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Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 4:48 am
by Zombie Master
justoneoftheguys wrote:
Duane Ausherman wrote:Hippo hands are the only way to go. with heated grips, the heat is on the inside, not the outside where the wind is cooling them. With hippo hands one can ride with the same gloves that one would need without the windchill factor. At freezing, light summer gloves are enough for standing around, or riding a bike at 65 mph.

Don't mess around with electricity, or thick gloves and mittens. Hippo hands solve the problem completely.
4 pages and you finally joined in. Thanks, Duane!
But if you have heated grips, they are always there on every ride. Once you have a set you'll never want a bike without them.

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 8:08 am
by SteveD
I've heard people say that, but despite the occasional cold ride here in temperate Victoria, I'm still reticent to install something electrical into the loom. Where and how would it connect into the loom/
Maybe next year I'll try the simple wrap around setup and see if I'd ever go back to no heat?

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 10:36 am
by Duane Ausherman
Steve, you have just hit on why I would only use them if my Hippo Hands weren't enough. I come from an electrical background and so I don't hesitate to use an electrical solution. However, in my BMW shop experience, I found that electrical accessories were the cause of a lot of problems. That was usually due to poor instalation, or failure to consider the total load on the system.

Bottom line, electrical aftermarket things tended to be a source of trouble. For me they were a source of income. For the customer they were a source of failure and "outgo" of money.

It is your time, money and reliability to consider.

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Thu Sep 30, 2010 12:38 pm
by Major Softie
Yeah, on the one hand, that suspicion of electrical accessories is a relic of the quality of the items when Duane was running his shop, and is not really relevant to today. On the other hand, an Airhead's electrical system is also a relic of the times...

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Fri Oct 01, 2010 4:48 am
by Zombie Master
SteveD wrote:I've heard people say that, but despite the occasional cold ride here in temperate Victoria, I'm still reticent to install something electrical into the loom. Where and how would it connect into the loom/
Maybe next year I'll try the simple wrap around setup and see if I'd ever go back to no heat?
You don't attach them to the loom. You install a $8.00 relay to the battery. The grips are isolated from the loom altogether. The cheap under grip type work well.

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Fri Oct 01, 2010 10:18 pm
by SteveD
Zombie Master wrote:
SteveD wrote:I've heard people say that, but despite the occasional cold ride here in temperate Victoria, I'm still reticent to install something electrical into the loom. Where and how would it connect into the loom/
Maybe next year I'll try the simple wrap around setup and see if I'd ever go back to no heat?
You don't attach them to the loom. You install a $8.00 relay to the battery. The grips are isolated from the loom altogether. The cheap under grip type work well.
Thanks. They're the ones I may consider next autumn...

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Sun Oct 17, 2010 6:55 am
by SteveD
These look ok...except maybe for mirrors on the bars...

http://cgi.ebay.com.au/Handschuhe-Lenke ... 1c15bc2a88

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Sun Oct 17, 2010 12:27 pm
by Garnet
Neuer, unbenutzter und nicht getragener Artikel in der Originalverpackung (wie z. B. Original­karton/‑tasche) und/oder mit noch am Artikel befestigten Originaletikett. :!: :o

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 6:14 am
by SteveD
Klingt wie das Zeug!

Re: Keeping your hands warm in cold riding weather.

Posted: Mon Oct 18, 2010 11:18 am
by Sunbeem
The local method of heating grips,or gloves, is to use the element wire from an old electric blanket -- I've never needed to go to that extreme, but it seems a simple way of avoiding unnecessary expense.
I think it would be vital to insulate the bars, so they didn't absorb any heat, then build up a nice leather grip over the wire.
There would be some electrical work to do, but I can't see the point of paying some shopkeeper's mortgage, and supporting a factory somewhere, when I could do it all myself, from largely re-cycled components.
That's still the way most motorcyclists, (as opposed to bikers), do it round here.
It's doesn't eat your beer money, it's green, and it's what Sunday afternoons are for.

Sunbeem.