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khabel
18th July 2012, 08:38
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

Bald Eagle
18th July 2012, 08:57
Eat garlic before riding

Sent from my MB525 using Tapatalk 2

f2dz
18th July 2012, 08:59
Reminds me that I should probably get mine checked over by someone cos I have a horrible sense of smell.

I guess it's just like any other piece of clothing? Wash them when it gets bad, keep them in a well ventilated area when you're not wearing them, not inside your closet. I just hang my gear over chairs around the dining table, in front of a dehumidifier if they're still damp. Seems to be okay in the morning.

duckonin
18th July 2012, 08:59
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

(1). Yep, have a shower...:niceone: (2) Always put on line to air out. (3) Buy new gear.:rolleyes:

FJRider
18th July 2012, 09:32
It's the acid content in the Auckland air. Either move areas ... or live with it.



But make sure the gear is properly aired out and dried between rides.

Flip
18th July 2012, 09:44
Send a few inches down here. We have had 6mm of rain in the last 8 weeks and its very dry.

CookMySock
18th July 2012, 12:05
Textiles - turn inside out and throw in the washing machine, dry on the clothesline. Put a fat dose of detergent in with them.

Akzle
18th July 2012, 12:32
Send a few inches down here. We have had 6mm of rain in the last 8 weeks and its very dry.

that's what she said.

skippa1
18th July 2012, 12:55
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

you might need to wash your piss flaps:killingme

FJRider
18th July 2012, 12:58
Textiles - turn inside out and throw in the washing machine, dry on the clothesline. Put a fat dose of detergent in with them.

Thats fine ... but pretty much ruins the water repellency. To combat that ... a wash straight after with no detergent, and a couple of caps of NIKWAX / TX. Direct wash in, will re-waterproof. It works a treat ...

Akzle
18th July 2012, 17:35
Thats fine ... but pretty much ruins the water repellency. To combat that ... a wash straight after with no detergent, and a couple of caps of NIKWAX / TX. Direct wash in, will re-waterproof. It works a treat ...

borrow mum's cheese grater and use SUNLIGHT soap (or similar) instead of laundry detergent. half a cake is a large wash-load.
also good for hunting clothes as doesn't lay thick with the "whiter and brighter" UV thingees.

then go roll in hotwax, sno-seal, sex wax, nubbin/dubbin/waxxy wax - particularly on the seams. goretex also sell some "re-proofing" shit, but tbh by the time goretex isn't waterproof it's due for replacement.

Bonez
18th July 2012, 19:01
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?Don't go to work.....

Usarka
18th July 2012, 19:50
Textiles - turn inside out and throw in the washing machine, dry on the clothesline. Put a fat dose of detergent in with them.

Noooooooooo! Don't do this.

Berries
18th July 2012, 22:02
It's the acid content in the Auckland air.
By jingo he could be right. My textile jacket must be ten years old now, ridden in all weathers and on most days. It's not been washed yet.

Or may be I do stink.

Tigadee
19th July 2012, 00:54
then go roll in hotwax, sno-seal, sex wax, nubbin/dubbin/waxxy wax - particularly on the seams.

Would spray on silicone work too?

Akzle
19th July 2012, 13:24
Would spray on silicone work too?

that sounds like something you'd find in an "adult store"...:devil2:

i would imagine it would, just make sure it doesn't have any acidy-shit in it (like stuff that evaporates as it cures...) that would probably be detrimental to stitching.

i recommend natural waxes, bees, carnauba, even rendered animal fat (a la yurts/canvas tents) etc

Ratti
19th July 2012, 14:20
dont waste your time and money with spray on stuff. Textile is inherently porous, look at how coarse the weave is, the water dribbles in between the threads. If your gear is leaking its because the inner coating and/or waterproofing layer has cracked.
Dont use oilskin dressing, animal fat or vegetable oils on your gear,it won't work.
A dose of dressing wax might work, one of my customers asked me about this the other day. I told him to give it a shot, he had nothing to lose except feeling soggy.

oneofsix
19th July 2012, 14:27
Would spray on silicone work too?



that sounds like something you'd find in an "adult store"...:devil2:


Sounds like you are thinking of spray on latex, umm now that might work, like those spray on condoms the Germans invented :lol
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U18xIsNfecA&feature=player_detailpage

Ender EnZed
19th July 2012, 15:16
is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

I usually just soak mine in petrol. That gets the fish smell right out.

pritch
19th July 2012, 16:04
My Spidi jacket has a leather binding around the edge of the collar, it smells when wet. I guess the only good news is that it doesn't take long to dry.

Some scary advice earlier: don't use detergent to wash textile riding gear, use the proper products; don't put Dubbin anywhere near any seam that you don't want to rot.

Tigadee
19th July 2012, 21:07
I usually just soak mine in petrol. That gets the fish smell right out.

You must be popular whenever someone lights up near you...

Maha
19th July 2012, 21:11
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

Theres only two things that smell like fish.... and one of them is fish...:cool:

Maakz
19th July 2012, 21:23
LOL Maha...hehehehe!!! :lol:

Maha
19th July 2012, 21:29
LOL Maha...hehehehe!!! :lol:

Well.. now, apparently there is three....:(

Tigadee
19th July 2012, 21:33
Well.. now, apparently there is three....:(

Man asked woman "Why do you have a tattoo of a seashell on your inner thigh?"
Woman answers, "If you put your ear to it, you can smell the ocean."

Usarka
19th July 2012, 21:34
Smells like fish, tastes like chicken, you don't know what you been lickin, oh boy.

nerrrd
25th July 2012, 19:22
Can anyone who has a textile jacket with a removable waterproof lining confirm or deny if it gets less of that I've-been-damp-for-ages smell, or is easier to air out than one with a built-in liner (like mine)?

FJRider
25th July 2012, 20:44
Can anyone who has a textile jacket with a removable waterproof lining confirm or deny if it gets less of that I've-been-damp-for-ages smell, or is easier to air out than one with a built-in liner (like mine)?

Removable liners are better.

nerrrd
25th July 2012, 23:20
Thought they might be, thanks for that.

CookMySock
27th July 2012, 12:48
... but pretty much ruins the water repellency. This is not correct. I throw my jacket and pants in the washing machine all the time, and there is nothing wrong with their waterproofness, in fact these (Mohsin) are FAR drier than my dri-rider gear I had.

I got sick of fucking around with smelly gear so I just ignored all the alarmist bullshit advice and just machine washed it. The result is nice-smelling gear that looks clean and new and it's dry as a chip.

Lozza2442
27th July 2012, 13:01
With all the rain we've been having in Auckland is there anyway to stop my textiles smelling like rotten fish when I arrive at work?

What do you do with them at work when they're wet? Surely shoving them in a bag would be bad

caspernz
28th July 2012, 04:41
To avoid the smell of wet bike gear, I do this: Remove helmet, remove ear plugs, insert ear plugs in nose...no more smell :laugh::wings:

On a slightly more serious note, my gear is Revit, with the removeable inners, and if a few hours of drying doesn't do it, I just unzip the inner and hang it up separate from the jacket itself. By the time it's hometime, all dry again :Punk: