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riding gear
Posted: Thu May 11, 2000 3:01 pm
by Thomas Keener
Another brand I'm surprised hasn't been mentioned is Motoport. Many people
think it's comparable to the 'Stich. They used to advertise in the mags,
but I haven't seen one recently. If anyone's interested, I'll dig it up.
TomK
riding gear
Posted: Mon Feb 05, 2001 8:35 am
by William Whalen
Need Info from the group,
I am looking for riding gear and need info and recommendations on a few
products. I do mostly Adventure Tour type of riding so while I do some dirt
riding I spend most of my time on the street. I am looking for jacket,
pants, and boots that I can wear on the street and also dual sport riding.
I am on a budget so a Darien type of jacket and pants are out of the
question.
I have found a good deal on MSR ISDE Gore-Tex Pants and MSR ISDE Jacket.
The boots that I am looking at are the Sidi Strada. Any info or
recommendations of these and other moderate priced riding gear will be
greatly appreciated.
Bill Whalen
Central Florida
92 KLR-650 A6
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riding gear
Posted: Tue Feb 06, 2001 5:33 pm
by InWoods13@aol.com
In a message dated 2/5/01 9:35:59 AM Eastern Standard Time,
whalenwp@... writes:
<< I am looking for riding gear and need info and recommendations on a few
products. I do mostly Adventure Tour type of riding so while I do some dirt
riding I spend most of my time on the street. I am looking for jacket,
pants, and boots that I can wear on the street and also dual sport riding.
I am on a budget so a Darien type of jacket and pants are out of the
question.
Bill,
I've been looking around as well. Can't find much fault in the Tourmaster
Cortech line of jackets. Bought a cortech sport for Mrs.Scott last year,
(190.00) It's well made/good armor in critical areas/reasonably
rainproof/looks sharp/shes not yet tried in 100 degree heat, no complaints
so far.
At this point, light leather with lots of zippered vents have been working
for me in the summer/winter. Picked up some Olympia Sport gauntlets awhile
back & feel good about that protection, perfect for Florida as they stay
reasonably cool in the summer yet will offer protection from elements in
winter here, can't imagine much better all around hand protection for the
buck. (look at a pic of them, you'll see what I mean.)
I'll be getting a cortech of some sort soon, not sure whether it'll be the
regular cortech 3/4 or the new cortech 3/4 lite. (I've no real world feedback
on the lite, they've got both in stock at Seminole Powersports if you'd like
to see first hand.)
Have looked at some of the enduro type jackets (MSR, O'Neal, Moose) & it
looks like you'll sacrifice some abrasion resistance compared to a reasonably
priced, 3/4 street jacket. I'm kindof set on the cortech, but will end up
going with the best outer layer of skin that I can afford.
Scott
A14 "thunderdog"
XT225 "project of projects"
riding gear
Posted: Thu Dec 30, 2004 8:29 am
by beggijonsson
Hi, and thanks for all your help,
As I am new to Dual Sport and I just got my KLR, and getting ready
to gear up for the right equipment, I was hoping if I can get some
advices from you folks with long time experiance, I am looking for
the ideal riding gear, boots, helmet, jacket, pants,gloves, and so
on. I am riding in Iceland in summertime where it rains alot.
Thanks.
riding gear
Posted: Thu Dec 30, 2004 10:36 am
by Bogdan Swider
> I am looking for the ideal riding gear, boots, helmet, jacket, pants,gloves,
and so
> on. I am riding in Iceland in summertime where it rains alot.
> Thanks.
There are many options and many opinions. I've gotten good service from my
Aerostitch suit - very popular in the US and Canada. It's Gortex lined and
offers crash protection.
http://www.aerostich.com/riderwearhouse.store I'm
on my 4th pair of Vasque Sundowner shoes - also Gortex lined. Not as good
protection as moto-specific boots but will allow you to hike when off the
bike. Iceland must be a great place to ride.
