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• #2102
The Giro? Your last post was saying you liked it.
What about the GripGrab? They seem to get totally mixed reviews.
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• #2103
Don't know. I've being rocking Roeckl gloves in winter.
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• #2104
Ski gloves?
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• #2105
Cycling.
http://www.bike-discount.de/en/shop/gloves-winter-191/brand-roeckl
They definitely have become a lot more expensive.
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• #2106
https://rab.equipment/eu/phantom-grip-glove
Will fit over mitts. -
• #2107
You like your RAB stuff :)
I've got other RAB gloves that I can just squeeze under mitts for night sections of audax and TCR but by themselves aren't too comfortable - they're warm though.
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• #2109
yeah good gear.
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• #2110
Just bought the Vulpine. At £24.50 seemed a good price.
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• #2111
I've been using the Sturmfist 5 for commuting recently (no proper long, cold rides yet) and it's mostly positive so far.
They are subjectively warmer than the Castelli Estremo and Rapha Deep Winters + merino liners making them the best glove I've owned to date. That said, my hands still lack the ability to heat themselves adequately so if the commute is very stop-start they get cold again.
My biggest negative with them is the lack of reflective bits meaning hand signals are invisible to drivers.
A sample of my glove collection in my quest to beat cold hands... :(
I think until battery heated gloves become very compact with longer battery life, I'm never going to truly have comfortable hands when riding in the cold.
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• #2112
I saw these and took punt on those - though previously not been very impressed with vulpine stuff
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• #2113
last night was baltic but the sealskins lobster gloves kept my hands toasty all ride. They're hideous obviously but work so well.
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• #2114
I have the Sealskin lobsters and they're bloody lovely. Silk liners when it was -2 then other day though.
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• #2115
Got a pair of the Endura Nemos in black and probably the toastiest winter gloves I've tried. Just been out for a frosty 2deg ride and v. impressed. Very grippy palms, not too thick. A word of warning; don't take 'em off mid-[wet]ride. All the delicious warmth disappears quick-smart since they're neoprene. £17 with a cheeky discount.
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• #2116
I've spent hundreds of pounds (probably thousands now, given how old I am) on gloves for winter cycling - and not one pair of cycling specific gloves have ever come close to Carhartt Base gloves:
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• #2117
Where did you find them for £17?
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• #2118
What size are you?
I've got some barely used Nemos (need to check but probably XS) that I don't want. Personally, they were useless for cold and wet for me.
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• #2119
Just broken my Specialized Sub Zero gloves out for their sixth winter:
http://road.cc/content/review/25196-specialized-sub-zero-glovesPerfect when initially heading out in early mornings and I can usually rely on just the inner after an hour once my body temp has risen.
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• #2120
Ah, the shop I work in, 40% discount..
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• #2121
Usually need a size Large for gloves.
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• #2122
Oh I see. I was searching google trying to find them for that cheap!
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• #2123
I could hook you up but I'm in Edinburgh so would need to pay postage alas..
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• #2124
http://road.cc/content/review/140854-sealskinz-extra-cold-winter-cycle-gloves
Still very happy with these, I tried Gore and they didn't work, also not with an underglove from Merino. The only snag is they're a little thick, so they keep your fingers warm from metal levers but sometimes I miss a tick shifting.
I tend to get cold fingers quickly.
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• #2125
I think I mentioned them a couple of years ago but Sugoi Subzero gloves have had an upgrade since I got mine and now have their Flash retroreflective treatment added to them.
They have 100g weight Thinsulate instead of the 50g most gloves get and have a nice thin palm and gel
The gloves wasn't really that good.