View Full Version : Visible Raincoat?
StoneChucker
1st March 2005, 22:06
Can someone reccomend a place to buy a raincoat suitable to wear over a textile jacket? I don't want to buy expensive wet weather gear. I have some over-pants, so I just need a waterproof top of some sort. Even one of those bright orange/yellow rain jackets?
I might go check out the warehouse or camping shops, but I have super-limited time, so suggestions will be great.
Dave.
Blakamin
1st March 2005, 23:50
Can someone reccomend a place to buy a raincoat suitable to wear over a textile jacket? I don't want to buy expensive wet weather gear. I have some over-pants, so I just need a waterproof top of some sort. Even one of those bright orange/yellow rain jackets?
I might go check out the warehouse or camping shops, but I have super-limited time, so suggestions will be great.
Dave.
WTF????
buy a "R-Jays" jacket and stop being a tight-arse girl..... :2thumbsup
mainly because waterproof shit dont breathe, so you sweat... so you end up farqin wetter!!!
trust me, I tried......
get some gear, dood, you wont regret it....
.
.Cheap yellow plastic from the Warehouse is as good as anything.
.
.(though Ducati do a great line in w/proof overgear......PM me if you'd like to borrow my catalogue)
Holy Roller
2nd March 2005, 06:46
.
.Cheap yellow plastic from the Warehouse is as good as anything.
.
.(though Ducati do a great line in w/proof overgear......PM me if you'd like to borrow my catalogue)
Just be sure to get one several sizes larger than you would normally wear. If you wear it only during the wet times the sweating problem isn't too bad.
Lou Girardin
2nd March 2005, 07:16
Teknic do a 2 piece suit for $89.00. Try them on while wearing your riding gear, sizings vary a lot.
marty
2nd March 2005, 07:20
i've got a tecknic 2 piece - bib pants and a loose fit jacket that goes over my leathers. cut the liner out of the jacket though - it's just a waste of time. had to get a 3XL to fit my fat arse
FEINT
2nd March 2005, 07:34
cycling shops have those fluorescent jackets... hope that helps. :niceone:
Pwalo
2nd March 2005, 07:47
If you've got a textile jacket can you just waterproof that? Mind you I'm sure that a lovely yellow PVC overcoat will look fetching on the R1, and it should make you visible to the blindest of SI motorists.
Wetweather gear is for wooses!
I'll be getting some soon
dhunt
2nd March 2005, 09:05
My Uncle & Aunt got some stuff from the warehouse for about $30 I think it was, two piece suit that really water proof and folds away very small.
StoneChucker
2nd March 2005, 10:38
WTF????
buy a "R-Jays" jacket and stop being a tight-arse girl..... :2thumbsup
mainly because waterproof shit dont breathe, so you sweat... so you end up farqin wetter!!!
trust me, I tried......
get some gear, dood, you wont regret it....
Thanks for all the suggestions people. Will look into it tomorrow morning...
And Blakamin. I'm really offended. You are sooooooo mean, don't you realise I'm sensitive, and easily offended. I have lost my faith in the biking community, and you are the one to blame.
I'll have to end this post, and the tears are obscuring my vision, and dripping into the keys, making them ssssssssssssstickkkk.
Why are people so mean :confused:
{PT - private}
Hitcher
2nd March 2005, 12:12
Go to a camping/tramping store. Buy the Columbia breatheable/packable jacket and leggings. Outstanding rain protection, and you don't get all sweaty in them, and the pack up nice and small when you're not wearing them.
You ride in the rain? http://www.2wg.com/icons/wtf.gif
Bugger that, I'll be parking up my bike soon, into hibernation, prob after Easter.
StoneChucker
2nd March 2005, 23:13
You ride in the rain? http://www.2wg.com/icons/wtf.gif
Bugger that, I'll be parking up my bike soon, into hibernation, prob after Easter.
No you silly bugger... But, when I go on holiday down south (in 15 hours), even with all the stalking I've done over the local tv weather lady, I can't control the weather.
When in the normal humdrum of life, I never ride in the rain, unless I get caught in it (hardly ever). That may not be a good thing though, since I rarely ride in the wet (less than a dozen times ever I think), on my current bike, I constantly have to consciously remember not to light up the back wheel (which is easy in the wet). Funny, but steering becomes a problem when doing a rolling burnout (ok ok ok, only happened once, but it freaked me out). Or, locking it up by changing down too fast...
Although, those nice slipperly white lines, manhole covers, train tracks, diesel, etc... make it easier :confused:
Big Dog
2nd March 2005, 23:18
.
.Cheap yellow plastic from the Warehouse is as good as anything.
.
.(though Ducati do a great line in w/proof overgear......PM me if you'd like to borrow my catalogue)
Nah Wharehouse plastic suck. get the nylon reinforced shit. its cheaper, looks better, is more waterproof and lasts longer. Get the Girly stuff it has better storm cuffs and is 100% on a bike. Shit I can get a womans 3xl on over gear.
I used to get a year out of each set (daily riding all weathers) and unless it is humid without raining it does not sweat badly.
Now that my gear has started to leak I'm gonna buy a nother set to keep in my bag (oh did I mention fold down real small and lightweight) for really bad days. I used to keep them under my seat oin the gpx250)
Lou Girardin
3rd March 2005, 07:15
No you silly bugger... But, when I go on holiday down south (in 15 hours), even with all the stalking I've done over the local tv weather lady, I can't control the weather.
