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-   -   Electric heated riding Gloves. Anyone tried them ? (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/camping-equipment-and-all-clothing/electric-heated-riding-gloves-anyone-59300)

*Touring Ted* 21 Sep 2011 22:29

Electric heated riding Gloves. Anyone tried them ?
 
I have no car and ride my bike everyday of the year.

I usually try and escape overseas for the winter but I'm stuck here working for a while and have a miserable 30 minute freezing winter commute coming up.

I suffer for Raynauds Disease in my fingers (no circulation in the cold) and winter riding is VERY painful for me.

I have tried heated grips, muffs, liners and about 10 types of glove. Nothing keeps my fingers warm.

The only thing I haven't tried is electric heated gloves........

Can anyone here tell me about them ??? Do they heat the finger tips ?

Jake 21 Sep 2011 22:59

Hi Ted I have a pair from warm n safe I use them along with the heated jacket Simply put they stop your hands from freezing but in really cold weather I think they still lose to much heat and I have still had numb fingers mind you without them on my hands would have totally frozen and a long time earlier - so put simply they do work but are still a bit limited. If you want to try them well you can borrow mine as I am not riding at the moment for various reasons so your welcome to borrow the gloves, heated jacket and troller for a month or two and give it a go - depending on your size. of course. That way you can make up your own mind. Drop me a PM . Jake.

*Touring Ted* 21 Sep 2011 23:16

Quote:

Originally Posted by adventure950 (Post 349842)
Hi Ted I have a pair from warm n safe I use them along with the heated jacket Simply put they stop your hands from freezing but in really cold weather I think they still lose to much heat and I have still had numb fingers mind you without them on my hands would have totally frozen and a long time earlier - so put simply they do work but are still a bit limited. If you want to try them well you can borrow mine as I am not riding at the moment for various reasons so your welcome to borrow the gloves, heated jacket and troller for a month or two and give it a go - depending on your size. of course. That way you can make up your own mind. Drop me a PM . Jake.

Wow Jake.. That's a very kind offer.

My body is fine with the gear I have but I just might take you up on the offer of the gloves as it gets colder.. :thumbup1:

SprintST 22 Sep 2011 03:51

I've got a pair of Gerbings T5 heated gloves ( Gerbing's Heated Clothing // The World's Warmest Clothing! ), as well as their jacket liner. As Adventure950 said, they keep your fingers from freezing but you won't find yourself turning the heat down too often in really cold weather.

In addition to the T5s I also frequently wear those Spock type waterproof overgloves from Aerostitch Aerostich Triple Digit Rain Covers :: Aerostich/RiderWearHouse Motorcycle Jackets, Suits, Clothing, & Gear which help cut the wind and keep the heat in.

Because I've got three bikes, and ride them all, it made economic sense for me to have one pair of gloves instead of 3 sets of heated grips. Plus, the bikes keep changing so I'd have to keep buying grip heaters.

There's another product from Aerostitch that I considered and that's a wrap around grip heater ( Aerostich Warm Wrap Grips - Heated Grips & Accessories - Rider Comfort - A to B Utilities :: Aerostich/RiderWearHouse Motorcycle Jackets, Suits, Clothing, & Gear ) because of its portability between bikes. Just sayin'. OOOps, I see in your original post that you've already tried the overgrip heaters.

Oh, I have no affiliation with either of the companies mentioned above.

Take Adventure950 up on his offer to loan you the gloves and try them for yourself. That's my best advice.

Good luck. Nobody like riding with frozen digits.

Threewheelbonnie 22 Sep 2011 12:51

Circulation is the key to keeping hands warm, the exact issue Ted has. I usually reccomend a few physical jerks, a good breakfast, not wearing your summer jacket with three jumpers underneath and a decent winter glove/muff/hand guard combo as the way to enjoy winter rides. Electric heat is unreliable, the wires are a pain and the heat tends to be too localised.

If your circulation is bad though electric gloves have got to be the best answer. You could always buy resistance wire and make your own. The only difficult bit is soldering onto NiChrome wire, the trick is to clean it in brake fluid.

Andy

backofbeyond 22 Sep 2011 14:05

Ted, you could try my electric undergloves as well but tbh they're f@cking useless. You do get heat from them but the cabeling drives you to distraction, the wires dig into your skin and they're really uncomfortable. I (genuinely) prefer cold hands, although I don't have the circulation probs you do. The ones I've got put most of the heat on the back of the hand (in the knuckles area) and not much on the fingertips.

