T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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246.1 | rain pants are swell | KLAATU::THIBAULT | Swimmers Do It Wetter | Wed Apr 01 1987 14:29 | 5 |
| I wouldn't recommend a poncho for bike riding. They're great for other
stuff but a friend of mine was riding with one and one of the loose
ends got tangled up in the chain. Not a pretty picture.
Bahama Mama
|
246.2 | Another thumbs down for ponchos... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | Macarooned on a Dessert Island | Wed Apr 01 1987 15:18 | 6 |
| Get gear that fits relatively closely, i.e. not a poncho. Baggy stuff makes
you feel like you're sailing a sailboat against the wind. Good ventilation
is important to keep you from wetting yourself with sweat. My preference
runs to GoreTex mountain parkas with underarm zippers, and GoreTex runner's
pants....
ken
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246.3 | Use Goretex | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | | Wed Apr 01 1987 16:53 | 15 |
|
I'm a big fan of Goretex. I've heard that there are similar products now
available, but I've never tried them. I have Descente goretex jacket and
Campmor goretex pants. They both work quite well. The other possibility for
pants is to just wear polypropolene tights. I have a heavy pair of polypro
tights, and am comfortable wearing them in rain down to about 40 degrees.
It is important that the clothing not flap excessively, so I don't think a
poncho could work.
Some people I know are quite happy with the Performance Rain gear ~$165.
for a suit last time I checked.
Good Riding,
--David
|
246.4 | it depends on how long you're in the rain | NOVA::FISHER | | Thu Apr 02 1987 04:56 | 25 |
| There are lots of ways to look at this problem, so please excuse
me if mine is too fatalistic.
It just does not matter what you wear, you are going to get wet,
soaked. What you want to try to do is keep warm so you don't get
hypothermic.
When I rode to Buffalo last June, I had a Performance rain suit.
It rained 5 of the 7 days that we took to get there. I used the
pants the first day. It poured all day. I was wet and toasty,
ok, soggy toasty. After that I only used the jacket. Since then
I have carried a much simpler plastic jacket with a velcro closure
with me and found it to be sufficient. It will double as a windbreaker
and provide some protection in the case of sudden cold blasts of
long downhill freezes. The plastic jacket is nice because you
can tuck it into a pocket (bulgy pocket).
It all depends on how much you "have to ride" once it starts raining.
If you're going to be there for days and days regardless, you need
more comfort. If the jacket is an emergency measure, then something
a little less elaborate will suffice. If you're never more than
a phone call away from home, a dime is a good tool (my pride is
too extreme for me to call for a ride home, but ....)
ed
|
246.5 | my $.02 worth | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO 8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Thu Apr 02 1987 12:54 | 16 |
| The above contain some good advise. To elaborate:
Primary objective is to keep your skin as dry as possible. For this
you want poly underwear. Tops and bottoms. You will be able to
overwhelm the moisture transport ability of Gore-Tex by vigorous
exercise, so cooling is important - I demand underarm zippers!
Foot protection is also important. I've got some Gore-Tex
booties (kind of like a gaiter) from Early Winters that do fine.
Hands get chilled, so protect them too. The best rain protection
that I know of is a Zzipper fairing, really. You kind of hide behind
the sucker, with your hands out of the breeze. Works good in cold
weather too.
I'm not giving my Cold and Wet Weather Clothing workshop at
NEAR (maybe at GEAR-UP '88) since they want me to talk about recumbents
instead. (that really upsets me :-)). It looks like we should have
the following for test rides: Avatar, Linear, DeFelice, Tour Easy,
and Infinity. Garry, want to add the Counterpoint? - Chris
|
246.6 | I DEMAND an apology | ISBG::MILLER | Marketing, the oldest profession | Thu Apr 02 1987 17:49 | 8 |
| > and Infinity. Garry, want to add the Counterpoint? - Chris
Reg, do you believe these people? Calling my CounterPoint a RECUMBANT!!!
Chris, it is a SEMIrecumbant.....;-)
Actually, I have been debating within about attending. I'll be better able
to let you know in a month. Sounds like a great time, tho, and I DO like
your idea.
|
246.7 | Yeah, you shud demEnd ! an apology... | MENTOR::REG | Who is Sylvester McCoy | Fri Apr 03 1987 10:48 | 8 |
|
OOOps, it seems every day I learn how to spell another word
properly. I had always thought it was RE_CUM_BENT (underscores
for sylabic separation only).
