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Topic: Good touring gear? (Read 6337 times)
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Hotbrakes
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Good touring gear?
«
on:
August 16, 2011, 11:11:52 AM »
I've done the miles and now I want to look the part. I've got Joe Rocket Alter Ego, pretty much junk, Shift Streetfighter SS that would be scary to crash in (very thin material), various cotton based riding pants, Shift leather jackets (too hot), Shift Hybrid pants (great but too hot), a couple Alpinestar race suits, Cortech HRX jacket and pants(that don't fit) and the jacket is a bit big with too much going on. I think that's about everything in my closet.
What I'm looking for is a 3/4 length jacket, solid pants, or suit with good protection (CE), heavyduty, waterproofish (nothing truly is), and usable for whatever time of year I decide to get on the bike and not turn around for a few days. I realize that this could be a costly gear purchase and I want to get it right. Aerostich is a bit too simple looking, Teiz too busy, BMW stuff looks great but costs as much as some of the bikes I own.
Right now I'm lost. The stealerships only stock junk street gear, BMW only has gear that requires a loan, and the internet has all kinds of weird 600, 400, denier, polyester, nylon, cordura crap.
So what gear takes everyone on their adventures that holds up to hot weather, cold weather, wet weather, crashing, etc.?
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Good touring gear?
«
on:
August 16, 2011, 11:11:52 AM »
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Justin
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #1 on:
August 16, 2011, 12:00:00 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 11:11:52 AM
What I'm looking for is a 3/4 length jacket, solid pants, or suit with good protection (CE), heavyduty, waterproofish (nothing truly is), and usable for whatever time of year I decide to get on the bike and not turn around for a few days. I realize that this could be a costly gear purchase and I want to get it right. Aerostich is a bit too simple looking, Teiz too busy, BMW stuff looks great but costs as much as some of the bikes I own.
Firstgear all the way IMO if you want waterproof. Their gear is always top notch. Olympia AST is another option if you want year round comfort. The jackets do seep in prolonged rain around the massive zippers - but those massive zippers also keep you cool in the hotter months, so it's a trade off.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #2 on:
August 16, 2011, 12:05:57 PM »
Perforated leather. Carry raingear...
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Hotbrakes
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #3 on:
August 16, 2011, 12:42:42 PM »
Quote from: Kootenanny on August 16, 2011, 12:05:57 PM
Perforated leather. Carry raingear...
I've got thousands of miles in leathers, and am a big fan. But when you're not on the bike as often occurs while touring (fuel, meals, chillaxing) it is brutal. I want textile pajama like comfort. If someone could take a flight suit and beef it up I would be in heaven. Looks like a Teiz is in my cart and I think I'm gonna check out. Ships in 48 hours...
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #4 on:
August 16, 2011, 01:01:11 PM »
At $274 shipped, the Teiz Lombard V3 was worth a shot.
Had I wanted to spend more money, the FirstGear TPG stuff looked really good with the new armor design. I've always considered FirstGear products to be cheapo stuff. But the price tag and specs say otherwise.
I forgot to mention that an old man gave me his Tourmaster Centurion (early model) one day while chatting at a gas station. The suit fits well and is very warm, but not in any sense of the word waterproof, or even resistant really. The protection doesn't instill very much confidence either.
«
Last Edit: August 16, 2011, 01:04:37 PM by Hotbrakes
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #5 on:
August 16, 2011, 01:40:38 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 01:01:11 PM
Had I wanted to spend more money, the FirstGear TPG stuff looked really good with the new armor design. I've always considered FirstGear products to be cheapo stuff. But the price tag and specs say otherwise.
Anything I have ever had made by Firstgear has been superb. 95% of reviews I see seem to reflect that as well.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #6 on:
August 16, 2011, 01:57:57 PM »
I like my Tourmaster TransII jacket and Centurian suit both have been very weather proof.
This is going to be like a oil thread.
IBTL
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #6 on:
August 16, 2011, 01:57:57 PM »
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #7 on:
August 16, 2011, 02:01:32 PM »
Aerostich Darien is good stuff. Look into the Darien Light.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #8 on:
August 16, 2011, 02:32:26 PM »
Another vote for First Gear products
My Kilimanjaro jacket and Hypertech pants are awesome. First Gear quality is excellent and well put together.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #9 on:
August 16, 2011, 02:43:27 PM »
Quote from: ANZAC on August 16, 2011, 02:32:26 PM
Another vote for First Gear products
My Kilimanjaro jacket and Hypertech pants are awesome. First Gear quality is excellent and well put together.
A Kilimanjaro and Hypertech pants would be awesome in 95° Virginia summer heat.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #10 on:
August 16, 2011, 02:51:33 PM »
Ditto on Olympia gear. I have the GT Air Transitions jacket and AST pants. The combo works well and is very versatile. I bought the suit in northern VA, Fairfax, and rode through one winter with it before moving to Texas. The two stage liner in the jacket works well. Below 40 or 45, add layers, thermals, sweater etc. In the heat just open vents and panels.. Have yet to get wet in it in spite of some multi hour rain rides. Has CE armor in back, shoulders, elbows, knees.
Olympia also has a Stealth one piece that my be what you are looking for. Looks like a souped up flight suit.
And always
Keep the shiny side up,
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #11 on:
August 16, 2011, 02:52:26 PM »
I have a Transition II jacket and Kathmandu pants. Really like them both. I would buy them both again in a heartbeat. Very comfy.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #12 on:
August 16, 2011, 03:45:27 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 12:42:42 PM
I've got thousands of miles in leathers, and am a big fan. But when you're not on the bike as often occurs while touring (fuel, meals, chillaxing) it is brutal. I want textile pajama like comfort.
I admit, leather is no fun standing around in the heat. But perf leather works very well when moving, and that's the point, right?
I recently purchased a riding jacket made from hemp. Interesting stuff...while it doesn't pass air like mesh, nor is it waterproof, it definitely breathes better than any of the synthetic textile gear I own and is the most comfortable jacket I've worn to date. And although I don't want to put it to the test, I have confidence it'll protect me as well or better than any of my other textile gear. If I could find some pants made of the same stuff, I'd buy them.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #13 on:
August 16, 2011, 05:51:02 PM »
Another vote for first gear stuff. great selection and I have their rush mesh for the warm days and their tgp overpants and 3/4 length coat in yellow. great quality and fit is right on
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Re: Good touring gear?
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Reply #13 on:
August 16, 2011, 05:51:02 PM »
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #14 on:
August 16, 2011, 05:56:34 PM »
My First Gear TPG jacket is fantastic. It's the most waterproof garment I've ever worn. It is a sauna in the summer though. Definitely a 3 season deal.
Based on my experience with the Transition 2, I probably won't buy another TourMaster piece. It's overly bulky, the vents are terrible, it leaks like crazy, most of the pockets are in the wrong place and the zipper broke in less then 2 years. Fortunately, I got it cheap. I know a lot of people like the jacket. I wasn't impressed.
My favorite piece of gear right now is my Teiz Commute Suit. It's not perfect but it's pretty good for the price and it's waterproof enough with a coat of Nikwax. It is a little warm when the mercury climbs but that's to be expected.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #15 on:
August 16, 2011, 06:04:36 PM »
Love my TPG pants. The jacket, meh.... yup great for rain but I find it too hot in the heat and too cold in the cold. The vents don't flow well, in my opinion. Even with their "underwear" I find it cold. I use issue poly pro and that works fine.I put on mesh when it's hot and my old Cotech Advanced Sport when it's not. Also I don't like their spine protector shape as it doesn't match up with aftermarket upgrades.
But that's just me. There are plenty of fans.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #16 on:
August 16, 2011, 06:58:28 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 11:11:52 AM
Right now I'm lost. The stealerships only stock junk street gear, BMW only has gear that requires a loan, and the internet has all kinds of weird 600, 400, denier, polyester, nylon, cordura crap.
So what gear takes everyone on their adventures that holds up to hot weather, cold weather, wet weather, crashing, etc.?
You get what you pay for. The BMW Rallye suits have the protection you're looking for. Look for a used one at
http://www.advrider.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=54
I picked up a month-old, mint condition Rallye jacket from one guy (he bought the wrong size) and matching Rallye pants from another that were mint except for 2 or 3 spots the size of a pencil eraser. I got each for 1/2 the of new. With the bad economy, folks are selling lots of stuff.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #17 on:
August 16, 2011, 07:23:09 PM »
Quote from: ConPilot1 on August 16, 2011, 02:43:27 PM
A Kilimanjaro and Hypertech pants would be awesome in 95° Virginia summer heat.
LMFAO!
Last September I suffered like an abandoned dog riding through the tidewater region just north of Chesapeake/VA Beach.
It was 45 degrees in the morning when I left the day before from NJ, so I wore my Killi jacket and my Olympia Ranger 2 pants. Didn't think it was going to be 50 degrees warmer in VA. I was going through the water in my camelbak like candy and cake at a fat kid's birthday party. That shit was brutal.
Firstgear and Olympia make very good gear, but the Killi and Ranger 2's are damn sure not warm weather kit.
Also, don't overlook the BMW gear. Its great stuff, honestly worth the price (unlike Rev'it) and is relatively easy to find for a fantastic deal. I picked up an Airflow 3 jacket a few weeks ago off the ADV Touring flea market. It was NWT and I paid $215 shipped, more than 50% off MSRP. Same thing with my Venting Machine pants. I got them off BMW of Daytona's Ebay page for $150, again more than 50% off their regular price. They were NWT but were on closeout last year. Good deals to be had if you keep an eye out for them.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #18 on:
August 16, 2011, 09:24:51 PM »
Was at Aerostich earlier today picking up my repaired Roadcrafter. Tried on the new Transit suit. Can't get a proper fit in the pants (too long for me, even in a short), otherwise I might have bought a set even though I need another riding set up like I need a hole in the head. The feel, fit and finish is like nothing else I've ever tried on. The Vanson pro-perf jacket I happened to be wearing paled in comparison. Waterproof micro-perforated leather, which feels like super supple textile. Nice!
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #19 on:
August 17, 2011, 06:36:41 AM »
Thanks for the replies. Just found a 'Stich on eBay for a good price and...got it. We'll see which works better!
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #20 on:
August 17, 2011, 08:57:28 AM »
http://www.motorcyclegear.com/street/closeouts/textile_jackets_and_pants/first_gear/firstgear_kilimanjaro_5_textile_motorcycle_jacket.html
fyi
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #21 on:
August 17, 2011, 09:56:20 AM »
Quote from: DangerMoney on August 16, 2011, 06:58:28 PM
You get what you pay for. The BMW Rallye suits have the protection you're looking for. Look for a used one at
http://www.advrider.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?f=54
I picked up a month-old, mint condition Rallye jacket from one guy (he bought the wrong size) and matching Rallye pants from another that were mint except for 2 or 3 spots the size of a pencil eraser. I got each for 1/2 the of new. With the bad economy, folks are selling lots of stuff.
+1. I buy all my good stuff great condition 2nd hand or leftover NOS. Saves a ton of cash. I got into a full 2 pc. Motoport AMK suit for $460 bux.
