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Biggish AL 14 Dec 2009 14:16

heated clothing
 
Hi
Looking for some heated clothing, can anyone make any recommendtions?

Cheers

AL

TravellingStrom 14 Dec 2009 14:57

I can say that although expensive to buy, the Gerbing gear is excellent,and with a life time warranty on the electrics, you can't go wrong.

They have been keeping me like toast in Alaska and soon I am sure they will keep me warm in the Andes of Peru :)

Cheers
TS

Motivator 14 Dec 2009 15:15

heated clothing
 
Hi Travellingstrom,

I`m planning on doing the Pan Am starting next June in Alaska and was wondering about the need for something heated (particularly my hands) - In your experience would you recommend it or is it just a "nice thing to have"

TravellingStrom 14 Dec 2009 15:30

Well, being a Queenslander from the tropics, I had everything I could that was going to keep me warm.

For instance, I have heated grips, but the backs of the hands get very cold, this isi where the Gerbing heated gloves comes in handy, they just heat the back of the hands.

I also bought heated socks, because the boots I am using are designed for summer weather and are not waterproof. Having the elkectric pants and jacket and socks and gloves was a real treat, it enabled me to ride all day from Coldfoot to Deadhorse and return, without being uncomfortable.

I also had on thermal underwear and all the clothing I could fit on.

Coming from the cold of England, you may not need to go to that exteme.

So, to answer the question, I personally would not be able to ride without heated grips, but many others can.

Cheers
TS

dlh62c 14 Dec 2009 17:02

+1 on Gerbings.

The fit is important. It has to fit snug. Nothing but a long sleeve tshirt is worn under it. The Gerbings also makes for a good light weight jacket when off the bike.

A temperature controller is a plus.

daryl

guzzibob 14 Dec 2009 17:05

I swear by heated grips, mainly because they mean I can wear thin summer weight gloves from March to Nov in the UK - I've got them on 3 bikes, which I use all year round, and have found the Oxford ones to be the most robust. Agree that they don't heat the back of your hands, but I have big bark busters on my XT which keep the breeze off, and a reasonable fairing on the Daytona, so ok there too. I have tried Gerbing gloves - great product with a lifetime warranty on the wiring, but I can't be doing with having more wires from me to the bike. One tip with any electrical devices: although it is tempting to quickly wire them to the battery, don't!! You WILL forget and flatten the battery, so make the extra effort to wire through the ignition. Even the new Oxford 'smart' switch doesn't seem to cut out soon enough to save the battery enough for starting - voice of experience!
I've also had a Gialli vest, but to be honest found it too hot, and the heat adjuster didn't really alter the heat. I lent it to a mate, who said he nearly cooked himself, so it's not just me! Might be good in Alaska, though...

Dodger 14 Dec 2009 17:43

Warm n Safe
 
I can recommend Warm n Safe heated gear.

I was up in the Yukon in June and July and didn't have heated gear .
When the sun shines it's beautiful ,but it gets cold damn quick as well .
As soon as I got back I ordered a jacket liner and gloves .
Best thing yet !

I haven't tried heated grips ,but the gloves alone seem great .

The great thing about them is that you don't have to dress up like the Michelin man to stay warm ., just turn it on and you are warm instantly.
They pack small when you don't need them .

You will get a discount for being a HU member at Warm n Safe and they have "seconds" at an extremely good price .I bought 2 liners and couldn't find a thing wrong with them .:thumbup1:

I haven't needed heated trousers or boots .
Just make sure your boots are waterproof if you are going north !

PS. I went to the WnS website ,they now have a remote heat controller ,so that's few less wires to fiddle with
I decided it would make a good Xmas present [for me] .I'll let you know how it works out .

Margus 26 Dec 2009 08:37

Another vote for Gerbings.

I did lot of homework before buying ours. Although they aren't cheap like many alternatives now available but their real advantage that they really are super-durable by design. Hard to wear out. Gerbings has really long experience on perfecting the design (now making over 20 years of heated clothing?).

I know guys having over 20 years old Gerbings that are completely worn out but still work!

For RTW or extra long trips use I'd recommend the full cover jacket, not the vest tho. The one that also heats your neck and arms. Keeps your arms flexible on those extra cold riding days and saves your neck from that cold biting wind that wants to get inside from your neck area under the helmet.

http://www.her-motorcycle.com/images...cket-Liner.jpg

We used ours in most of the South-American countries (although mis-conception says S-Am is warm - WRONG! Most of the time you ride high up in the Andes mountains, we froze in riding Ecuador on the very equator line!), let alone northern North-America, even riding in Australia we needed it a lot!