Bogdan
riding gear
Posted: Thu Dec 30, 2004 5:36 pm
by kdxkawboy@aol.com
In a message dated 2004-12-30 6:32:16 AM Pacific Standard Time,
beggijonsson@... writes:
>
> Hi, and thanks for all your help,
> As I am new to Dual Sport and I just got my KLR, and getting ready
> to gear up for the right equipment, I was hoping if I can get some
> advices from you folks with long time experiance, I am looking for
> the ideal riding gear, boots, helmet, jacket, pants,gloves, and so
> on. I am riding in Iceland in summertime where it rains alot.
> Thanks.
>
>
>
For pants I'd recommend the Answer Ride pant. They are over the boot and
waterproof (gortex clone) with good size front patch pockets for your wallet. Most
any outfit making MX style pants has a product like the Ride pant so there is
a lot of selection.
For a jacket you definitely want something that uses gortex, or a gortex
clone, to provide waterproofing. Once again most any outfit making MX type riding
pants offers a DS or Enduro jacket that would fit the bill. At the same time
most any good synthetic steer jacket will do just as good with the added
benefit of somebody armour. I use a Joe Rocket Tahoe (its been discontinued) street
jacket for my trail riding.
Gloves and boots can be a personal choice. Boots you can go with a true MX
boot, or a slimed down version type adventuring boot. You can also get by with a
good, stout workboot. I grew up working in the woods and found that my old
caulks, when the woods sole was replaced with a flat sportsman sole, made an
excellent DS boot that you could still go hiking in.
For a helmet, the best of the best these days is the Arai XD. Its an off road
helmet with a face shield. Off road it flows as much air as any full face off
road helmet design. On the highway you just flip down the face shield. And
you have visor for those days you are riding into the sun. Otherwise, it's you
choice of rather to go with a full face road helmet and less air flow, knowing
the face shield is vulnerable to any sort of fall or you go with a full face
off road design and goggles knowing you loose the protection of the lexan face
shield when being pelted.
Pat
G'ville, Nv
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
riding gear
Posted: Fri Dec 31, 2004 3:27 pm
by John Biccum
I was in Tokyo over Thanksgiving holdiday and spent some time trolling
motorcycle shops. I noticed a Shoei dual sport helmet for sale in Tokyo, it
was very "XD-like". It had neither Snell nor DOT stickers on it. I also
saw this helmet on a few Japanese riders, but I have never seen them here in
the States. There was also another brand in several of the Tokyo motorcycle
shops that offered a similar dual sport helmet but I did not recognise the
brand. It too had neither Snell nor DOT stickers on it.
It only a guess but I suspect that Shoei will sell their dual sport helmet
here after it makes it thru DOT and Snell testing.
----- Original Message -----
From:
To: ; DSN_klr650@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, December 30, 2004 15:36
Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Riding Gear
>
> In a message dated 2004-12-30 6:32:16 AM Pacific Standard Time,
> beggijonsson@... writes:
>
>>
>> Hi, and thanks for all your help,
>> As I am new to Dual Sport and I just got my KLR, and getting ready
>> to gear up for the right equipment, I was hoping if I can get some
>> advices from you folks with long time experiance, I am looking for
>> the ideal riding gear, boots, helmet, jacket, pants,gloves, and so
>> on. I am riding in Iceland in summertime where it rains alot.
>> Thanks.
>>
>>
>>
>
> For pants I'd recommend the Answer Ride pant. They are over the boot and
> waterproof (gortex clone) with good size front patch pockets for your
> wallet. Most
> any outfit making MX style pants has a product like the Ride pant so there
> is
> a lot of selection.
>
> For a jacket you definitely want something that uses gortex, or a gortex
> clone, to provide waterproofing. Once again most any outfit making MX type
> riding
> pants offers a DS or Enduro jacket that would fit the bill. At the same
> time
> most any good synthetic steer jacket will do just as good with the added
> benefit of somebody armour. I use a Joe Rocket Tahoe (its been
> discontinued) street
> jacket for my trail riding.
>
> Gloves and boots can be a personal choice. Boots you can go with a true MX
> boot, or a slimed down version type adventuring boot. You can also get by
> with a
> good, stout workboot. I grew up working in the woods and found that my old
> caulks, when the woods sole was replaced with a flat sportsman sole, made
> an
> excellent DS boot that you could still go hiking in.