Just be patient and search the boards for people selling gear. There's ALWAYS gear on the move.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #22 on:
August 17, 2011, 11:37:10 PM »
Another place to find used gear:
http://marketplace.ibmwr.org/
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #23 on:
September 08, 2011, 01:38:24 PM »
Any Olympia gear is great. I have an AST Airglide and the pants to match. Plus an older jacket I picked up in Ebay for $35.
Also keep a Tour master Transition2 in rotation. Another GREAT jacket! With the liner it's QUITE warm, and can provide decent venting on the 68-73 degree days or nights. Have a set of pants from them. Not certain the model but not as good as the jackets.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #24 on:
September 08, 2011, 02:02:26 PM »
Well, scratch off my previous unequivocal recommendation of Olympia's Ranger 2 pant.
I made a run down to Toms River on Tuesday, about 150 miles round trip from West Orange. It was scheduled to rain all day, but I wasn't feeling taking my truck, so I donned my Killi 5.0 Jacket and my Ranger 2 Pants and made the ride. Previously this combo proved impervious to to rain (with the exception of the occasional trickle over the collar, but what jacket without a hood doesn't do that?) but this time not so much. My Killi was aces as usual, but my Ranger pants gave it all up at about mile 125. It was like the damn levy broke, with water just pouring in at my crotch and lower leg areas. It was like a cheap diaper on a baby, wet all the hell over, from the waist on down.
I got 2 years out of them to the damn day.
I wasn't really thinking about replacing my pants yet; Well, it was on my mind, as I like the new Klim Latitude suit, but the coin isn't in my pocket yet for that. Guess I'm gonna be saving for some gore-tex pants to buy sooner rather than later.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #25 on:
September 08, 2011, 04:33:21 PM »
Quote from: Justin on August 16, 2011, 01:40:38 PM
Anything I have ever had made by Firstgear has been superb. 95% of reviews I see seem to reflect that as well.
+1000
I've crashed tested their leathers.
.... saved my life.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #26 on:
September 11, 2011, 10:31:03 PM »
Check out the Rev'it Sand outfit. Pricy, but worth it, IMHO.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #27 on:
September 12, 2011, 09:23:29 AM »
I normally would have overlooked Joe Rocket stuff as lower tier or cheap gear but I have been absolutely pleased with my setup.
I have a Joe Rocket Ballistic 7.0 3/4 length jacket. It claims it is waterproof and I have tested it a couple times with good results. If I kept things zipped up I stayed dry save for a small leak around my collar and another small leak at my cuff. Both because I probably did not have them closed off well enough. It was an extended frog strangler sort of day at interstate speeds though. This jacket was purchased new but on sale at a local brick and mortar for just over $100. It has been great in temps down in to the upper 20's and up into the mid/upper 80's. It gets a bit warm in the 90's though if you have to stop at lights.
With that I have Joe Rocket Ballistic Dry Tech pants that zip to the above jacket. They also have proven to be very comfortable, warm, and dry. Again the only leaks I got were when I forgot to close a zipper on the side. I got these slightly used from a member here. Plenty of waist adjustment for fitting over various thickness base layers and full length zippers on the sides for easy removing/entry even with boots on.
I am a big guy and this stuff fits me well. at 6'2" and a bit over 250 it is often hard to find stuff that has the arm length, inseam length, and shoulder width to keep me covered and comfortable.
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Last Edit: September 12, 2011, 10:40:28 AM by Jason F.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #28 on:
September 12, 2011, 10:00:24 AM »
Quote from: Jason F. on September 12, 2011, 09:23:29 AM
I normally would have overlooked Joe Rocket stuff as lower tier or cheap gear but I have been absolutely please with my setup.
I think people just assume that and think Joe Rocket is squid gear. The folks I know that use JR stuff always seem to be pretty happy with it.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #29 on:
September 12, 2011, 11:19:40 AM »
I'll speak up for Joe Rocket. I crashed in a five-year-old JR textile jacket this past spring and after sliding down the road after a 35 + mph get-off, you could hardly tell the jacket had been in an accident. Same accident, my First Gear HT textile overpants were pretty shredded put never broke through to expose skin. As far as rain protection goes, I'm in Phoenix, it's not a consideration. (I have Frogg Toggs for road trips.)
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #30 on:
September 12, 2011, 03:19:25 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 17, 2011, 06:36:41 AM
Thanks for the replies. Just found a 'Stich on eBay for a good price and...got it. We'll see which works better!
You done good. Mine's got about 60k miles on it now and it's holding up just fine. Pull the pads out, wash it spring and fall, retreat with Nikwax spray on waterproofing when dry and ride in all types of weather.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #31 on:
September 12, 2011, 05:22:30 PM »
You'll like the Stich suit. I like mine. I can't wear it above about 75F degrees...but for any riding 75 and below (a good part of the year), it's awesome. And contrary to what some folks say, it's pretty fast and easy to take off/put on. My 2-piece is very comfortable on the bike. No, it's not comfortable enough to lounge around in...but why on earth would anyone want to lounge around in your riding gear?
It's meant for riding--not lounging around.
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ChrisZRX
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #32 on:
September 14, 2011, 05:50:54 AM »
I just got a new Tourmaster Centurion on ebay for $217.00, delivered.
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sfalexi
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #33 on:
September 14, 2011, 02:02:24 PM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 12:42:42 PM
If someone could take a flight suit and beef it up I would be in heaven.
Might want to inquire about the Olympia Stealth suit. It's pretty much a flight suit, beefed up. Don't know about the fit and finish, but that's exactly what it looks like.
