T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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307.1 | Hand pads | LILAC::MAYO | | Fri May 08 1987 14:17 | 5 |
| I have a pair of Spenco pads, not gloves, and find them a lot
cooler to use in summer. However, they do not appear very
stylish if you are into that...
Tom
|
307.2 | Get the thick ones, leather if you don't have hang ups about it | EUREKA::REG_B | Husqvarna Sonata fur A# saw und vood | Fri May 08 1987 17:32 | 16 |
| re .0 The cheap ones with soft pads wear quickly. This is
because the pad squirms around and disintegrates, then the two pieces
of leather rub each other to bits. For riding and falling I recommend
the thicker leather ones with almost no pad; for riding only I prefer
no gloves, just let the hands harden up a little.
Reg
Yeah, I *KNOW* ! Ya can't know ahead of time when its gonna
be a fallin' down day.
Unless you fall most days, or hardly ever, or oh_never_mind...
|
307.3 | Cotton | AITG::HUBERMAN | | Fri May 08 1987 17:39 | 8 |
| I've used both. The ones with the cotton back are cooler and can
be used (UGH) to wipe sweet of your face. There isn't really a
big difference. Just make sure that the padding is decent.
Actually, the cotton gloves I've had always lasted until the leather
rots. You really get quit attached to them. One pair of lycra
gloves I had ripped very quickly, the other pair is still ok.
|
307.4 | go for cotton | DEBIT::FISHER | | Mon May 11 1987 05:57 | 15 |
| I think an important consideration is, "How much do you ride or plan
to ride?"
2 hrs or less a day, 10 hrs or less a week? You can use anything
and be comfortable.
More than that, including hot days? I'd go for cotton, whether it
be the crocheted type or the newer type that's half lycra half terry.
Other than "falling down days" there're the days when you want to
get stuff off your tyres (or tires), gloves are good for that unless
you let your hands get tough enough then you can use you bare palms
then, too.
ed
|
307.5 | | MELODY::DEHAHN | | Mon May 11 1987 09:31 | 6 |
|
I've had the best results over the years with Cycle-Pro lycra padded
gloves.
CdH
|
307.6 | Low end gloves | MOSAIC::BROWN | | Mon May 11 1987 11:41 | 3 |
| I hope I don't get shot for saying this, but I use a pair of Spag's
79 cent garden gloves. They're leather reinforced in the palms
and work fine.
|
307.7 | What every biker should wear | AMUN::CRITZ | Nuke all snakes! | Mon May 11 1987 13:48 | 6 |
| RE: -1
I'm loadin' the musket now, Kratz, and heading for your
office.
Spag's gardening gloves, indeed.
|
307.8 | | DEBIT::FISHER | | Mon May 11 1987 13:59 | 8 |
| This needs a line like:
Nothing gets between me and my Brake levers.
Sorry, couldn't resist, it's been a rough day -- what with all that
sunshine and such.
ed
|
307.9 | how many pairs can you wear? | PRTHOS::NBLIAMPTIS | | Thu May 14 1987 12:35 | 3 |
| The latest Bicycling Magazine says lycra backed gloves can save
up to 8 seconds over 100 miles due to improved aerodynamics.
Now, if I can get 100 pairs at 8 seconds each...
|
307.10 | If I could do 100 mi, 8 sec are piece of cake | MAGIC1::GRACE | | Thu May 14 1987 14:18 | 1 |
|
|
307.11 | Two Crocheted Cotton Backs | DSSDEV::DAVISON | | Tue Jun 23 1987 19:55 | 9 |
| I just bought a pair of the Spenco gloves which have gel-filled
sacs which act as padding. They're not very heavy and seem to
provide the best grip and the best protection from road vibrations.
I was previously using the Bike Nashbar brand gloves which worked
fine until I started riding more frequently. I still think they're
a great buy for under $6.
Glenn
|
307.12 | Hands Tingle w/ or wo/ Gloves | DELNI::HELMREICH | | Mon May 01 1989 14:42 | 16 |
| I hope this reply gets "found", being attached to an old note.
I have found that riding my mountain bike even 4-6 miles makes my hands
tingle. This never really happened on a 12 speed. I have $15 Novara (REI)
gloves, synth. leather palms with padding - but the tingling happens with or
without gloves.
