ottoshape
Well-known member
Rain or Winter Golf gloves work ok in cold weather if you can't find the cycling specific items.
I bought these autumn to spring gloves thinking they would cover the bit in the middle . Obviously not but still useable above freezing.they're not really designed to work down to those temps, they're a fairly thin windproof glove. what they are good at is for the the autumn to spring period when it's too cold for normal gloves but above freezing. the Hydromatic ones are a little warmer but for anything below -1 / -2 i'd be reaching for my neoprene gloves, great a keeping you hands warm, if not wet - just don't take them off mid ride otherwise it's a like wearing blocks of ice for the first couple of minutes until they warm up again
What we need are heated grips like they have on motor bikesI love Brisker gloves. I have 6 pairs. Work great on the moto in the 35F-50F range. Though hand guards do block much of the wind. I would bump that range up 5F, if you're doing long and speedy descents on MTB. They are not below-freezing gloves.
Hi Rob,I agree the Briskers are not great.
in search of some decent gloves I found the Endura Freezing Point gloves.
tested today in 0 degrees (2 degrees max at some point) and had to take them off halfway through the day as they were too hot.
expensive. Decent.
I wear them for most of the year until it gets either really cold or really wet. In the wet they soak up water like a sponge and the wind chill makes it feel like I'm wearing ice cubes.
Errr..no..As fellow EMTB members know, Ebikes are always generating more wind and rides are much farther than regular bikes
First, most of my rides are two battery rides. I always carry a spare (Levo). In the winter it's not uncommon for me to run both batteries dead. Second, my average speed for say a 25 mile ride /4500ft elevation gain is 12mph. For instance this morning, it was below freezing and there was a strong headwind. A regular biker would have struggled against the wind. I just blazed right through it at governed speed. Third, keep in mind we are talking winter riding. I don't see a lot of fat biker's doing 3 hr rides with huge elevation gains. I have been passed by fat bikers in deep snow but if it is icy or hard pack snow then it's see ya later dude.Errr..no..
I don't really know why you would think this ..I've certainly gone a lot further on a ride than the range of my ebike battery would allow ..and as fast ( going down..generating wind ... but that was me and not the bike )
Why are we talking about Fat Bikes ..in your original post you mentioned regular bikes ..which to me is an MTB .( not a fat bike )First, most of my rides are two battery rides. I always carry a spare (Levo). In the winter it's not uncommon for me to run both batteries dead. Second, my average speed for say a 25 mile ride /4500ft elevation gain is 12mph. For instance this morning, it was below freezing and there was a strong headwind. A regular biker would have struggled against the wind. I just blazed right through it at governed speed. Third, keep in mind we are talking winter riding. I don't see a lot of fat biker's doing 3 hr rides with huge elevation gains. I have been passed by fat bikers in deep snow but if it is icy or hard pack snow then it's see ya later dude.
Cheers
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