BruceP 22 Sep 2011 14:40

Quote:

Originally Posted by *Touring Ted* (Post 349838)
I have no car and ride my bike everyday of the year.

I usually try and escape overseas for the winter but I'm stuck here working for a while and have a miserable 30 minute freezing winter commute coming up.

I suffer for Reynards Disease in my fingers (no circulation in the cold) and winter riding is VERY painful for me.

I have tried heated grips, muffs, liners and about 10 types of glove. Nothing keeps my fingers warm.

The only thing I haven't tried is electric heated gloves........

Can anyone here tell me about them ??? Do they heat the finger tips ?

My brother in law has that as well, he uses gloves with a small battery when out walking etc.

Try the Raynauds forum, The Raynaud's Association , see what people use for cycling.

And add muffs as well, they stop wind chill.

Oh, and thanks for reminding me I am about to see my 1st winter in nearly 2 years :-(

Jake 22 Sep 2011 15:45

Ted my cloves set up is such that they plug into my heated jacket wrist connectors and I do not have the wires to use the heated gloves by themselves - but any Electical shop could supply it - you would need two DC coax cables one to reach each glove from your waist area of your jacket where they plug into the heat troller. As for comfort the warm n safe gloves - wires do not cut into your hands nor do they get hot spots - If you do use the gloves alone with a wiring kit then they will get pretty warm as I say mine work as an extension of the jacket so the jacket draws a lot of heat however you can operate the gloves seperate of the jacket but still need to wear the jacket for the power connection with my current set up (bit limiting really).

Like all things electrical they can let you down and probably will at the worst time they can, so if you were going travelling it would be best to have a secondary backup system. I find wearing the heated jacket makes you feel comfortable but actually makes you colder as your body is so warm it lets out heat instead of closing itself down to preserve heat so when in very cold climates heated gear is not the answer - mad as it sounds.

TravellingStrom 22 Sep 2011 19:46

Just a quick note on electric gloves, they only heat the OUTSIDE of the fingers and hands not the inside. For that you will need heated grips.

But having used the Gerbings gloves and the CLS Heat grips, they keep my hands toasty :)

*Touring Ted* 22 Sep 2011 20:02

Quote:

Originally Posted by TravellingStrom (Post 349933)
Just a quick note on electric gloves, they only heat the OUTSIDE of the fingers and hands not the inside. For that you will need heated grips.

But having used the Gerbings gloves and the CLS Heat grips, they keep my hands toasty :)

I've tried loads of heated grips. Great for keeping your palms warm !!

They do nothing for me really. :freezing:

Redboots 22 Sep 2011 20:45

Warm & Safe for me. Water/windproof. Also use their jacket liner.
Works a treat. Toasty.
I have had white fingers for years in anything below 15c and these work for me.
I use dash mounted controls.

As a bonus, Mike Coan who runs Warm & Safe is always there to answer any questions and has sent me an FOC "troller" after I buggered mine up.

Cheers,
John

*Touring Ted* 22 Sep 2011 20:57

Does anyone know of a good UK supplier for these 'Safe n warm" gloves ?

I think I need to make an investment....

Jake 23 Sep 2011 18:32

Ted I bought mine from [url=http://www.warmnsafe.eu/] excellent service and no difference in price - I had problems with the uk dealer at that time - that dealer might have changed now though I do not know.

bugsy 23 Sep 2011 18:40

Gerbings - heated jaket wiv heated gloves too
top hot banana's! :thumbup1:

dan66 24 Sep 2011 21:58

Years back when I was despatching in London I used heated inner gloves with a pair of leather summer gloves and handlebar muffs.

The wires took a bit of getting used to, some parts of the hand were warmer than other parts and the cables and plugs took a bit of imagination to get right but the heated inner/thin glove/muff combination worked a treat.

I would recommend them.

Dan

Mehmet Zeki Avar 24 Sep 2011 23:39

whatever the problem is with your bike or accessories,if you are in the area, please come to our club....certainly it will be over...presently we have a French couple friends at the club who were planning to sell the transalp, now the bike is air freightened to Hong Kong as he is in love with his bike again and wants to ride it in China after we made some changes.
Our club is the right address of exchanging experiences in İstanbul and supporting adventure riders to Asia..So every adventure rider is kindly invited to our club...First be our guest here then please send your thanks to HU..

Wish you all the best...
mehmet zeki.

Selous 25 Sep 2011 02:43

Quote:

Originally Posted by *Touring Ted* (Post 349838)
I have no car and ride my bike everyday of the year.