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Justin
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #34 on:
September 15, 2011, 06:37:37 AM »
Quote from: sfalexi on September 14, 2011, 02:02:24 PM
Might want to inquire about the Olympia Stealth suit. It's pretty much a flight suit, beefed up. Don't know about the fit and finish, but that's exactly what it looks like.
I tried one out, it seemed to be built pretty well. But it had no give at all in the back, so it was useless for a sportbike riding position. The only other complaint I had from trying it on was all the velcro. Opening the front zipper was like a workout there was so much velcro
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FAST: 2004 "Silver Bullet" FJR1300
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Hotbrakes
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #35 on:
December 04, 2011, 07:46:37 AM »
Finally getting around to an outcome.
So I got the Teiz Lombard and a well used but good condition Roadcrafter. Both have pros/cons but in the end, I'm wearing the Teiz and the Roadcrafter is already with it's new owner in Seattle. The RC lacked ventilation for Virginia spring and fall.
The Teiz vents well but is not waterproof. Even after a healthy spray of waterproofing treatment it seeps a lot. I need to try the wash in first, then spray it down. The Teiz is warm too. This morning I rode to work with the temp gauge indicating 24 degrees most of the way. Underarmour, heated vest, and light jacket under the suit kept me toasty. Only my feet and face were cold.
Thanks for all the suggestions on here. Definitely a good place to see what works and what doesn't.
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Hotbrakes
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #36 on:
June 11, 2012, 12:58:35 PM »
The Teiz is a roaster above 70 degrees. Overall comfortable but not practical for a long trip in the warmer months.
The gf and I stopped by Revzilla this past weekend to look at gear. Excellent service and knowledge from the staff. I could spend days in there picking their brains and trying stuff on.
When it comes to waterproof sans liner, ventilated for 80+ degrees, the only option was Klim. I walked out with the pants. Gonna save money and get the jacket next year.
Kudos to Revzilla and Klim!
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morgeen
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #37 on:
June 18, 2012, 04:04:54 AM »
Well I'll be the first to say poor touring gear have disappointed me on more than one vacation... ^^
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AnotherOne
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #38 on:
June 19, 2012, 12:42:14 AM »
Quote from: Hotbrakes on August 16, 2011, 11:11:52 AM
I've done the miles and now I want to look the part. I've got Joe Rocket Alter Ego, pretty much junk, Shift Streetfighter SS that would be scary to crash in (very thin material), various cotton based riding pants, Shift leather jackets (too hot), Shift Hybrid pants (great but too hot), a couple Alpinestar race suits, Cortech HRX jacket and pants(that don't fit) and the jacket is a bit big with too much going on. I think that's about everything in my closet.
What I'm looking for is a 3/4 length jacket, solid pants, or suit with good protection (CE), heavyduty, waterproofish (nothing truly is), and usable for whatever time of year I decide to get on the bike and not turn around for a few days. I realize that this could be a costly gear purchase and I want to get it right. Aerostich is a bit too simple looking, Teiz too busy, BMW stuff looks great but costs as much as some of the bikes I own.
Right now I'm lost. The stealerships only stock junk street gear, BMW only has gear that requires a loan, and the internet has all kinds of weird 600, 400, denier, polyester, nylon, cordura crap.
So what gear takes everyone on their adventures that holds up to hot weather, cold weather, wet weather, crashing, etc.?
I agree with you about the Alter Ego being junk. Sold mine and got the Olympia AST. Highly recommend you check it out as it is very nice quality, especially at the mid price point it sells at. They use the same materials as Aerostitch. Kinda of like an off the rack Aeorstitch made in China that sells for 1/2 the price and their venting and styling is better. Olympia use 500D and 2000D Cordura so have significantly more abrasion resistance than nylon gear. 1000D Cordura as an example has a rated abrasion resistance comparable to 1.3mm leather and twice that of 1000D nylon. A second issue is venting. The olympia has best in class venting for the type of jacket it is. The AST shell is water proof on it's own so does not need an extra rain liner. I use mine with their XMoto pants which vent very well and have lots of protection.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6AVeitn2F04
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Last Edit: June 19, 2012, 12:45:21 AM by AnotherOne
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expatbrit
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #39 on:
June 19, 2012, 07:14:36 AM »
Has anyone looked at Stadler?
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ConPilot1
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #40 on:
June 19, 2012, 10:00:50 AM »
Quote from: AnotherOne on June 19, 2012, 12:42:14 AM
I agree with you about the Alter Ego being junk. Sold mine and got the Olympia AST. Highly recommend you check it out as it is very nice quality, especially at the mid price point it sells at.
They use the same materials as Aerostitch. Kinda of like an off the rack Aeorstitch made in China that sells for 1/2 the price and their venting and styling is better.
Olympia use 500D and 2000D Cordura so have significantly more abrasion resistance than nylon gear. 1000D Cordura as an example has a rated abrasion resistance comparable to 1.3mm leather and twice that of 1000D nylon. A second issue is venting. The olympia has best in class venting for the type of jacket it is. The AST shell is water proof on it's own so does not need an extra rain liner. I use mine with their XMoto pants which vent very well and have lots of protection.
Well that's one of the biggest wagonloads of bullshit I've heard in a long time. NFW. Not even close. I had one, and it never even came NEAR the comfort/performance/waterproof levels of my 'Stich jackets, either the Darien or the Roadcrafter. AST wouldn't even stand up to a 20 minute medium rain during my commute.
The collar was a torture device, and setting up/closing the vents on the thing were nightmares. complete velcro-fiddle-circus and frustrating to use.
Well constructed? Yeah, I'll give ya that but that's about it.
As far as the highly touted AST airflow goes, my Darien flows more air than the AST ever dreamed of.
