I bought toe covers for my Mavic mtb shoes which I wear on the road with Frog cleats and had to cut a larger hole in the bottom to accommodate the larger cleat. I haven't tried them riding yet, but also have a handful of chemical toe warmers.
I bought toe covers for my Mavic mtb shoes which I wear on the road with Frog cleats and had to cut a larger hole in the bottom to accommodate the larger cleat. I haven't tried them riding yet, but also have a handful of chemical toe warmers.
I use the chemical toe warmers, when it gets below 42 or so, definitely below 40, as well as booties, and wool socks. Nothing worse than cold feet. If I am wearing my PI winter boots. then just the wool socks and sometimes the chemical warmers.
2015 Trek Silque SSL
Specialized Oura
2011 Guru Praemio
Specialized Oura
2017 Specialized Ariel Sport
My Seal Skins are pretty warm, have worn them at 0 degrees C (and that's the coldest temperature I will ride!) and my feet are nice and happy. Wish however there is something that could keep my nose warm that doesn't make you look like a bank robber!
Catrin, I think the lowest temperature I have ridden in with the combo of road shoes, wool socks, booties, and chemical warmers was close to 32 or so. In fact, there was one morning about a month ago that Hirakukibou and i had a planned ride for 6 AM; it was about 33, even though it was still September. We were determined not to bail, and that is the combo I had on my feet. I may have ridden in the 20's, but it would have been nothing more than a 10-15 mile ride on my old hybrid on a sunny day in February.
I also have the Seal Skin socks, which I bought for a tour. They are *extremely* warm, but somewhat a pain to get on/off. I bought them mostly for the waterproof aspect and I have worn them hiking, too.
2015 Trek Silque SSL
Specialized Oura
2011 Guru Praemio
Specialized Oura
2017 Specialized Ariel Sport
I use the PI Calientoes toe covers on my road shoes (Northwaves) with an SPD-SL cleat...I had to get the XL size (my shoes are a size 42...yes I have clown feet) and they fit the shoes just fine. For rides where the temps start out in the 30's, I switch to PI full shoe covers (the Amfib material ones), also in a size XL which is the biggest size they make. They just fit (like barely) my shoes, but work great. I have to really pull the velcro closure together in the back, in order to get a good seal...but I haven't had any problems with them ripping and I love the rubber-like bottoms that they have. Way more durable and grippy on damp pavement.
I would say for those that are having problems with toe/shoe covers fitting over MTB shoes, perhaps try going up a size or two (if you can) and see if that helps. I find it odd, that although my PI shoe covers *just* fit over my shoes...when my DH has borrowed them on occasion, they actually seem to slide over his shoes much easier...and he wears a size 46 Specialized S-Works shoe with Speedplay cleats. Not sure why that is.
Linda
2012 Seven Axiom SL - Specialized Ruby SL 155