Reg
(an' how do you shoulder one o' dem tings in a 'cross event anyway ?)
|
246.8 | CLASS is in session | ISBG::MILLER | | Mon Apr 06 1987 13:40 | 29 |
| > I had always thought it was RE_CUM_BENT (underscores
I an really sorry for that, Reg. I humbly request your forgiveness.
Please?
> (an' how do you shoulder one o' dem tings in a 'cross event anyway ?)
You've asked this question before, and I didn't respond because
I actually thought you were joking around. But I guess you really
want to learn something. It's not very often we get you in this
frame of mind, so I think I will take advantage of that.
One doesn't shoulder SemiRecumbEnt tandems. One could ride them,
but two shoulder them. The picture would be reminiscent of a
Middle-Eastern potentate being carried by porters, with one shoulder
in the front and another in the rear (of the machine, Reg, of the
machine).
Another method of porting the machine, provided you've strayed into
areas not suitable for biking, would be to winch yourself along
using the timing chain and the built in boom. Actually, the bicycle
is very efficient in this mode. However one (or two, as the case
may be) is limited to the length of the chain for wach portage...In
our case, that's 17.5 yards.
I really think it's silly to think one (o t a t c m b) would need
more length, however, since one (or t a etc) will realize within the
first 15 feet the undesirability of following you, or others into
the muck.
And that's the end of today's lesson. Any questions, Reg?
|
246.9 | carry like a suitcase | EUCLID::PAULHUS | Chris @ MLO 8-3/T13 dtn 223-6871 | Tue Apr 07 1987 11:53 | 8 |
| Seriously, to carry a low-handlebar recumbent, you just grab the
top tube just in front of the seat, like you'd grab a suitcase handle.
It's low enough so's when you are carrying it with your arm straight
(assuming you have a non-knuckle-dragging build), the wheels are
several inches clear of the ground.
This was a raingear note... Anybody been trying out their's recently?
- Chris
|
246.10 | Rain? Whats that? | ISBG::MILLER | | Tue Apr 07 1987 17:28 | 9 |
| > This was a raingear note... Anybody been trying out their's recently?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
Rain? Whats that?
|
246.11 | Gortex/Raingear recommendations?? | TOOK::FRANK | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:07 | 6 |
| There have been a lot of changes in Gortex and Rain gear of the
recent years. Are there any current recommendations around raingear,
Gortex or otherwise.
Thanks
Frank Ferreira
|
246.12 | | NOVA::FISHER | Tay-unned, rey-usted, rey-ady | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:18 | 12 |
| If you want to stay dry, ride when you don't need it. :-)
Seriously, I have tried everything and the last few years gave up
totally on miracle fabrics and use a nylon shell, I still get wet
but it takes up less space when I don't need it and it isn't
that bad when I do use it. AND I've ridden at time when I could
pour a pint of water out of the arm when I tug at the elastic on
my wrist.
Anyone have any more joyous experiences?
ed
|
246.13 | more reasoning on Gortex | TOOK::FRANK | | Mon Apr 25 1994 15:18 | 17 |
| thanks Ed
riding when you don't need it is desirable ;^)
What has put me in the market? Last week on a pleasantly cool day,
took a 35-45 minute arobic ride wearing a nylon windbreaker. I got
soaked from the inside-out. Today, also pleasantly cool, took the
same ride wearing a Gortex shell, closed to the neck and snug at the
wrists. When finished, I was dry inside and felt great... I've had
the shell for awhile. I'm considering the purchase of Gortex pants
and wondering if they will provide the same positive results as the
shell. Natch for the money they will be multi-functional and used
on a Motorcycle, Canoeing, hiking and walking, as well as, bicycling.
I look forward to hearing other opinions...
Frank
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246.14 | | MSBCS::BROWN_L | | Tue Apr 26 1994 19:32 | 5 |
| I simply wear nylon as well and just arrive wet. I have Gortex, but
sweat so much that it doesn't really matter. The nylon jacket/pants
keeps the road grit off the clothes underneath, which in turn keeps the
washing machine from seeing a ton of sand, which in turn keeps the
Maytag man away. _Kratz
|