Let me guess. You have an online store and sell Olympia gear.
Your AST kool-aid flavor smacks of almost directly coming from Olympia marketing itself.
BTW, full retail on a Roadcrafter is $527. Full retail on an AST is $350. How do you figure that is half the price of a comparable 'Stich? (Not that the AST is comparable to a 'Stich)
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Last Edit: June 19, 2012, 12:28:29 PM by ConPilot1
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bungie4
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #41 on:
June 19, 2012, 10:13:46 AM »
I've gone through a pile of gear, some good, some bad. On the low end, Tourmaster Intake + plus Air Caliber pants saw me through 3 years of riding. Very versatile and inexpensive. Wore VERY well.
Scorpion Commander and Teiz pants. Jacket good (leaks around the big ass adjusters on the arms), pants crap, shitty materials, poorly made, no protection - but they fit awesome!
Latest gear, Motorport Air Kevlar top an bottom. Amazing gear I bought used for half price. 33F - 100F, all day downpours weren't a problem. Comfortable on the bike, heavily armoured.
I was shopping for Klim when the deal on the Motoport came up.
Pays yer money, takes yer chances.
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AnotherOne
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #42 on:
June 19, 2012, 01:08:03 PM »
Quote from: ConPilot1 on June 19, 2012, 10:00:50 AM
Well that's one of the biggest wagonloads of bullshit I've heard in a long time. NFW. Not even close. I had one, and it never even came NEAR the comfort/performance/waterproof levels of my 'Stich jackets, either the Darien or the Roadcrafter. AST wouldn't even stand up to a 20 minute medium rain during my commute.
The collar was a torture device, and setting up/closing the vents on the thing were nightmares. complete velcro-fiddle-circus and frustrating to use.
Well constructed? Yeah, I'll give ya that but that's about it.
As far as the highly touted AST airflow goes, my Darien flows more air than the AST ever dreamed of.
Let me guess. You have an online store and sell Olympia gear.
Your AST kool-aid flavor smacks of almost directly coming from Olympia marketing itself.
BTW, full retail on a Roadcrafter is $527. Full retail on an AST is $350. How do you figure that is half the price of a comparable 'Stich? (Not that the AST is comparable to a 'Stich)
I'm not sure of the cause of your bitterness but my experience has been very different and much more positive. I'm in my 4th year with my AST and have owned 4 other jackets, it is by far the best thing I have ever used. I'm not saying Olympia make the best gear ever, just saying the AST hits the sweet spot perfectly IMO between price and performance. For comparison purposes I'm a guy who commutes every day in conditions that range from (95F to 32F) highway/city riding. Note: also used heated liner below 45F. I also tour a few weekends a year. Hell, Klim make a $1400 jacket that has got to be better than either the stitch or Olympia just based on that price. I've addressed your points below.
Comparison with Aerostitch - both are made with the same materials (500D Cordura). In fact Olympia uses 2000D Cordura to reinforce the strike points. I believe Aerostitch uses 500D Cordura for this. Cordura is supposedly very abrasion resistant compared to say polyester (used in most cheap gear) which is not.
Waterproof - the AST uses water proof zippers on the opening vents that are not 100% waterproof covered by fabric flaps. I find the chest and exhaust vents are 100% water proof with the flaps but the top of the sleeve vents transmit some detectable dampness in a downpour. This is not enough to be bothersome though. With the insulated liner worn this is not noticeable.
Collar - this fits me fine although I will acknowledge it has a limited adjustment range. I have the version 2 of the jacket, this has been increased in the version 3 of the jacket according to Revzilla
Venting - this is the best venting jacket, next to mesh I have owned. It has two chest vents, two vents on the sleeves that run the full length of the sleeves and two exhaust vents. The vents on the front of the jacket and sleeves have straps to hold them open to the wind and force air in the jacket. No one in the industry makes a jacket with bigger sleeve vents. In comparison the Aerostitch jackets I have looked at only have pit vents and these are placed such that air from forward motion will not be forced into the jacket.
Price - I was unaware you could buy a new stitch for as little as $527 however looking at this it appears basic things like an insulated liner are extra cost options on the stitch. In fact they have four pages of extra cost options listed for this jacket on their site so I suspect the out the door price would be higher for the stitch than just $527.
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Last Edit: June 19, 2012, 01:23:49 PM by AnotherOne
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Hambonee
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #43 on:
June 19, 2012, 01:27:20 PM »
Ive got a motoport 3/4 jacket and pants I bought this year. REALLY expensive and not necessarily pretty but man it is good stuff!
Comfortable as all get up, highly armored, warranted for a crash(7 years you crash they fix free), and well made. Since it was made to my measurements fix like a charm and have used from 30 degrees to 80 with nothing more than removing a liner to adjust.
Anyways, I can't help but think the stretch Kevlar will hold up better than cordura/nylon/whatever. The material is some odd stuff..was pulling on it the other day and the stuff feels almost like leather in how it stretches and behaves.
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X1Glider
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #44 on:
June 19, 2012, 01:36:51 PM »
Don't sweat it Another One. Like any product, be it Apple/Mac or Aerostitch, some will vehemently defend their choice. I bought a garment for outrageous money and people think I'm nuts for it and some people even claim it sucks too. As much as it cost, I wonder if those people actually spent their money on it and experienced it or are they talking internet BS in an effort to defend their beloved Stiches. But my experience with it has been pure perfection.
I paid 800 for a new Stitch 1-piece in the late 90s and it ranked among the worst garments I've owned. I could get in and out of it an nothing flat but it leaked like a sieve through every seam and zipper. My final opinion on it is that it was good for keeping your work clothes clean on a dry day. I sold it to someone else for just that purpose for $500 a week later.
