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Got to get w/the Jet Set Lannis, everyone knows it's a thong & flip-flops!!!
...I have found tour master to be my friend for the most part with a textile (Rincon,10 years old and still good but I don't think that is made anymore) jacket that has a linner (don't ride much when real cold (-25 deg F) ...
There is no perfect riding gear.
you can't beat the crash protection of an Aerostich Roadcrafter. the armor is superior.it's pretty well vented but on real hot days I soak my t-shirt and open the vents, it's almost air conditioned then.. new suits have flaps that can cover your boots too.
You might shop around. The new textile stuff is very good. I picked up no brand jacket (Speed & Steel brand) at a close out rack at a booth ar COTA. The weather changed when I was riding back to OKC from MotoGP Austin. Rain, wind and cold. I am talking 30s, 45 mph north head wind, flurries and rain. This jacket is much better than my leather so far as warmth and rain. It's ventilated and armored. I wear it 8 months, and slip into the mesh for summer.Shop around. You might be surprised. I wouldn't be shocked if you could find a good one like it at Cycle Gear.
+100. Roadcrafter and soaked long sleeved cotton Tshirt. Only downside is the need to shed suit fast when not moving if hot. so keep moving....
Simple for me. 80 degrees F and up, mesh jacket and layer to comfort. 75 degrees and down to 50 degrees leather or textile with a liner or not as well as layers as needed. 45 down to 32ish degrees a cold suit and layers as needed. Below 32 degrees, keep my ass at home😂Oh and frog toggs, water proof boot covers and glove covers in a nylon bag in the right bag with the Jack Daniels for the cold wet conditions.
That's exactly my current plan when I'm at home. Problem is, on a long tour, packed full, I can't carry two different riding outfits for two of us; as big as proper protective gear packs, I'd fill two saddlebags with just mesh, rainsuits, pants, etc ..... Lannis
You get rain? I'm envious ....
I'm shopping everywhere I can find ... I've had a Street and Steel "Brighton" jacket similar to what you describe, and my "Bilt" mesh jacket from Cycle Gear is reaching the end of its life.I wore out a FirstGear Kilimanjaro jacket 2000-2010, and my Tourmaster Rincon has lasted about 8 years but is about done. I have a heavy armored leather jacket but (unlike most leather, which people find shrinks badly over the years) this one expanded over the last couple years and doesn't fit me any more.Fay is at the end-of-life of her second Joe Rocket jacket/pants outfit, and also has a Bilt mesh jacket which needs replacing. Very little to our credit is the fact that normally we ride in jeans; helmet, boots, gloves, and jacket are all good, but our legs are protected only by cotton denim, which isn't good. We're not going on our next long tour in jeans. Kevlar jeans maybe, if we go the rainsuit route.None of the gear above, however, is waterproof; all of it requires a rain suit if water starts coming down (or up from the highway; you get wetter from truck and pavement spray than from rain) ....No place I'm aware of within 200 miles besides the Cycle Gear in Springfield VA has an extensive line of gear where you can try things on for size ... so it's the guess-try-return-try again on line cycle ...Lannis
Oh man! This is a relevent post for me. I am in my early 60s and I bruise really easily and my skin on my hands cuts easily. Been trying to decide how to go concerning riding apparel and armor.GliderJohn
b but the upshot is that neither one of us heals up like a young dog any more if we go down, and a lick that I used to just shake off will have me hurting bad the next couple mornings or longer .... Hence the search for the Right Stuff!Lannis