When in the normal humdrum of life, I never ride in the rain, unless I get caught in it (hardly ever). That may not be a good thing though, since I rarely ride in the wet (less than a dozen times ever I think), on my current bike, I constantly have to consciously remember not to light up the back wheel (which is easy in the wet). Funny, but steering becomes a problem when doing a rolling burnout (ok ok ok, only happened once, but it freaked me out). Or, locking it up by changing down too fast...
Although, those nice slipperly white lines, manhole covers, train tracks, diesel, etc... make it easier :confused:
You haven't lived until you've ridden through a West Coast drizzle. God knows what a real West Coast rainstorm is like. Roads are grippy though.
Good Luck
jrandom
3rd March 2005, 07:18
those nice slipperly man holes...
See? What have I been saying about you Wellington lot? Eh? Eh?
Shudder.
StoneChucker
3rd March 2005, 07:33
See? What have I been saying about you Wellington lot? Eh? Eh?
Shudder.
First off, I'd like to correct an unusual spelling mistake. That should be slippery.
OI!!! Screw you guys, I'm going home!
(respect my authoratai)
Oh, just for that JRandom (;)), I declare that for the entire day, you shall have slippery man holes on the brain. While you're sitting at work, looking out the window you'll suddenly find yourself thinking about man holes, slippery or otherwise. Actually, nothing unusual there ey? :lol:
:confused: :spudwave:
vifferman
3rd March 2005, 07:48
Oh, just for that JRandom (;)), I declare that for the entire day, you shall have slippery man holes on the brain. While you're sitting at work, looking out the window you'll suddenly find yourself thinking about man holes, slippery or otherwise. Actually, nothing unusual there ey?
:laugh:
I'd go with either the Columbia stuff Hitcher suggested, or summat like Motoline, which is made specifically for the purpose. Unless you can find summat at the Warehouse that coincidentally happens to fit well, with fastening cuffs and legs, and that's not too baggy, it'll drive you nuts when it flaps in the wind and probably won't breathe, so at the slightest suggestion of sun, you'll cook and end up wet anyway.
I used to wear Line7 bike trou, as made for the MOT bike cops (don't make em anymore), with just a waterproof raincoat, but then I was only riding a short distance at 50km/h. My next set of gear was a cheap 2-piece green/purple :sick: suit I bought from Doyles, which was tight over my leathers, even though it was the biggest size they had. The legs were too short, and the jacket zip blew out after a few wears, due to the wind resistance pulling on the jacket and stressing the zip.
Suit #3 was a full WFO nylon/PVC 1-piece, which despite being the largest size was again too short. It was 100% waterproof and I absolutely cooked in the fooker if there was even the slightest hint of sun somewhere in the world. I wore it 4 or 5 times and sold it for half what I paid for it.
From now on, I'm only wearing decent quality gear that's made for bikers. :yeah:
(Remind me of this, willya, next time I'm tempted to be "thrifty"?)
Hitcher
3rd March 2005, 09:50
First off, I'd like to correct an unusual spelling mistake. That should be slippery.
Now you realise that this embarrassment could have been avoided if you'd used the politically-correct descriptor "personnel access hatch"...
Hitcher
3rd March 2005, 10:22
Not that I should profer an opinion on the practise of conjugal orifice plugging, but I am somewhat concerned, nay disturbed, that a VifferVixen is endowed with a "man hole" q.v.
AMPS
3rd March 2005, 11:23
And pray what exactly is a "man hole" (or more politicocorrectly - a "personnel access hatch") but a hole for a man to enter through, or "a hole, usually with a cover, through which a person may enter a sewer, boiler, drain, or similar structure".
And my wife sews, so she is a sewer. Furthermore, a boiler is "an enclosed vessel in which water is heated and circulated, either as hot water or as steam" OR "a pot for stewing or boiling". As my wife is frequently stewing over something dumb I've done, I'd say she is quick to come to the boil. And when she boils over, I'm in hot water. Ergo, she's a boiler as well.
And we know said "personnel access hatch" also functions as a drain (or so I've been told).
And (Also! Plus! Furthermore! In addition!) a screw hole is a hole for a screw (not a hole in or on a screw), a key hole is a hole for a key (not in or on the key), a mouse hole is a not a hole in a mouse, a fox-hole is a whole for a fox, a port-hole.... errr... um well, then a pot-hole is um.... err.. Yes. Mostly.
So what's your problem? I'm (allegedly) a man, it's a hole, etc... etc...
But (BUT!) regardless of that, we were being politically correct, which means we were talking in a non-gender-specific fashion, which means you need not worry about the masculinity of The Viffervixen's endowments: as far as I can determine, after many years familiarising myself with it, it is not now, nor has it ever been some other bloke's access portal.
Far, far, far too much info.
Clever though.
Hitcher
3rd March 2005, 11:29
But (BUT!) regardless of that, we were being politically correct, which means we were talking in a non-gender-specific fashion, which means you need not worry about the masculinity of The Viffervixen's endowments: as far as I can determine, after many years familiarising myself with it, it is not now, nor has it ever been some other bloke's access portal.
I am relieved that clarity and, hopefully, closure has been attained on this potentially most private of matters.
SPman
3rd March 2005, 17:29
Raincoats!
I thought it might be about....
Oh, never mind....
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