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Hi Vis Winter Wear

(23 products)

Hi-vis winter workwear combines EN ISO 20471 visibility standards with thermal insulation rated to -40°C - colder than a domestic freezer. You need both systems working together: fluorescent material and retroreflective tape for visibility, plus insulation that maintains warmth without compromising conspicuity.

Standard hi-vis vests don't insulate. Regular winter coats lack the fluorescent background material and reflective tape required under EN ISO 20471. Layering a vest over a thick jacket reduces retroreflective performance because the vest sits away from your body and flaps in wind. Purpose-built garments solve this by engineering insulation and visibility together from the start.

Insulation choice depends on your activity level. Synthetic wadding maintains warmth even when damp from sweat or snow - essential for active work. Down provides better warmth-to-weight ratios but collapses when wet. Thinsulate-type microfibre offers high warmth with minimal bulk when you need dexterity.

Common mistake: choosing the warmest possible jacket regardless of actual work intensity. Heavy insulation causes overheating during manual handling. You sweat. That sweat saturates the insulation. When you stop moving, wet insulation loses thermal resistance and you get dangerously cold. Match insulation weight to your activity level.

Windproof fabric matters because wind chill dramatically reduces effective temperature. At -10°C with 30 km/h winds, felt temperature drops to -20°C. Wind penetrates woven fabrics through fibre gaps, carrying away the warm air layer next to your skin. Windproof garments use tightly woven fabrics or laminated membranes that block air movement.

Design features prevent cold weather failure points. High collars stop heat loss through the neck where blood vessels sit close to skin. Adjustable cuffs prevent cold air pumping up sleeves. Longer backs protect lower back and kidneys when bending - kidney exposure triggers core cooling response even when your torso feels warm. Storm flaps over zips eliminate thermal bridges where metal conducts cold through the garment.

Product options: high vis insulated jackets for upper body protection, waterproof parkas with extended length, thermal hi vis body warmers for core warmth with arm mobility, insulated trousers (often overlooked but essential - lower body cold impairs balance), and winter coveralls that eliminate gaps between garments.

Visibility changes in winter conditions. Fluorescent material relies on UV light - shorter daylight hours reduce effectiveness. Snow creates high-contrast backgrounds that overwhelm fluorescent colours. Heavy rain and fog scatter light. EN ISO 20471 Class 2 or 3 ensures adequate material area under these degraded conditions.

These garments apply to construction sites, road maintenance (gritting, pothole repairs), power line repairs, airport ground operations, and railway maintenance. Any outdoor role with vehicle traffic or mobile equipment in cold weather requires both protection systems working together.

Temperature ratings assume proper layering: base layers wick sweat, mid layers add insulation, outer shell blocks wind and precipitation. Without this system, even -40°C rated jackets won't perform as specified.

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