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ConPilot1
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #45 on:
June 19, 2012, 01:47:45 PM »
Quote from: AnotherOne on June 19, 2012, 01:08:03 PM
I'm not sure of the cause of your bitterness but my experience has been very different. I've addressed your points below.
No bitterness involved. You don't know me, I tend to have strong opinions on certain things. Your post came across to me as a sales pitch for the AST.
Comparison with Aerostitch - both are made with the same materials (500D Cordura). In fact Olympia uses 2000D Cordura to reinforce the strike points. I believe Aerostitch uses 500D Cordura for this.
AS jackets have a double layer of the 500D on the shoulders and elbows. Not a big deal. You don't hear of Roadcrafters blowing apart in a crash. I've seen the stitching work in Olympia products and it is not on the same level as the AS. Lots of fraying, loose threads. The materials used are only as good as the quality of the stitching holding it together.
Waterproof - the AST uses cheaper quality water proof zippers on the opening vents covered by fabric flaps. I find the chest and exhaust vents are 100% water proof but the top of the sleeve vents transmit some dampness in a downpour but not enough to be bothersome. With the insulated liner worn this is not noticeable.
My AST leaked like all hell through stitching seams, particularly at the back of the shoulders/arms. Dripping water. Not "dampness". And as far as it not being noticeable with the insulated liner, that's great when it's 40° and raining. What do you do when it's 75° and raining? Wear an AST with the insulated liner???
Collar - this fits me fine although I will acknowledge it has a limited adjustment range. I have the version 2 of the jacket, this has been increased in the version 3 of the jacket according to Revzilla
Fit is subjective. Some like the fit. Didn't work for me at all. I'm an average/smaller build guy. The collar was suckage for me, as was the general cut of the jacket.
Venting - this is the best venting jacket, next to mesh I have owned. It has two chest vents, two vents on the sleeves that run the full length of the sleeves and two exhaust vents. The vents on the front of the jacket and sleeves have straps to hold them open to the wind and force air in the jacket. No one in the industry makes a jacket with bigger sleeve vents. In comparison the Aerostitch jackets I have looked at only have pit vents and these are placed such that air from forward motion will not be forced into the jacket.
So you just "looked at one" and made those assumptions without real world trial-and-error. Evidently you never wore a Darien because when you open the pit and back zips, loosen up the sleeve cuffs a bit and take down the top zipper a few inches the jacket flows more air than anything I've had, short of my mesh.
Price - I was unaware you could buy a new stitch for as little as $527 however looking at this it appears basic things like an insulated liner are extra cost options on the stitch. In fact they have four pages of extra cost options listed for this jacket on their site.
Maybe so. However the general function of the AS jackets doesn't require any extra liners. If you're cold, wear a fleece or a heated jacket liner, which is what most heavy experienced winter/cold weather riders do anyway. As far as I'm concerned they can have 10 extra cost options. It's nice to be offered extra luxurious options if you've got the need for them and the willing to part with the scratch.
As far as pricing goes do you homework before coming online and making incorrect blanket statements about Olympia vs. 'Stich.
It sounds to me like you've never owned or personally tried a 'Stich so in my judgement you are not qualified to be making such definitive comparative statements.
If you came on and said that you rode 15k miles in an AST and 15k miles in a Darien and you preferred the AST, that would be different
as your opinion would be based on your personal experience. You're free to your opinion as anybody else is, no doubt.
I just find it laughable when comparing pieces of gear when looking at paper specs. I've had and used both. Real world riding and real rain.
Plus there are two main jacket seperate contenders in the 'Stich lineup. Darien and Roadcrafter. The AST to me seems more to be targeted at competing with the Darien.
The Roadcrafter is a totally different jacket.
Hang around the forums, and check other forums, read a bit. You'll find there are people who love them and a good percentage hated the AST for reasons I stated above.
It's common knowledge the AST's were hit and miss and there were most definitely quality issues with the product line.
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Last Edit: June 19, 2012, 02:07:53 PM by ConPilot1
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AnotherOne
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #46 on:
June 20, 2012, 10:11:21 AM »
No I am not an Olympia retailer. I also don't have a religious attachment to any brand. You edited this portion of my post out before responding.
"I'm not sure of the cause of your bitterness but my experience has been very different and much more positive. I'm in my 4th year with my AST and have owned 4 other jackets, it is by far the best thing I have ever used. I'm not saying Olympia make the best gear ever, just saying the AST hits the sweet spot perfectly IMO between price and performance. For comparison purposes I'm a guy who commutes every day in conditions that range from (95F to 32F) highway/city riding. Note: also used heated liner below 45F. I also tour a few weekends a year. Hell, Klim make a $1400 jacket that has got to be better than either the stitch or Olympia just based on that price. I've addressed your points below."
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ConPilot1
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #47 on:
June 20, 2012, 11:30:32 AM »
Stated my opinion. This ain't a pissing match.
I'm glad you are all about your AST. Mine sucked.
Enjoy it, and wear for many safe miles.
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expatbrit
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #48 on:
June 21, 2012, 04:15:10 PM »
Quote from: ConPilot1 on August 17, 2011, 09:56:20 AM
+1. I buy all my good stuff great condition 2nd hand or leftover NOS. Saves a ton of cash. I got into a full 2 pc. Motoport AMK suit for $460 bux.
Just be patient and search the boards for people selling gear. There's ALWAYS gear on the move.
I am envious of all you folk with normal builds that can do that.
Us freakin' mutants are SOL. I'm trying hard to decide if I'm biting the bullet on full custom stuff -- the answer is probably 'yes', but /OUCH/.
