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Author Topic: Silk glove liners  (Read 1389 times)

Offline montmil

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Silk glove liners
« on: November 07, 2011, 01:59:14 PM »
Finally. Cooler weather has added a few seasonal items on the rack at one of my favorite scooter stores, Lone Star BMW & Triumph in Austin, Texas. Or, as pal Bengt Phorqs refers to the town, the Commie Capital on the Colorado. ;D

Anyways, Lone Star had a short ton of Tourmaster black silk glove liners with knitted silk cuffs. Looked like a deal at $9.99 / pair so snagged a couple pair. I had bought previous silks at Dallas ski shops but they were rather pricey... for their cost, I kinda thought the glove's price must have included a 3-day lift ticket. Yikes.

The thin silk liners really help keep your hands toastier than without 'em. You fat cats with heated grips may now move on along.

Monte
Monte Miller
Denton, TEXAS
1978 BMW R100S
1981 BMW R65
1983 BMW R65
1995 Triumph Trophy
1986 VW Cabriolet

Offline marcmax

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #1 on: November 07, 2011, 02:40:57 PM »
Silk liners under just about anything will keep you toasty warm. When I lived in the other big state (sorry Texans) I had silk long underwear that went on under all the other winter stuff and I always stayed warm. Only problem I have ever had with silk glove liners is that all the gloves now seem to have velcro closures. The hook side will really tear up a silk liner in a hurry.
Keep your bike in good repair: motorcycle boots are not comfortable for walking.

1982 R65ls    1984 R65ls

Offline nhmaf

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #2 on: November 08, 2011, 11:07:13 AM »
It is definitely time to swap over from the summer riding gear - Sunday's 50 mile ride on the Kawasaki (42F in the sunshine) was, very "brisk" and left me with numb fingers.
Airhead #12178 ? BMWMOA #123173 ?BMWRA #33525 ?GSBMWR #563 ?1982 BMW R65LS ?1978 BMW R100/7 1998 Kawasaki Concours

Offline suecanada

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #3 on: November 09, 2011, 08:55:39 AM »
One comment...hippo hands with heated grip wraps inside!!!
1983 R65LS - LRB still my favourite!? 1988 Honda NX250, "Toodles Too" and a Suzuki DR650, "Calypso." All stored in the "Brrrmmm Closet".

Offline Matt Chapter

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #4 on: November 11, 2011, 10:54:16 AM »
Quote
Finally. Cooler weather has added a few seasonal items on the rack at one of my favorite scooter stores, Lone Star BMW & Triumph in Austin, Texas. Or, as pal Bengt Phorqs refers to the town, the Commie Capital on the Colorado. ;D

Monte

Sure, Austin is liberal.. in comparison to the rest of Texas.  ;)

Were you in town recently?  I missed you again, let me know when you come back through.

Also, I'm going to have to check out these "silk liners".  I rode into work this morning wearing http://www.kneedraggers.com/product/654330/Alpinestars-SP-X-Gloves  Brisk!
'04 R1150 RT ~41000 miles
'86 R65 / '84 motor ~72000 miles. SS lines, Spiegler rotor, Progressive monoshock, Keihan silencers, a piece of Pichler fairing.
'76 CB400F ~26000 miles. non-runner!

Altritter

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #5 on: February 04, 2012, 12:58:06 AM »
Quote
Only problem I have ever had with silk glove liners is that all the gloves now seem to have velcro closures. The hook side will really tear up a silk liner in a hurry.

I've found two potential fixes for that problem:

1. David Morgan (davidmorgan.com) sells a nice pair of unlined leather motorcycle gauntlet-style gloves for $50. The leather is really nice, and they have snap fasteners on the backs of the wrists (to close up the flared "skirts".

2.  Winter Silks (wintersilks.com) sells silk liners in three weights for varying air temperatures. Prices range from $9.95 for lightweight, to $13.95 for a heavier silk/wool blend. The company offers discounts for multiple pairs. (I lose gloves all the time.) I ordered some—they arrived today—and I think I'm going to like them.

Offline Barry

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #6 on: February 04, 2012, 04:15:41 AM »
I've been commuting all  this week with temperatures down as low as  -7 Deg C (19 Deg F). My hands wouldn't survive without silk liner gloves. I draw the line at -7 though - chickened out on Friday and went in the car.

Incidentally my local town Macclesfield has a long history of silk production. Here's a quote from the local silk museum web site

"Most of the silk-covered buttons in Britain, (and over much of the civilised world for that matter), in the late 18th century would have been made in Macclesfield, as would most of the silk ties worn in Britain until quite recent times."

Like most other things it's all made in China now.

http://www.manchester2002-uk.com/history/victorian/maccsilkmill.html
« Last Edit: February 04, 2012, 04:17:17 AM by bhodgson »
Barry Cheshire, England 79 R45

Offline wilcom

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #7 on: February 04, 2012, 07:10:13 AM »
Quote
Like most other things it's all made in China now.

The worm has turned.............
Joe Wilkerson
Telephone man with a splash of Data
Menifee, CA

Present:
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past:
1982 BMW R65LS
1979 R65
1980 R65
1982 R80RT
1974 R90/6
1972 R75
1964 R50/2
19xx R27
ZX-11

Offline Barry

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Re: Silk glove liners
« Reply #8 on: February 04, 2012, 07:34:06 AM »
Quote


The worm has turned........


 [smiley=clap.gif]
« Last Edit: February 04, 2012, 07:36:49 AM by bhodgson »
Barry Cheshire, England 79 R45