I have these - they're almost a neoprene material - good wind and cold blockers:
http://www.rei.com/product/745948
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Need some recommendation for good warm winter cycling gloves.
Thanks
Resi
I have these - they're almost a neoprene material - good wind and cold blockers:
http://www.rei.com/product/745948
Sarah
When it's easy, ride hard; when it's hard, ride easy.
2011 Volagi Liscio
2010 Pegoretti Love #3 "Manovelo"
2011 Mercian Vincitore Special
2003 Eddy Merckx Team SC - stolen
2001 Colnago Ovalmaster Stars and Stripes
Hi Resi,
I commuted by bike throughout the winter last year (hoping to again this year!) and it took me some time to find a glove I liked.
For temps above 47 or so but still too cool for fingerless gloves, I have a pair of Terry full-finger bike gloves that I really like. They fit exceptionally well. These are the ones:
http://www.teamestrogen.com/products.asp?pID=14148
For temps between 30/35 and 50, I found I was comfortable in a non-bike specific glove made of Polartec Powerstretch Windpro fabric. Fleecy on the inside, super thin and flexible, somewhat wind resistant if the wind is not frigid. Here's the pair I have actually:
http://www.ems.com/catalog/product_d...=1187619992454
For colder weather, I had a really hard time finding something that was adequately windproof and insulating, but didn't feel like boxing glove. I have to say I tried on most of the bike-specific gloves (PI and so on) and felt they were too clumsy. Here's what I ended up with -- it's a springweight ski/ice-climbing glove:
http://www.mountaingear.com/pages/pr...4967276%201064
I'm actually quite happy with them. They're good alone down to 20F or thereabouts (maybe a tad colder), for anything colder I wear a light/midweight polypro liner underneath (this combo worked for me down to about 10 deg last winter. The two days colder than that, I drove). I find them plenty flexible/non-bulky, so shifting/braking is comfortable. They block the wind well, and the adjustable cuff makes dealing with various layers (base/mid layers with thumbholes, glove liners, jacket, etc) much easier.
Good luck finding something you like! I think glove preferences are a bit more personal than one might think -- for instance I just can't stand anything even slightly bulky, but others may not mind this.
Last edited by VeloVT; 08-20-2007 at 09:22 AM.
Sorry to drift... but is my post displaying wrong for everyone else too? Anyone know if there's an issue using Camino (as a browser) with TE? I just downloaded it yesterday because Safari has so many compatibility issues and it's been bugging me... why is the world so non Mac-friendly?
Your 3rd url link is not closed with the right tag. Needs a / between the open bracket and the u. That *should* fix the problem and deconfuse the board software.
oooh much better. thanks torrilin!
Liza, thanks for the excellent suggestions. I have been VERY UNHAPPY with Longfingered glove selections ever since pearlizumi quit making my favorite gloves... both the terry and the polartek seem pretty nice.
For really really cold weather, i put on a pair of reg. longfingered gloves and then put on a large pair of men's fleece gloves. the fleece is insubstantial and doesn't fat up my hands too much.
they also weigh next to nothing so as soon as its warmer i just put them in my camelbak.
On advice given here, I got DH a pair of lobster claw gloves for Christmas last year. Something like: http://www.teamestrogen.com/products.asp?pID=21007
He really likes them when the weather gets cold.
Give big space to the festive dog that make sport in the roadway. Avoid entanglement with your wheel spoke.
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1978 Raleigh Gran Prix
2003 EZ Sport AX
If I were to look for another pair of winter biking gloves, I'd probably be tempted to look at XC ski racing gloves too, like some of the ones on this page:
http://www.newmoonski.com/Merchant2/...ry_Code=Gloves
I have the Terry gloves for temps down to about 50, 48. Sometimes, I wear thin liners from EMS under them. I have a pair of PI gloves that are heavier for temps down to 35 or so. They feel a little awkward shifting my road bike, so I have to be more "aware." They are fine for the mtb, though. I bought Craft lobster gloves last year. I really hate them. They fit well and keep me warm, but I just don't like the feeling of having my fingers separated. I can't reach the shifters as well.
An expensive mistake, so what i ended up doing on a couple of cold days was to put chemical warmers between the liners and my lighter weight Terry gloves. Perfect for mtb rides in the 20s.
Thanks Lady's, you are all awesome!!!!!
The louis garneau 3 in1 transfo gloves worked really well for me all winter. For the extremely cold days, I would add a chemical warmer and was fine. I've tried other gloves (ski gloves, PI gloves) and found these to work best.