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Best cold weather gear?

Started by ducpenguin, October 21, 2008, 11:37:59 AM

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ducpenguin

Ok...just wanted to know what some of you thought about your cold weather gear...what is the best and worst?
Jackets, gloves, pants, boots, etc.


ducpenguin

Ooopssss....I probably should have posted over there...
Moderators; please feel free to move it...I was just looking for a fair amount of response.
Thanks!

the_Journeyman

I've had very good luck with my Tourmaster gear, a balaclava & silk thermal underware ~

JM
Got Torque?
Quote from: r_ciao on January 28, 2011, 10:30:29 AM
ADULT TRUTHS

10. Bad decisions make good stories.

LA

I can tell you what's the worst.  A Carrheart jacket w/sweater, a pair of worn out jeans, sneeks, and CoreTech insulated gloves.

And maybe a couple Guinness.  [drink] [drink]

Thank God I live in South Carolina. [thumbsup]

LA
"I'm leaving this one totally stock" - Full Termi kit, Ohlins damper, Pazzo levers, lane splitters, 520 quick change 14/43 gears, DP gold press plate w/open cover, Ductile iron rotors w/cp211 pads.

R90S (hot rod), 80-900SS, Norton 850 MkIII, S4RS

Henecton

I ride almost year round in Northern, VA so I have had practice with what works and what doesn't. Also my gear is inexpensive.

Leather palmed snowmobile gloves, bulky but work and can still manipulate the controls.

Fieldsheer textile pants with quilted liner. I have actually taken the liner out and use thermal underwear underneath and have found I prefer that to the liner.

AGV Textile jacket with liner. Jacket is large enough to accomadate a polar fleece underneath very comfy.

Underarmor hood like football players wear, thin enough not to affect helmet fit but warm.

Foggy breath mask(Aerostitch Warehouse).

And a scarf for my neck.





Bikes: 2007 Multistrada
Totalled 2007 695 Monster.

Hi_Fi_Guy

Olympia AST Jacket and Ranger pants.  BMW Pro Winter Gloves + Oxtar waterproof boots.  Balaclava or similar for neck area.  18k miles later I am always warm and dry when the weather gets cold and wet. I add an Aerostich electric vest when things get really cold.

VisceralReaction

I used to wear my summer gear with the liners in them and an extra sweater or something and long underwear etc.
I find that I get bulky and feel like the Michelin Man, I can't turn my head, just not very comfortable. I finally got around
to buying Gerbing gloves and loved them, but man my feet would get cold. So, I got the socks and wow, warm feet and warm toes.
Well, then I decided my legs got pretty cold when it was below 35F. So I went and got the pant liners and just said what the hell
at the same time and picked up the jacket liner too.
This last Sunday it was 18F when I left on my ride at 7am and under my jacket and pants all I wore was a pair of shorts and a
T-shirt. Turn up the Gerbing gear and nice and comfy and no Michelin Man, "I can't move very well kind of feeling"
There are squirrels juggling knives in my head

professor_pro

The FirstGear TPG setup is rather pricey, but it is head and shoulders better than any of the others I personally checked out (and I checked out a bunch!). I rocked the 3/4 length jacket (Rainier) all last winter through some torrential downpours here in the PNW and always arrived bone dry on the inside. It even has 'dry pockets' that do what they're supposed to! Comes with a nice, removable 'soft shell' windproof liner jacket that I actually wear pretty often off the bike. Also has halfway decent built-in armor.

I just picked up the TPG pants on eBay a couple of months ago & have rain tested them with excellent results. My current wet weather/winter gear setup is the TPG jacket & pants, some SIDI Strada Rain boots & some-odd A* winter gloves. Aside from the few times when I didn't fasten a zipper properly, or had a pant leg peeking through the bottom of the pant, I arrive 100% dry at my destination!
"Life is for having fun, not propping up emotional cripples!"


Current stable: '08 S4RS Tricolore;  '07 DR-Z400SM;  '04 MINI Cooper S; 

Past stablemates: '02 620ie dark; '06 Yamaha TW200;  '76 Volvo 242

ellingly

Depends how cold we're defining it here. I commute even in the middle of winter here, coldest mornings are below freezing, most around -1 to -3°C (30.2°F -> 26.5°F). Coldest I've ridden here is -10°C (14°F). My commute is 30-40 minutes, speeds up to 120 km/h (70 mi/h).