I'm perenially suspicious of Spenco gel-filled everything, but could Spenco
gloves do more than regular gloves? The handlebar grips a sponge rubber, not
the hard rubber on many ATBs. So, potentially, I've got all the padding I need.
I realize that more of your weight is on the handlebars when riding an ATB,
but there must be cure for this. (Maybe I could have that nerve in my hand
surgically moved ;-)....)
Steve
|
307.13 | Motorcyclist need DH bars! | MCIS2::DELORIEA | Common sense isn't | Mon May 01 1989 14:58 | 11 |
| Steve,
The same thing happened to me when I rode my motorcycle. It was a Honda
Intercepter (cafe racer style street bike). The thing had low bars and of
course only one hand position. Much like a MT-bike. When I rode a friends bike
with higher bars, I didn't have the tingling hands. Maybe raising your bars
might help take the weight off your wrist.
OR ride no hands ;-)
Tom
|
307.14 | COUPLE MORE IDEAS | AKOV11::FULLER | | Mon May 01 1989 15:09 | 9 |
| I would first try re-angling the bar and/or the last note of
raising lowering. In addition, I believe that firmer grips provide
better protection than softer ones.
A lot of older mountain bikes have extremely wide handlebars. Most
better bikes have narrowed considerably. You could evaluate this
and perhaps saw the end off of each bar.
steve
|
307.15 | Spenco Worked for Me | 32635::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Tue May 02 1989 13:50 | 7 |
| See note 129 (Numb Novice) for a discussion on how Spenco
Gloves helped me with this problem. Nerve damage can be perminent
so it's not something you want to wait a long time with before
finding a cure.
Jerry
BTW - I'm on my fourth pair with no further problems.
|
307.16 | Time for Spenco, I guess... | DELNI::HELMREICH | | Wed May 03 1989 18:19 | 24 |
| < Note 307.15 by 32635::JSMITH "I Bike Solo II" >
>>>> BTW - I'm on my fourth pair with no further problems.
After reading note #129, I guess I'll get the Spenco. But have you worn out
4 - $25 pairs of Spenco gloves? I guess if they work, then money is not so
important.
Does Spenco make a gel-filled handlebar grip for Mountain bikes? I suppose
I'll get the gloves first, then worry about grips of any type.
It does seem like too much pressure is on my hands. Perhaps I should
experiment with positions/stem heights, too. I asked a few shops
about longer stems, and they said that they were not common for an ATB.
(I suppose a low stem (handlebar height) should make for better control in
the woods - but I need comfort first!)
Thanks for all the input....
Steve
|
307.17 | I don't care about bike parts anymore...but gloves! | CESARE::JOHNSON | Truth is stranger than fiction | Wed May 03 1989 19:35 | 9 |
| I'm wearing out my second pair of Spenco gloves. Don't tell the
company, but as far as I'm concerned, each pair is worth more than the
last. $25 seems like nothing when I don't have them! When my family
asked me what they should bring from the U.S. when they came to Italy,
I didn't hesitate....
MATT
PS -- They're well made, too.
|
307.18 | I only paid full price for the first pair. | 32635::JSMITH | I Bike Solo II | Wed May 03 1989 19:44 | 12 |
| As Matt said in -1 they are well worth it. Now that I know that
I have to have Spenco I'm always alert to sales of odd sizes. For
example I picked up two pairs at Goodales of all places on sale for
uner $12 a pair, reason being that they were size extra large, so
I slip on a thin pair of poly ski glove liners and wala instant
winter or cold weather gloves (about 6 mo/yr in N.H.). Also, I
have seen many mail order houses run slales on the older black
gloves with the mesh knit backs since the new lycra back gloves
have been on the market. Once you find a good thing you tend to
stick with it regardless of the price. Besides, isn't bicycle
bargin hunting a fun part of the sport?
Jerry
|
307.19 | change bars | WFOV11::SISE | | Thu May 04 1989 11:32 | 17 |
| re .16
I also have the problem of pressure on my hands while riding my
MTB (Mongoose IBOC). I did not have this problem with my fuji
cadensa it had bars with a "rise" in them, and a city bike stem.
With a gell seat this was comfortable for hours, but for serious
riding, more so climbing, was a problem.
Depending on your riding needs, you may want to try different bars
(ones with some rise).
John
John_who_can't_wait_for_the_rain_to_stop_so_he_can_ride_his_NEW_PARAMOUNT!
|