I’ve got pretty poor circulation so it’s time to start thinking about warmer gloves. My old Fox Antifreezes that i use for colder autumn days (*) are pretty much worn out and they seem to be discontinued… Water resistant or waterproof would be a bonus I think. No palm padding, and no pulling-inside-out linings please!
I might pick up a set of Fox Polar Sidewinders, the standard Sidewinder are my normal gloves. But I haven’t a clue what else is good.
(* this probably indicates what I mean about poor circulation, for most people this is a proper winter glove, for me it’s autumn… So, warm kit pls! For winter I wear perfect curve neoprene window cleaner’s gloves!)
I got a pair of 100% Briskers for £20 – fantastic cold weather gloves (still useable with a slice open through the palm – fell off and broke my fall with razor sharp flint!)
I don’t get on with bulky gloves, I find that the palms bulk up too much and restrict blood flow (I have some waterproof RST tractech gloves for the motorbike which are terrible, no feel at all form the bars!). I had an old pair of specialized ones which finally died last year (after 17 years of service!) which I replaced with a set of the 100% briskers, absolutely brilliant gloves, have mine in day-glo yellow and will be ordering a second set later today.
I’m an Aldi glove fan. I have 3 pairs of normal winter gloves and a pair of the lobster gloves, wore a pair of the normal winter gloves on this morning’s commute
BUT, they’re not great for grip. I went to BPW and did my first run with them on (it was early Jan), horrendous, had to go back to the car and change to normal gloves
For most of my normal riding they’re fine though. Pogies will be going on when it’s cold enough
After spending a fortune on Castilli, rapha, gore and Mavic gloves. I’ve been blown away by http://galibier.cc stuff.
Their leather gloves are better quality than the rapha aquivilant for £100 less.
The winter gloves are also spot on in fit and build quality.
They are unless you are going fast – then the wind starts to get through them.
I’ve been using aldi winter gloves for the past 4 years, I’ve really not found anything else as good in terms of warmth and water resistance..
Guess it depends what you mean by ‘going fast’, but I have a long downhill stretch on my commute, around 4 miles, where I’m doing 20mph+ for a considerable amount of time and never noticed an issue.
Guess it depends what you mean by ‘going fast’, but I have a long downhill stretch on my commute, around 4 miles, where I’m doing 20mph+ for a considerable amount of time and never noticed an issue.
They’re great for commuting & mtb, but I find on longer road rides that enough wind gets through to eventually make my hands cold.
Tend to wear my regular summer gloves through the winter as I like the feel they give but always carry a spare, dry pair in my bag. Also, when it’s really cold I carry a Zippo hand warmer and I toast my digits on that every now and then. Works a treat!
Semi-lobster, so you get some of the benefit of a lobster (warmer) with some of the benefit of a normal glove (dexterity). Dawson, that’s pretty much it. A lobster glove is normally warmer as it allows better trapping of air around the hands, like a sleeping bag. A “normal” glove, however, is like a duvet. Better freedom of movement, so better at being able to use your fingers, but not as warm. IMHO, a semi-lobster is the best of both worlds. See also the truly brilliant Hestra 3 finger ski glove.
On gnarmac or MTB over really cold winters, the two free/two tucked up format of the Elements work really well for me.
Warm in all but the very, very coldest of weathers. Water repelling, as opposed to waterproof, but have never felt cold when they’ve been wet. Great reflective detail on them as well (Black ones for me).
I’ve got a pair of the glacier gloves but only really use them canoeing and occasionally with drop bars. On the mountain bike if its too cold for the aldi specials then I’m a convert to pogies.
I’ve got the 100% Brisker, Meh, I think you’ll be disappointed if you’re expecting a warm glove and once they get wet the cold cuts right through them.
Posted 7 years ago
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