Quick shifter and rear brakingOne thing I found with heated grips - the levers are fkn cold! So your fingertips will still freeze...

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Quick shifter and rear brakingOne thing I found with heated grips - the levers are fkn cold! So your fingertips will still freeze...

Quick shifter and rear braking![]()
No one can fault you for wanting the safety features, I will also want them one day and I'm probably stupid for taking the risk of riding without any.
I'm not intentionally avoiding safety aids, I avoided ALL aids for my first bike, I'm just trying to see what a pure and simple bike feels like and to gain the skills needed to ride one.
What I wanted was a 250 CBX Twister.... But due to a very good deal and pressure from the Mrs to spend less I ended up with a 200cc GomotoI might have missed it, but what bike did you choose as your your first ride?
Excluding VAT yes. I don't think they're con artists.
Plug is R 109,86 at Trac Mac.
http://trac-mac.com/store/ngk/264/cpr8ea-9.html
I use summer gloves, and my hands freeze in about 500m of riding, got some running gloves and decided to try them under the summer glove, helped a bit, but after a few KM on back roads my hands were frozen again. decided i'll invest in heated grips instead of winter gloves.
Thanks for the advice as always, I appreciate it. It needed to be replaced at 8000 km.I think the con here is rather that it needed to be replaced at 10k already and then for that price.
But things have moved on and everything is expensive these days.
That looks bloody good , did you read the specs on that exhaust .
RIDDEN: 9 Triumph motorcycles (yes, the brand in back in SA!)
HARTBEESPOORT – Yes, Triumph is back. Fans of the iconic British motorcycle brand has reason to rejoice after a period of uncertainty following the change of distributorship earlier this year. Previously imported by Kawasaki Motorcycles South Africa, the products will now be handled by Triumph South Africa, a joint venture between automotive industry veteran Bruce Allen and the Fury Motor Group.
New-look dedicated dealerships
/snip
http://www.carmag.co.za/car-reviews...umph-motorcycles-yes-the-brand-in-back-in-sa/
Oh come on... I want a new Tiger but R200k? :erm:
Does your gear have an expiry date printed on it or is it just normal wear and tear that necessitates replacement?So my BMW jacket and pants are at EOL which means I am due for some expensive gear replacement soon.
Does your gear have an expiry date printed on it or is it just normal wear and tear that necessitates replacement?
Rather, how do you know your gear is at the end of its life?
For the reasons listed above heated grips only solve the "inside" of the hand problem and is really just a comfort feature on top of winter gloves.
Trust me I've been where you are with the same logic but the reality is heated grips actually make the cold worse for causing a polarizing effort from the inside of your hand to the outside.
So start with legit waterproof winter gloves first, then as an optional extra get heated grips on your next bike.
In fact I find heated grips although I use them obviously for being there actually have more practical use in the autumn and spring in between seasons where I get caught out with summer gloves on a cold morning or night and then it makes it quite pleasant.
There are some cases where the fairing or hand guards cover your hands where it is less extreme, but still nothing works well enough to compensate for summer gloves in winter.
I rode for many years with summer gloves and "hacks" only to eventually have heated grips and realise it actually didn't work like I expected. Then I got legit winter gloves (RST Titanium) and it was a revelation I wanted to kick myself for, not having done it years earlier.
I've only ridden in Cape winters, which are wet, but not below freezing like in the highveld. Heated grips won't stop your hands from freezing, but they are a huge improvement over non-heated.Makes sense, thanks for the write-up, as much as it pains me since i like gadgets, i'll follow your advice, so winter gloves it is.
I've only ridden in Cape winters, which are wet, but not below freezing like in the highveld. Heated grips won't stop your hands from freezing, but they are a huge improvement over non-heated.
Main thing is to get gloves that are windproof. Windproof and heated grips will mean tasty fingers.
Ja...erm no.
I'm not trusting my rather expensive German engineered motorcycle to a bunch of backyard mechanic hacks that universally use the same boxes across most bikes.
Anyone who claims their stuff is "decent" have absolutely zero clue about fueling of bikes and cars.