>
> For a helmet, the best of the best these days is the Arai XD. Its an off
> road
> helmet with a face shield. Off road it flows as much air as any full face
> off
> road helmet design. On the highway you just flip down the face shield. And
> you have visor for those days you are riding into the sun. Otherwise, it's
> you
> choice of rather to go with a full face road helmet and less air flow,
> knowing
> the face shield is vulnerable to any sort of fall or you go with a full
> face
> off road design and goggles knowing you loose the protection of the lexan
> face
> shield when being pelted.
>
> Pat
> G'ville, Nv
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
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>
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riding gear
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 11:55 am
by art art
I have been riding with some buddies for the last year, a couple of the guys have went out and gotten riding pants and jerseys and jackets. I have been riding in Levi s long sleeve t-shirts and a wind breaker jacket. For shoes I have been wearing leather construction boots. Probably 90% of my riding is on forest roads and desert trails.
My question is how many dirt riding guys out there are wearing the same kind of clothes I am? Am I making a big mistake by not getting true dual sport riding gear?
And lastly, a couple of us are 300Lb guys, which makes it hard to find MEN size gear. Does anyone know of a place to get 4X jerseys, jackets and 52" waist pants?
Thanks
---------------------------------
Yahoo! Photos Showcase holiday pictures in hardcover
Photo Books. You design it and we ll bind it!
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
riding gear
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 12:34 pm
by Arden Kysely
One of these days you'll take a fall and wish you were wearing riding
clothes. On my last get-off my padded jacket and pants saved me from
elbow, shoulder, knee, and hip damage. It's your body, but at 300
pounds you must hit pretty hard. One good knee-to-rock smack is all
it will take to put you out of commission for a long time. Sorry,
can't help you with sizing--you'd make two of me.
__Arden
--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, art art wrote:
>
> I have been riding with some buddies for the last year, a couple
of the guys have went out and gotten riding pants and jerseys and
jackets. I have been riding in Levi's long sleeve t-shirts and a
wind breaker jacket. For shoes I have been wearing leather
construction boots. Probably 90% of my riding is on forest roads and
desert trails.
>
> My question is how many dirt riding guys out there are wearing
the same kind of clothes I am? Am I making a big mistake by not
getting true dual sport riding gear?
> And lastly, a couple of us are 300Lb guys, which makes it hard to
find MEN size gear. Does anyone know of a place to get 4X jerseys,
jackets and 52" waist pants?
>
> Thanks
>
>
>
>
> ---------------------------------
> Yahoo! Photos Showcase holiday pictures in hardcover
> Photo Books. You design it and we'll bind it!
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
riding gear
Posted: Thu Jan 12, 2006 1:08 pm
by Douglas Bouley
I'm pretty good sized, but mostly a road rider. I agree that it doesn't
take much to break stuff when you fall on hard things, even at lowish speed.
Broke 2 ribs once at about 5 mph falling on a hard thing.
Don't know about jerseys and stuff, but First Gear makes some good
grande-sized street gear.
Doug
Arden Kysely wrote:
>One of these days you'll take a fall and wish you were wearing riding
>clothes. On my last get-off my padded jacket and pants saved me from
>elbow, shoulder, knee, and hip damage. It's your body, but at 300
>pounds you must hit pretty hard. One good knee-to-rock smack is all
>it will take to put you out of commission for a long time. Sorry,
>can't help you with sizing--you'd make two of me.
>
>__Arden
>
>--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, art art wrote:
>
>
>> I have been riding with some buddies for the last year, a couple
>>
>>
>of the guys have went out and gotten riding pants and jerseys and
>jackets. I have been riding in Levi's long sleeve t-shirts and a
>wind breaker jacket. For shoes I have been wearing leather
>construction boots. Probably 90% of my riding is on forest roads and
>desert trails.
>
>
>>
>> My question is how many dirt riding guys out there are wearing
>>
>>
>the same kind of clothes I am? Am I making a big mistake by not
>getting true dual sport riding gear?
>
>
>> And lastly, a couple of us are 300Lb guys, which makes it hard to
>>
>>
>find MEN size gear. Does anyone know of a place to get 4X jerseys,
>jackets and 52" waist pants?
>
>
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]