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Keeping my neck warm

Started by Grendel, March 10, 2011, 09:37:50 PM

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Grendel

Hi, I've search other threads and none of them quiet answer my question.

what's everyone's thoughts on keeping their neck warm during winter (I'm in Oz, so winter is approaching).

Balaclava?
Turtle neck?
Scarf?
neck gaiter?

I thought about getting a scarf, but i'm not sure which one.  maybe a big hanky tied around my neck like the HD riders wear?


Scotzman

I bought a nice neck warmer here in the states at Bass Pro shop that tightens around the neck. I've worn balacalavas, but made lens fog up easier.
"Get your haggis right here. Chopped heart and lungs boiled in a wee sheep's stomach.
Tastes as good as it sounds. Good for what ales you."

stopintime

Keeping the wind off the skin is key [moto]

For me, that means a wind proof neck gaitor.
I tighten my jacket collar over it after I pull it high enough to allow the helmet to go over, then I put on the helmet making a wind proof seal around my neck. Then I pull the front enough to not cover nose and mouth.

Like this
http://www.motorcycle-superstore.com/1/1/360/12134/ITEM/Comfort-In-Action-Bike-Pit.aspx
252,000 km/seventeen years - loving it

Grendel

Quote from: Scotzman on March 10, 2011, 11:05:14 PM
.... I've worn balacalavas, but made lens fog up easier.

thanks, wouldn't have even thought that would happen.


Turf

Rev'it balaclava is AMAZING, if fog is an issue a good wipe down of your face shield with anti fog stuff with cure that.
I may not have gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.

Raux

I use a military gator. gives me options from just my neck, to over chin and under helmet to over nose and high in helmet
only problem is it isn't waterproof

Privateer

My fast lap is your sighting lap.

Heath

I use this..
http://www.cyclegear.com/spgm.cfm?L1=5000&L2=&L3=&L4=&item=FTL_ANT24-BZ
but it is hell to get it not to slip down when I am putting the helmet on and get it adjusted just right. It does great at blocking wind though when I do have it adjusted right.

I see now they make a Balaclava and want to give that a try.
http://www.cyclegear.com/spgm.cfm?L1=5000&L2=&L3=&L4=&item=FTL_ANT22-BZ
2007 Ducati Monster S4RT
2006 Ducati Monster S2R800 Dark [sold]

Jarvicious

I use a combination balaclava/neck gaiter.  I tried one of the gaiters alone, but like Heath said it's a pain to keep adjusted properly if your helmet also fits properly. 

One of my older helmets is a bit to big for regular use, so it's officially my cold weather helmet.  The venting sucked on it, so it works out perfectly.  It goes a little something like this:

Balaclava
Jacket, zipped up around the bottom of the balaclava
IZ_ fleece neck gaiter (don't wear this alone, it doesn't protect from the wind well enough)
Helmet
Adjust gaiter up into bottom helmet opening to seal off drafty parts. 

I rode 120 miles at night in 22 degree weather with the above setup.  Having a high collar jacket helps too.  Just remember, your visor WILL fog up, so use the anti fog stuff and keep it open a crack at stops if you can just to let your lid breathe. 
We're liberated by the hearts that imprison us.  We're taken hostage by the ones that we break.

Timmy Tucker

Quote from: Jarvicious on March 12, 2011, 04:48:22 PM
I rode 120 miles at night in 22 degree weather ...

make the beast with two backs. That.
I rode 35 miles home from my cousins one night when it was about 40 degrees and I though I was gonna die before I got home. But, my likeness to a sandy vagina is well documented across the internets. Plus, my cold weather gear consisted of a summer mesh jacket, jeans and a very thin bandana that wouldn't cover my nose/mouth and tuck in my jacket at the same time.

Ended up getting one of these. It's windproof, waterproof and only $13. Haven't had a chance to try it yet though:

1999 M750 - "Piggy"
2007 S4RS

J5

i'm waiting for the americans to say that you are a pussy and winter in aus is nothing ;)

turtle neck ftw , keep the cold air off the skin works wonders

they are cheap too

the one that i have is like a balaclava , the head section is thin so doesnt affect the helmet fitment and then thick around the neck

wear a good jacket and gloves and keep the cold out and it works well
i dont care if you have been a mechanic for 10 years doing something for a long time does not make you good at it, take my gf for an example shes been walking for 28 years and still manages to fall over all the time.

seevtsaab

Quote from: Jarvicious on March 12, 2011, 04:48:22 PM

I rode 120 miles at night in 22 degree weather with the above setup. 

First of all, Jarivicious, you are a manly man.
What did you do for your hands? Wet socks?

Also, the sexual innuendo in, and suggested by, this thread is making my head spin. Especially seeing
that picture of that sexy villian, Timmy Tucker, who knew?

My contribution, simple Turtle Fur Fleece, which fills the gaps but blocks the wind, not so much.

Jarvicious

Heated gloves are the number one thing I can recommend for cold weather riding.  Period. 

Plus, I was wearing a full set of thermal underwear, top and bottom, jeans, over pants, and my rain pants just to keep the wind off.  Cold is one thing when you're standing still, but it's the wind that's going to get you at 70 miles an hour.

Top was the thermals, a thin outer shell type jacket, my riding jacket (I could fit the other jacket under my riding jacket because it's too big normally) with quilted liner, and my rain jacket over that.  Fleece neck gaiter, balaclava, helmet. 
We're liberated by the hearts that imprison us.  We're taken hostage by the ones that we break.

ducpainter

Quote from: seevtsaab on March 13, 2011, 07:23:17 AM
First of all, Jarivicious, you are a manly man friggen nuts..
<snip>
Fixed. ;D
"Once you accept that a child on the autistic spectrum experiences the world in
a completely different way than you, you will be open to understand how that
 perspective
    is even more amazing than yours."
    To realize the value of nine  months:
    Ask a mother who gave birth to a stillborn.
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