Heat waves are now a normal occurrence. One obvious way to beat the heat is to stay indoors or stick to the shade, but not everyone has that luxury. That’s where cooling vests come in.
If you watch high-performance sports, you may have seen bikers in the Tour De France or Formula 1 drivers at the notoriously hot and humid Singapore Grand Prix wearing slightly bulky and sometimes colorful bits of kit over their torsos, ahead or even during the events themselves.
It’s enough to make one wonder: Would a vest stuffed full of ice packs help ease my suffering while I mow the lawn? I can tell you, the answer is “Sort of!” but first, lets go over some of the basics.
What Are Cooling Vests?
Left to its own devices, your body cools itself with sweat. You squeeze a bunch of liquid out of your pores, and as it evaporates from liquid to gas in the heat of the sun, it pulls heat out of your body to complete the transformation. This is all well and good, but for a few drawbacks you know all too well. You have to keep yourself full up with water (or other beverage if your intensity calls for it). If it’s humid out and air is full of water already, your sweat won’t evaporate very quickly. And even when the system works well, it’s just unpleasant!
Cooling vests can help aid this process in a few different ways. Evaporative cooling vests essentially help cool your body by adding extra, artificial sweat. You dip them in water, and as that evaporates from the vest’s porous, quick-drying structure, you get the cooling effect of sweat without having to sweat your own sweaty sweat.