I do as much layering as I can. I wear the following:
* Full thermal underwear
* Decently warm socks (my snowboarding socks, actually)
* A* SMX3's are the current boots'o'choice. They're ventilated so possibly not the best for riding in winter
* Thin glove liners from a ski shop
* Motorcycling pants & jacket. I tend to swap between a fabric winter jacket (A DriRider Alpine jacket, fully armourned, I have crash tested it, works well) and my A* leather jacket.
* Gloves - some winter DriRider warm gloves. Even have a nifty windscreen wiper on the index fingers, helps if it is wet (usually isn't here).
* Balaclava/neck warmer combo
* 2 or 3 layers on top - thermal underwear, tshirt, maybe a long sleeved tshirt, a windproof fleece that I have for work, and an appropriate jacket. Two layers on the bottom (thermal underwear and pants). If it is super windy I have some goretex overpants I chuck on which cuts out any major wind.

No heated gloves. I get off feeling a touch cold, but no extermites blue, and warm within 2 minutes of sitting down at my desk in the office.
Team Ghetto Racing: motorcycle racing and riding on a budget
2006 Ducati MS2R1000 road | 1973 Suzuki GT250 cafe race | 1982 Yamaha RD250LC race | 1991 Suzuki GSXR750 perpetual project | 1984 Suzuki TS250x vintage enduro | 1997 Honda CT110 postie of death | 1982 Kawasaki KH100 bucket racer

Spider

Listen to Ellingly, he knows cold weather. He lives in a desolate, remote, awful place in Australia. A place so bitterly cold and windy that the Australian people send their politicians there to live....it's THAT nasty.

ellingly

Quote from: Spider on October 24, 2008, 03:57:29 PM
Listen to Ellingly, he knows cold weather. He lives in a desolate, remote, awful place in Australia. A place so bitterly cold and windy that the Australian people send their politicians there to live....it's THAT nasty.
That's not entirely true. It is very rarely windy here!

Rest's true though!

Least it's dryer than Melbourne.
Team Ghetto Racing: motorcycle racing and riding on a budget
2006 Ducati MS2R1000 road | 1973 Suzuki GT250 cafe race | 1982 Yamaha RD250LC race | 1991 Suzuki GSXR750 perpetual project | 1984 Suzuki TS250x vintage enduro | 1997 Honda CT110 postie of death | 1982 Kawasaki KH100 bucket racer

Takster

I just got everything wired up for my new Warm'n'safe jacket and gloves today.

40 degree 30 minute commute to my night job at 70-80 mph.  I was wearing EMS cold weather thermals, the heated jacket, heated gloves, a MESH jacket on top, thermals, jeans, and leather on the bottom, and with the dial at about 7, I was almost unbearably hot.  I kicked it down to about 5, and I was toasty but not sweating.

my only complaint is that the jacket is kind of short... leaves part of my back exposed when I'm in a highway tuck.  Also, the gloves will have to break in quite a bit before they get comfortable.  I'm trying to brainstorm a way to put a MC battery in my backpack for skiing this winter without being dangerous.

Best gear purchase ever.

'09 Monster 696

sfarchie

I love my Dainese lined jacket. I also have a perforated leather jacket when it's not so cold, but the lined jacked it my fav since the lining comes off. The best thing is I was hit, flew about 10' and did my best impression of a runner diving to steal base. My jacket came out unscathed...I wish I could say the same for me.  :'(
Ray
SFaRChie
'10 Streetfighter, '01 KTM Duke II, '09 M1100S (RIP), '08 Vespa GTS 250,'58 Vespa Allstate (RIP), M696 (sold)

extra330

I decided to splurge a little and help out the retail numbers last month.  To stay toasty I wear a Belstaff Mercury jacket (without it's liner) over the Gerbing heated jacket liner. Man I just love the heating coils in the collar. With the heated liner in the jacket ,my core temp stays nice and high so my Belstaff Pioneer pants keep me plenty warm with just a pair of shorts under them. I also use the Gerbing G3 gloves, gotta have toasy hands.
The lasted addition has been an Outdoor Research winds stopper helmet liner. That completes the package by keeping my chin and forhead warm.

Mike

Current ride: 07 S4RS Pearl white
                  84 BMW R100RS
Past rides:
02 ST4S
97 900SSSP
90 Honda VFR 750
90 Suz. DR 350
82 Suz. GS 450