I usually try and escape overseas for the winter but I'm stuck here working for a while and have a miserable 30 minute freezing winter commute coming up.

I suffer for Raynauds Disease in my fingers (no circulation in the cold) and winter riding is VERY painful for me.

I have tried heated grips, muffs, liners and about 10 types of glove. Nothing keeps my fingers warm.

The only thing I haven't tried is electric heated gloves........

Can anyone here tell me about them ??? Do they heat the finger tips ?

Hi Ted I have Gerbings gloves 2 pairs lifetime garentee, they warm up the entire hand, you can purchase a yemp control as well, the down side i find is when on M way no probs ditto A roads but town they get quite warm for me, so i got the temp guide now will tr that out this year if weather bad enough.

Dodger 25 Sep 2011 20:11

Warm n safe gloves plus a set of handlebar muffs will do the trick .But for a thirty minute commute the handle bar muffs might be overkill .
Warm n safe also have a remote temp controller which works fine with a jacket liner and gloves.

[ warm n safe give a discount for HU members ]:thumbup1:

farqhuar 26 Sep 2011 04:47

I suffer from the same syndrome Ted and have been disappointed with electric grips as it is my fingers, not my palms, which suffers from the cold.

I purchased a second-hand set of Gerbings gloves with a temperature controller from US eBay 2 years back and they are absolutely brilliant. They heat the whole hand and get extremely hot if you don't turn them down - I guarantee they will keep your hands comfortable. :thumbup1:

Honestly, they are the best bike related purchase I have made in 40 years of motorcycling.

Wheelie 5 Sep 2012 22:52

I live in Norway and have for the last two winters commuted every day, even in snow storms on the highway (but too many close calls and one spill, and I am reconsidering taking public transport on icy and snowy days this coming winter).

Anyways, I have a gerbing jacket and gloves. I get so toasty I have to turn it way down even if I only wear a dress shirt under my jacket on the coldest days. Many days I only wear the gloves... Or the jacket... But the combination rocks! The commute is 30 minutes, but I have ridden two hours in a snow storm... I wish my wind scrren and visor had vipers and defrosters, then it would be perfect! Wind deflectors on the handlebar should make a huge difference, as will a wind screen...

My new bike has heated grips, but have not really tried them out in cold weather. But my tests this summer tells me that they will not come even clise to the heated gloves.

TravellingStrom 5 Sep 2012 23:52

Quote:

Originally Posted by Wheelie (Post 391704)
My new bike has heated grips, but have not really tried them out in cold weather. But my tests this summer tells me that they will not come even clise to the heated gloves.

You will find they complement each other. The Gerbings gloves only heat the outside of the hands and fingers, while the heated grips keeps your hands from getting cold and cramped.

As a windshield for the hands, I would consider Hippo Hands for overall wind/rain protection as the Gerbings to get wet with time

Cheers from China
TravellingStrom

roger2002 6 Sep 2012 05:16

I have Gerbings heated gloves (rechargable battery operated 7.2 vdc) that were the best investment I've made for keeping me warm in the cold. I also have heated grips on my V-Strom that do very little to help. Having both now I realize that if I had to chose one, I'd go with the heated gloves because they do so much more than heated grips. The heat is concentrated on the back of the hands and the outside of the fingers, at -10 celsius I sweat if I have them set over 50%. With heated grips I was cold if it was close to freezing if I was out for more than 30 minutes. With any battery operated gear though you have to have back up! If it fails, you're screwed without cold weather gear.

spollock 18 Sep 2012 00:24

Raynauds
 
I, too, have Raynauds and get cold white hands even with heated grips. But with Gerbings on full I can ride in below freezing weather with comfort.

Toyark 2 Oct 2012 19:39

the trick Ted is to get your hands out of the airflow.
I use those bike Tucano Urbano handlebar muffs . Null Points for elegance but 100% effective. In winter and in freezing rain I ride with no gloves on just those fitted to the bike.
No more drained batteries, no more squidgy inner liners of 'waterproof' gloves which bunch up when damp.

pic from website- fitting mine back to bike next week :thumbup1: around £46 a pair so way cheaper than heated Gerbings heated jacket and gloves which are great but expensive (which I have but not used since I bought those!)

Miniemojaz 2 Oct 2012 22:45

Useful thank you all

Wheelie 3 Oct 2012 14:21

There is one drawback of relying on electric heating - it doesn't keep you warm off the bike, i.e.


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