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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 Mar 2012 Karma :   
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| Stonefly |
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 Stonefly Scooby Slapper

Joined: 17 Jul 2011 Karma :  
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 Posted: 00:21 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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Depends on where you live, but Mega Motorcycle Store (formerly George Whites) has quality gear at rock bottom prices. My significant other got Frank Thomas leather jacket and leather pants, with armour, for £100 last Sunday.
Also worth having a look on the Ghostbikes website, and also Bits for Bikes website. I can recommend the Spada clothing - i have a jacket and pants, textile waterproof material with full armour. Cost me under £150. Very very warm gear, so not recomended for summer riding, but has kept me toasty all winter! ____________________ Current......Kawasaki ZZR1200 C2H and Kawasaki ZZR600 E7
Previous....Yamaha FS1E, Honda SS50, Suzuki AP50, BSA Bantam D14, Honda CD175, Honda CB250N, Kawasaki Z250A3, Yamaha RD250E, Kawasaki Z400, Kawasaki Z500, Kawasaki GPz550, Honda NTV600, Kawasaki GT750, Kawasaki Z1000R, Kawasaki GPX250 |
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| _Troy_ |
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 _Troy_ World Chat Champion

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| kawakid |
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 kawakid World Chat Champion

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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
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| Paris2 |
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 Paris2 Nearly there...

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| Rogerborg |
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 Rogerborg nimbA

Joined: 26 Oct 2010 Karma :    
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 Posted: 10:59 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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"Textiles" generally refers to cordura (or another brand name) of nylon fabric. Nylon is fairly abrasion resistant - it was used for flak jackets before kevlar and better fabrics came long. However, it can tear and even melt on a long slide on a dry road - it comes down to how far you're planning to slide before hitting something.
Better brands will advertise the density of the fabric in Deniers, e.g. "600D" or "1200D". High numbers mean denser fabric means more abrasion protection but more weight.
Cordura is pretty water repellent but not fully waterproof. If you want waterproof, look for separate layer of (e.g.) Goretex or Hipora branded fabric, or you can try applying waterproofing treatments to the cordura, or wear separate waterproofs over the top.
Another alternative for summer riding is kevlar lined denim jeans. I wear black Draggin' jeans which I can get away with as office wear. Regular denim is the chocolate teapot of protection, you'll be surfing on your skin within a few feet. If you go with kevlar denims, I'd suggest Sartso, Hood or Draggin' - there are cheaper ones available but they use cheaper woven kevlar which is more prone to tearing.
Leather offers the best abrasion protection if you get decent stuff. I'd be more cautious about buying cheap off-brand leathers than cheap off-brand textiles. The fewer panels, the better, the stitching can give way before the substrate.
Whatever you wear for abrasion protection, ensure it's got CE approved armour inserts in the knees, hips, elbows and shoulders, and I would also recommend a dedicated back protector. I suspect the foam inserts in many cheaper jackets offer the bare minimum of protection.
There are loads of good deals on eBay, I just scored some good condition IXS leather trousers for the princely sum of £26 delivered. You do need to be patient though, there's plenty of stuff out there, don't over-bid. ____________________ Biking is 1/20th as dangerous as horse riding.
GONE: HN125-8, LF-250B, GPz 305, GPZ 500S, Burgman 400 // RIDING: F650GS (800 twin), Royal Enfield Bullet Electra 500 AVL, Ninja 250R because racebike |
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| Alpha-9 |
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 Alpha-9 Super Spammer

Joined: 19 Jan 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:26 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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I got myself a spada jacket and buffalo trousers and it's perfect for what I need it for
Jacket was £80 and the trousers were a freebie
Leathers i think are restrictive and heavy and need maintaining, and expensive expensive expensive ____________________ Fzr-600 1999 |
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| Nick 50 |
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 Nick 50 World Chat Champion