If it had to be black, and you had the choice between superfabric/cordura and leather/cordua, both goretex pro-shell, and the leather was TFL cool treated, what's your take?
I'm leaning towards leather. It better be good, 'cos having the stuff made to fit me is ... yeah. It's expensive, but so's one trip to the ER.
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X1Glider
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #49 on:
June 22, 2012, 02:11:09 PM »
Quote from: expatbrit on June 21, 2012, 04:15:10 PM
<Slight threadjack, but I've been following this thread to see what the output is>
I am envious of all you folk with normal builds that can do that.
Us freakin' mutants are SOL. I'm trying hard to decide if I'm biting the bullet on full custom stuff -- the answer is probably 'yes', but /OUCH/.
If it had to be black, and you had the choice between superfabric/cordura and leather/cordua, both goretex pro-shell, and the leather was TFL cool treated, what's your take?
I'm leaning towards leather. It better be good, 'cos having the stuff made to fit me is ... yeah. It's expensive, but so's one trip to the ER.
As I will spend between 10-16 hours in the saddle on a trip just so I can get as far from Texas as quickly as possible before I can enjoy the rest of the country, I tend to go more for comfort. To me, that means the extra flexibility of textile. I haven't worn leather since my racing days( 10 years ago) and always hated the stiffness. But to be honest, my Rukka's Goretex ProShell equipped Armacor cordura superfabric is pretty stiff as well.
What is intersting about the Armacor is that it stiffens on impact much like a kevlar vest. Wether that's good or bad or simply interesting is something I'm unsure about but I have no doubts that it would hold up under a 100 mph slide, just like leather would.
My only beef with leather is sometimes the stitching can rip through the leather. I've had a glove blowout at the seams. The needle perforations were the path of the rip. The stitching on the Rukka is double and triple stitched and the weave of the Armacor will give with tension rather than rip. Just MHO. Keep in mind it is just my opinion. I won't start a war on leather vs textile.
As for TFL, I've felt the difference. All my gear has been black. The Rukka bakes me the least in Texas sun despite having only frontal armpit vents.
Goretex Pro Shell. There's nothing better. When it pisses down, it doesn't absorb moisture. Water rolls right off. It weighs the same in the dry or in the dirty side of a hurricane. Right now, this is the best available. Other suits that rely on rain liners will end up 3 -4 times heavier when wet. An added bonus with the Pro Shell is that since the moisture doesn't absorb into the fabric, even with a liner underneath, the coldness of the wetness, especially in low temperatures, isn't close to the skin and will not remove body heat. This is important if you're trying to prevent hypothermia.
The near future holds applications using superhydrophobic nono-coatings available to mid priced gear. The bad ass base fabric itself will still be high dollar stuff.
I have not tried the ProShell leather stuff that Rukka and now Arestitch offers. Gotta be pretty awesome to ride in a downpour and not absorb any water in a leather suit.
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Last Edit: June 22, 2012, 02:18:51 PM by X1Glider
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expatbrit
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #50 on:
June 22, 2012, 02:52:56 PM »
Quote from: X1Glider on June 22, 2012, 02:11:09 PM
As I will spend between 10-16 hours in the saddle on a trip just so I can get as far from Texas as quickly as possible before I can enjoy the rest of the country, I tend to go more for comfort. To me, that means the extra flexibility of textile. I haven't worn leather since my racing days( 10 years ago) and always hated the stiffness. But to be honest, my Rukka's Goretex ProShell equipped Armacor cordura superfabric is pretty stiff as well.
Rukka, sadly, isn't an option. They don't make gear that'll fit me. The leather/textile combo, with the leather backed up with the proshell appears the best option.
Quote
What is intersting about the Armacor is that it stiffens on impact much like a kevlar vest. Wether that's good or bad or simply interesting is something I'm unsure about but I have no doubts that it would hold up under a 100 mph slide, just like leather would.
My only beef with leather is sometimes the stitching can rip through the leather. I've had a glove blowout at the seams. The needle perforations were the path of the rip. The stitching on the Rukka is double and triple stitched and the weave of the Armacor will give with tension rather than rip. Just MHO. Keep in mind it is just my opinion. I won't start a war on leather vs textile.
Totally with you. I think they're pretty damn comparable at this point, for the really high-end textiles.
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As for TFL, I've felt the difference. All my gear has been black. The Rukka bakes me the least in Texas sun despite having only frontal armpit vents.
And this is with TFL, on the Rukka? I've avoided black in NM, because the sun is /harsh/ here as well and without TFL even mesh isn't great. For longer trips, I'm not a fan of mesh, both for the perception of protection (and I'm not including the Motoport stuff here; more the 'general' mesh) and because of the whole issue when it gets over 95 degrees.
I really like the /idea/ of TFL. I've just never tried it.
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Goretex Pro Shell. There's nothing better. When it pisses down, it doesn't absorb moisture. Water rolls right off. It weighs the same in the dry or in the dirty side of a hurricane. Right now, this is the best available. Other suits that rely on rain liners will end up 3 -4 times heavier when wet. An added bonus with the Pro Shell is that since the moisture doesn't absorb into the fabric, even with a liner underneath, the coldness of the wetness, especially in low temperatures, isn't close to the skin and will not remove body heat. This is important if you're trying to prevent hypothermia.
The near future holds applications using superhydrophobic nono-coatings available to mid priced gear. The bad ass base fabric itself will still be high dollar stuff.
I have not tried the ProShell leather stuff that Rukka and now Arestitch offers. Gotta be pretty awesome to ride in a downpour and not absorb any water in a leather suit.
