Heated gear choices.

Hello Eric, I ride year round using Tourmaster Senergy 2.0 liner and gloves. Control is easy to use and the connection comes apart easily if you forget to unplug before dismounting.
I wear long Johns underneath my pants and simple leather chaps over to block wind.
I also have HippoHands on the handle bars to block wind.
With this setup, I have been good down to 0F for a 30 minute ride to work.
I can't tell you Tourmaster is netter than any other as this is the only heated gear I worn. Good luck!
 
I ride with a 12volt heated jacket that is common in the construction trades. The jacket accepts standard Bosch 12 battery like you would use in a drill or saws all. I purchased a cord to go from my auxiliary power plug on my Rocket to the jacket plug. Total cost is around $150.00. This set up is simple and plenty warm. Others in my group of riding partners have the jacket liners with the gloves and heated pants. Cost near $1000.00. Wow, lots of money!
 
The jacket I use is powered from the bike and has heated back ,front,arms and collar. There are no internal wires to break as the fabric itself heats up and produces infra red heat. T shirt and leather jacket is all you need . It's made by a company called EXO2.
 
IMG_0247.JPG Joe Rocket battery operated cost about $189.00. Was disappointed at first but the batteries that came with the gloves were defective and the company replaced them for free. Comes with a charger that charges both batteries at the same time. Three settings and no wires to attach. Last about three hours and you can buy extra batteries. In 15 degree weather (hour long ride) hands stayed warm. Use them daily back and forth to work. ;);););););) just a foot note the gloves have the word Rocket stamped across the front of them. Neat.
 
well its getting cold out. so i'm kicking this tread off again. i'm planning a ride from south of Nashville Tn back to Norfolk VA in january. i'm looking for long haul heated options anyone take their gear out for several hundred miles?
 
anyone take their gear out for several hundred miles?
This is just an opinion - based on YEARS of very cold/wet/damp/icy nocturnal commuting and riding (I had no car) in the UK. The better your PASSIVE gear is the better off you are. Active heating can and will fail at the most inconvenient times. Whatever the battery life is (if it uses batteries) - you will (one day) need 2 hours more.

And now - being older. If I thought there was a chance of Snow or Ice - I'd avoid taking anything I cannot easily lift in a state of shock in the cold. In my case that would be a bicycle - a really light one.

Just about everybody I know who does VERY COLD work uses something like HIPPO HANDS
 
Your experience may vary, and mine has.

Like almost everything that has more than three steps (computers, cars, cooking -- everything) we really should decide what we want to do, then find the most cost-effective method to do that.

Too many of us are guilty of the "shiny object" syndrome.

The key is to treat you, your clothing, your bike, your environment, your route, as a total system, and look at it systematically.

I mostly agree with @barbagris . By way of example, I commute in all weather by bicycle. Some years ago, when I assumed that past a certain point, the weather was too cold to ride, I was at work, and just happened to be walking by the bike rack by the front entrance when I saw a fellow cyclist parking her bike, and I looked at her quizzically and asked, "How do you do it?"

She smiled, and said, "I was told long ago, 'There is no bad weather. There is only bad clothing.'"

I followed her advice, and over the next two years, extended my riding season, and the one trick I found, that applies to motorcycles, and agrees with @barbagris initial statement (I have NO heated gear on the bicycle) is plugging up the holes where ambient air could otherwise reach your skin, was key. As I found garments that allowed the movement necessary on a bicycle, and still sealed -- and we all know the wisdom of layers, I found the only weather restriction -- one that to this day I have not solved -- is the ten or so degrees above freezing in the rain -- resulting in high humidity and the perspiration causes condensation on my goggles. I found booties and one layer of gloves are sufficient on the bicycle thanks to the workout keeping the blood flowing.

Switch to the motorcycle, and I might as well be a couch potato, so in addition to sealing my garments, I find "prevention" is necessary.

While I understand the concept of Hippo Hands, and have used them on other bikes, the need for more than less control at all times on the Rocket makes me too nervous when I envision the situation where a hand is off the handlebar, and I need to get back to the handlebar NOW, and end up fumbling with the opening of the Hippo Hands / Moose Paws.

For that requirement, I found the creation of @Bedifferent to be exquisite for the Rocket (Touring at least, with a Touring windshield), to wit:

What do you think?....Hand wind deflectors

Then, as posted elsewhere, I use a First Gear heated vest, that has wires that connect to First Gear heated gloves. There is enough protection on the bike, I have not found the need for heated anything below the waist - as with @Boog I wear long underwear, lined pants, and wool socks, and that seems to suffice.

Without some protection for the hand grips, I find no amount of heat works.

With protection for the hand grips (and there are several approaches to this), I find a low to medium setting on vest (gloves are not controlled independently) and heated grips (I recommend Oxford) works.

And the beauty of putting effort into well-sealed clothes and some protection for the hand grips, is in the event Murphy shows up (@barbagris real-world experience), I have found I can handle the ride indefinitely (or the rest of the fuel supply) without the electric -- just less comfortable -- definitely bearable.
 
well its getting cold out. so i'm kicking this tread off again. i'm planning a ride from south of Nashville Tn back to Norfolk VA in january. i'm looking for long haul heated options anyone take their gear out for several hundred miles?

I don"t know if you have it in the U.S. or not, but we have a shop called Marks, used to be Marks Work Wearhouse, last year I picked up a set of heated gloves and heated jacket, they are battery operated, so I can still use them when not on the bike, this is the only reason I chose battery over wired, and they are fantastic, I have been out riding in -5 to -10C and they have been great and the batteries are not that bulky and I usually get about 6-8 hours out of a charge on the gloves and jacket and I have only ever gone up to the medium setting and been super comfortable
 
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