We combine it with Gerbing's heat adjuster (if possible, don't buy any other than Gerbings regulator - although they all work in the beginning, most others will give up in a relatively short time and start giving problems - heard from many people reporting too many problems with not-so-known heat regulation relays). You can adjust your own comfort temperature - makes you really smile on those cold days when you hate to do long distances on a bike!

Good thing our GS has a proper 700W generator, we're two up RTW, so the vests take around 150W together, add heated grips and powerful lights and most of the bikes (with around 250-400W generators) start to have problems with keeping battery recharged and bike running - so check your generator spec if doing 2-up with heated clothing.

Redboots 26 Dec 2009 10:43

Warm n Safe
 
I'm with Dodger... +1 for Warm and safe.
I have my controllers dash mounted. Great gear, and great service.

John

jennabusa 28 Dec 2009 19:19

Gerbings,just make sure you wear a very thin shirt underneath.
9 english winters so far.:thumbup1:

Triumph5ta 19 Jan 2010 17:01

Exo heated clothing
 
I have an Exo heated waistcoat. Warm as toast. Regular use for over 3 years.
Very good customer service, I loaned it to my partner and therefore needed another wiring harness to attach to her bike, I phoned Exo and they put one in the post free of charge.
StormRider Heated Vest - EXO² Heated Clothing and Heated Motorcycle Clothing UK

Tim Cullis 19 Jan 2010 19:11

Real cheapskates should look here.

trophydave 19 Jan 2010 20:33

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim Cullis (Post 272482)
Real cheapskates should look here.

I am a real cheapskate,that is very similar to what I have:mchappy:

colebatch 20 Jan 2010 02:37

Exo2 +1
 
I use an EXO2 heated vest and gloves in Siberia. :thumbup1:

IanC 13 Feb 2010 22:14

I can't recommend Gerbings too highly! I went up to Prudhoe back in Sep 06 (everyone told me too late). So I bought the whole kaboosh - trousers, socks, sleeved jacket and gloves. Only ever used (and kept) the last two! And the jacket's a very nice one to wear out in the evening as well....

I explain it to the unconverted (bikers and non-bikers) that the difference is like having or not having a heater in a 4-wheeler in winter. And really nice to put your heated jacket on if you become a bit damp (= REALLY cold).

One point though, is I have had a controller fail. And was advised that the Warm-n-Safe controller's a lot better quality - so that's what I now have.

BTW I have another spare brand-new set of Gerbings heated gloves if anyone is interested? They were about £140 when I bought them.

steveindenmark 14 Feb 2010 18:22

Can someone answer a question regarding the Gerbing jackets please?

When you get them do they come supplied with an electric chord that attaches to the battery and then you plug the jacket to that by male/female jack plugs?

Steve

IanC 14 Feb 2010 20:21

Steve

Yes I think they do. But you really ought to get a controller, so's you can switch off/on and regulate the heat as you're going along. You could roast otherwise! It will come with a male and female socket, so could be inserted afterwards. The Gerbings sockets are all the same type (also same as Warm n Safe, not sure about others).

So you'd wire in a female socket to the bike anyway normally, and may need to do this via a relay (if you want it switched), or could I guess do it direct from the battery. For instance a standard 1200GS accessory socket won't provide enough current, not sure about other bikes. The Gerbings in particular uses quite a lot.

Not sure I've explained very well, but if not please ask!

Capo Sakke 14 Feb 2010 20:23

Quote:

Originally Posted by steveindenmark (Post 276602)
Can someone answer a question regarding the Gerbing jackets please?

When you get them do they come supplied with an electric chord that attaches to the battery and then you plug the jacket to that by male/female jack plugs?

Steve

Yes the do but you cone need extension cords also.

By the way we tested four different heated cloths Gebring included non of electrical ones worked properly only liquid one was working. :thumbdown:

Actually electric ones were working couple of hours and then some connections was malfunctioning or burnt.

We did 1639 km / 23.7 h and cross Arctic Circle twice during coldest time of the year in Finland 5 - 6 Feb 2010.

So test conditions can't be better than that. :funmeteryes:


You can read more on my web page

But no problem we were prepared to do without any heated clothes so we survived.

TravellingStrom 15 Feb 2010 02:18

What you get with the kit is a basic set of leads and an off/switch but this as mentioned can mean hot or cold so yes, fork out for th econtroller.

Wire it direct to the battery with the leads provided, it has it's own fuse and you are good to go, the lead is long enough to come out under the seat, but if you need to, get an extension.

Cheers
TS

Chizz 23 Feb 2010 13:07

Just bought a biketek jacket (from motorworks) to use on the ride down to the northern mini meet. I was very very impressed -9 on the A9 down from Inverness, but kept snug and warm with just a base layer and normal bike jacket.

An an easy to use 3 heat position switch. Early days yet so admitedly cannot comment on durability but so far I would say that this is a quality product-

Chizz


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