work? I think really well. At first I was struggling to get into temps cold enough to use it, so night rides gave me the best shot at that. Now GORE calls this a jacket. I might call it a heavy jersey. Either way, I first wore it with a short sleeve base layer under it. It was likely never below 50 degrees. I was warm enough, of course, but I noticed that the fabric in the sleeve felt a little clammy against my bare skin. It needed to get colder before I could use this again as I feel it does best over a long sleeve jersey or base layer. Jacket, as they said.

Finally it turned cold. Now my personal thermostat runs on the cool side, so I am not the guy who wears shorts all year. I love my fuzzy jammies, you know? I did another night ride where the temps got to 42 degrees (but hovered more near the mid to upper forties) and I was pretty sweaty underneath from a lot of climbing. I was starting to feel that I was not keeping up with staying warm, but I was only wearing a very thin LS base under it, non-winter long fingered gloves, and thermal knickers. I think I was under-dressed in too many places. But I was not suffering either.

The next ride was a bit colder, down to 37 degrees and never above 45 and I was wearing full thermal (GORE) tights, GORE Infinium gloves, and a fuzzier yet not too heavy LS base layer. I was quite comfy, only feeling some cold in the thinner, non fleecy panels of the C5 jacket. I bet that if I layered a bit more, perhaps with a light/medium Merino wool jersey under it, that I could go well below 40 degrees and be good to go.

Wind just stays out there where it belongs, never passing into the jacket and the cut of this is just so well done, especially compared to how garments for cycling were when I began riding these things. 

What don’t I like? It’s black and that scares me a bit for daytime use on trafficked roads although it sure looks good. And at my age, I need all the sexy I can get. But not DEAD sexy. However, at night, color matters naught. Oh, by the way, the C5 jacket has reflective dots embossed on the cuffs and into the rear, bottom panels, along with a few GORE logos, etc. 

It’s a good one, this is. And it even comes in bright colors.

Note: For more on this and other GORE offerings see their website here; https://www.gorewear.com/us/en-us

Note: GORE sent over the C5 Thermo Jacket to Riding Gravel at no charge for test and review. We were not paid, nor bribed for this review and we will always strive to give our honest thoughts and views throughout.

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