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| Atomic Punk |
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 Atomic Punk Scooby Slapper
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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 Mar 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 14:20 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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| Rogerborg wrote: | "Textiles" generally refers to cordura (or another brand name) of nylon fabric. Nylon is fairly abrasion resistant - it was used for flak jackets before kevlar and better fabrics came long. However, it can tear and even melt on a long slide on a dry road - it comes down to how far you're planning to slide before hitting something.
Better brands will advertise the density of the fabric in Deniers, e.g. "600D" or "1200D". High numbers mean denser fabric means more abrasion protection but more weight.
Cordura is pretty water repellent but not fully waterproof. If you want waterproof, look for separate layer of (e.g.) Goretex or Hipora branded fabric, or you can try applying waterproofing treatments to the cordura, or wear separate waterproofs over the top.
Another alternative for summer riding is kevlar lined denim jeans. I wear black Draggin' jeans which I can get away with as office wear. Regular denim is the chocolate teapot of protection, you'll be surfing on your skin within a few feet. If you go with kevlar denims, I'd suggest Sartso, Hood or Draggin' - there are cheaper ones available but they use cheaper woven kevlar which is more prone to tearing.
Leather offers the best abrasion protection if you get decent stuff. I'd be more cautious about buying cheap off-brand leathers than cheap off-brand textiles. The fewer panels, the better, the stitching can give way before the substrate.
Whatever you wear for abrasion protection, ensure it's got CE approved armour inserts in the knees, hips, elbows and shoulders, and I would also recommend a dedicated back protector. I suspect the foam inserts in many cheaper jackets offer the bare minimum of protection.
There are loads of good deals on eBay, I just scored some good condition IXS leather trousers for the princely sum of £26 delivered. You do need to be patient though, there's plenty of stuff out there, don't over-bid. |
really really appreciate the time spent on writing this and the guide so i don't go for cheap and end up killing my self or seriously injure for few quid if i had a crash
looking at your explanation, for summer I guess leather will be really warm so maybe go with Textiles for jacket from ebay and ensure it has ce approved in the elbow and get a back armour.
I don’t know how good the ones on ebay are and what their Deniers is but I guess for 40 pound or more can maybe get my self a good jacket
Then the trouser will go for textiles and leave Kevlar alone as it is not very abrasion resistant material so if I had a few meters of skid still will protect the skin
Gloves I guess textiles
And what do you guys suggest on helmet and boot, would I need boot at all ? I guess my normally trainees can protect me to an extend
Thanks again |
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| _Troy_ |
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 _Troy_ World Chat Champion

Joined: 11 Feb 2011 Karma :   
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| keggyhander |
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 keggyhander World Chat Champion

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| Shinigami |
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 Shinigami World Chat Champion

Joined: 14 Feb 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 15:15 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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i' 3 jackets, 2 textile ones and a leather. I generally wear my cheaper textile one as it feels better and warmer than my hein gericke one. I've not actually worn the leather one yet but that'll be for when weather is a bit better.
Bootwise you can get away with a pair of tuzo cheapies like these
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Motorcycle-Tuzo-B3-Short-Touring-Leather-Black-Boots-Waterproof-6-7-8-9-10-11-/180832234001?pt=UK_Motorcycle_Boots&var=&hash=item6fc68c217d
very waterproof and comfy (no problems walking about in them all day) although not particularly armoured they will protect again abrasion.
more protection however = more cash. I'd never ride in just trainers and normal non bike boots will just leave you with wet feet in anything but sunshine ____________________ Current: Honda City Fly CLR125 2003 Honda CB600F Hornet 2008 Yamaha FZ6 S2 + 1991 Kawasaki GPZ500
"Once you realize what a joke everything is, being the Comedian is the only thing that makes sense. |
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| Sako |
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 Sako World Chat Champion

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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
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| kawakid |
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 kawakid World Chat Champion

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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
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| Howling TerrorOutOfOffice |
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 Howling TerrorOutOfOffice Super Spammer

Joined: 05 Dec 2008 Karma :    
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| Alpha-9 |
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 Alpha-9 Super Spammer

Joined: 19 Jan 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 18:41 - 14 Mar 2012 Post subject: |
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I'm going to hazard a guess that English isn't your first language
"Clothes" my friend, "Clothes"
Personally I like my textiles, but i'm a 125 and don't feel I need THAT much protection, although i'm just as capable of killing myself.
Plus my textiles are light and easy, and seemingly waterproof, and have thermal inners, so I can always be warm and dry, and they've yet to let me down, seeing as it was snowing when I first got my bike.
Additionally, I can stick my jacket and trousers over my suit for work each day, and jsut take them off when i'm there, which is a lot less hassle than gettign completely changed each time.
So really it's not about "which one should i get"
It's about "what should I consider when choosing gear/kit/motorcycle clothes" (Same thing btw)
I'd say consider these things:
- Comfort & restriction
- Practicality for purpose (do you really want full racing leathers on your daily commute?
is it easy to take off? )
- Protection (How much protection do you actually want/need?)
- Weather proofing (removable thermals for hot days?)
- Style
- Price - They can go ridiculously expensive!
and probably more  ____________________ Fzr-600 1999 |
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| kawakid |
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 kawakid World Chat Champion

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| stranger12 |
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 stranger12 World Chat Champion
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 14 years, 115 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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