I'm sold on the proshell concept. I'm sold on waterproof gear without raingear, because I never, ever get my raingear on in time since I hate wearing it, and the flapping, and so on. It may be pricey, but it's less than the deductible on my medical insurance.
Thanks for the feedback, especially from someone in an equally hot climate to my primary riding area.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #51 on:
June 23, 2012, 08:46:46 AM »
Quote from: AnotherOne on June 19, 2012, 01:08:03 PM
Comparison with Aerostitch - both are made with the same materials (500D Cordura). In fact Olympia uses 2000D Cordura to reinforce the strike points. I believe Aerostitch uses 500D Cordura for this. Cordura is supposedly very abrasion resistant compared to say polyester (used in most cheap gear) which is not.
I've had a number of Olympia things go through my hands (Airglide 2, Moab, AST2, X-Moto, Airglide pants, Recon 2 and 3 pants). I still have the recon 2 pants and a pair of airglide 2's. I also have a Roadcrafter one-piece.
Olympia's 500d cordura is nothing at all like Aerostich's.
Nothing at all
. The "Cordura" name is applied to a variety of fabrics of differing quality. These two manufacturers are using a different quality of fabric, and it shows.
The stitching and seam allowances on Olympia gear is very poor - I returned/exchanged 3 or 4 olympia products for issues like that (as in, a seam came to me already burst, new with tags!).
If you're a stockier build, olympia's gear is ok. Not great - ok. If you're lean, it sucks - it will
never
fit you right. I can't be sure, but Olympia's cordura feels like it may be a urethane coated variety - it doesn't breathe well at all. The x-moto rivals the roadcrafter in terms of unbreathableness, and the roadcrafter has a goretex lining! The x-moto leaks like a sieve (granted, not designed to be WP without the liner).
Some of their stuff does look nicer than 'stich's, but I've held stuff in my hands from
scorpion
with better fabric.
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X1Glider
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #52 on:
June 25, 2012, 01:26:23 PM »
Quote from: expatbrit on June 22, 2012, 02:52:56 PM
Rukka, sadly, isn't an option. They don't make gear that'll fit me. The leather/textile combo, with the leather backed up with the proshell appears the best option.
I sent you a reply to your PM before I read this thread again. Curious as to who you would have make a custom suit.
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X1Glider
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #53 on:
June 25, 2012, 01:48:47 PM »
Actually, unless you have a hump, you can mix and match jacket and pants. Before going custom, take a nice 400 mile overnight ride to Gilbert, AZ to visit the guys at
www.adventuremotorcyclegear.com
. Give them a call to make sure they have the garment you're interested in first. Then try it in person. One thing about Rukka's sizing is that they run on the long side. Longer inseams, sleeves and torso in other words. At least the SRO was this way. The Armas, my 2nd choice at the time, was a great looking piece of gear.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #54 on:
June 25, 2012, 02:22:10 PM »
Quote from: X1Glider on June 25, 2012, 01:48:47 PM
Actually, unless you have a hump, you can mix and match jacket and pants. Before going custom, take a nice 400 mile overnight ride to Gilbert, AZ to visit the guys at
www.adventuremotorcyclegear.com
. Give them a call to make sure they have the garment you're interested in first. Then try it in person. One thing about Rukka's sizing is that they run on the long side. Longer inseams, sleeves and torso in other words. At least the SRO was this way. The Armas, my 2nd choice at the time, was a great looking piece of gear.
I talked to the Rukka folks at Trophy Cycles, and they said they can't fit me. Aerostitch can't modify enough to fit.
It sucks being a mutant.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #55 on:
June 29, 2012, 02:36:38 PM »
Update!
Got a set of BMW Rallye 2 Pro jacket/pants on eBay for $400 and it came today on the brown sleigh. Initial impression is good. Lots of vents, very comfortable yet heavy duty material. Fit was questionable for my build on the BMW size chart (6' 220lbs) but it fits like a good pair of pajamas. My girlfriend has Rallye 2 Pro pants that have held up very well in two crashes. Only complaint is the liner system for waterproofing. But at least it's only one liner for water and cold so I'm not stuck with a saddlebag or closet full of mismatched liners to sort through.
The Klim pants proved to be very comfortable and versatile and I've put over 1000 miles on them in the last week. No rain test though. I will likely sell them though and live with the liner of the R2P to recoup some of that cost. Good pants though.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #56 on:
December 16, 2012, 04:49:17 PM »
And a last minute decision to visit the local Bimmer shop for their holiday extravaganza netted the unexpected purchase of a Klim Latitude jacket. They just picked up the brand and had a few sizes to try on, and 15% off! Much to the wife's dismay of our ever growing closet, I made endless promises to sell all the gear come spring cause this
should
be exactly what I need. Sturdy and well made, guaranteed waterproofing, no liners, no bs riding gear. The material is very stiff as well which should allow adequate air circulation in hot weather with the vents open.
The Rallye 2 Pro gear has been great for summer riding but has no wind blocking except with the liners in. With the liners in there's not much room to layer up for sub 40 with darkness or cloudy skies. The outer shell just doesn't block the wind as an outer shell should. And a few times I've opted for wetness in lieu of stopping and undressing in some dirty gas station bathroom to insert liners. Very stylish and comfortable above 40 degrees though.
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Re: Good touring gear?
«
Reply #57 on:
January 16, 2013, 01:52:37 PM »
For pants and jacket I like the Kathmandu by First Gear.
With the liner(s) I ride comfortably (for about an hour) at 15F. Below that my wife says I cannot ride.
Without liner, all vents open, and dressed appropriatly it is comfortable up to around 95F. Above that mesh pants and jacket all the way.
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