Been riding gloveless so long now that I genuinely struggle to ride as well WITH gloves.I am not a good enough rider to dare riding sans gloves.
You can just engage the lever more with the tip of your finger which allows for better ergonomics IMO.Never understood grip tape on levers.
But then I don't ever remember my finger/thumb slipping off a brake lever or shifter paddle
Been riding gloveless so long now that I genuinely struggle to ride as well WITH gloves.
Sure? It seems to me that those MTB gloves have a really thin palm, so they are good for sweat absorption but not protect your hands much in a crash (e.g. Fox Pawtector). The Moto gloves have a way thicker palm and more rugged construction (e.g. Fox Dirtpaw)They're exactly the same as mtb gloves
I had a couple of pairs of Oakley Factory Pilot gloves back in the day but I think they had goatse leather palms that busted out pretty quickly.
Nah. I still don't get it.You can just engage the lever more with the tip of your finger which allows for better ergonomics IMO.
Blob of shoe goo?speaking of gloves - anyone know a good product to add 'grippers' to the thumb and index finger? i've got a pair of gloves that i like when i do occasionally wear gloves that don't have them and are slippery on the shifter and levers.
There are obviously variations but that's more manufacturer and model, not sport. I've had plenty of different pairs of moto gloves and they're no different than what I own for mtb gloves (and now I obviously use the same ones for both)Sure? It seems to me that those MTB gloves have a really thin palm, so they are good for sweat absorption but not protect your hands much in a crash (e.g. Fox Pawtector). The Moto gloves have a way thicker palm and more rugged construction (e.g. Fox Dirtpaw)
this. it's either humid and you're sweaty as fuck, or chilly enough to need/want them for most of the year. not much between the two.Honestly man, I don't know how some of you east coasters could ride without them. It's really low humidity where I ride. If that were different, I'd wear gloves.
I do wear them for moto but that's more a vibration blister thing. And I did wear them if it's raining or cold for mtb. But people have no idea how much less arm pump you get with that little less of a thickness to the grip.
The cayennes are proper street bike gloves with double layer kangaroo hide in the palm with sliders. Actually wore them a few times on the MTB after recovering from thumb surgery. the slider puck can kind of hook onto the handlebar and takes some of the weight off the thumb.I had a couple of pairs of Oakley Factory Pilot gloves back in the day but I think they had goatse leather palms that busted out pretty quickly.
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Damn, you are right. They sell the Pawtector also as moto glove.There are obviously variations but that's more manufacturer and model, not sport. I've had plenty of different pairs of moto gloves and they're no different than what I own for mtb gloves (and now I obviously use the same ones for both)
They used to sell dirtpaws as mtb gloves and still do sell several of the same ones as both.
and now they don't sell the pawtector as an mtb glove any more (same with the dirtpaws)Damn, you are right. They sell the Pawtector also as moto glove.
if there were ever a weird enough company to do it, it would them or sidiI want some Alpinestar SPD moto boots!
You guys should be old enough to remember the Sidi Avalanche.if there were ever a weird enough company to do it, it would them or sidi
I actually don't care as long as I can color matchy-match them to the rest of my "kit".and now they don't sell the pawtector as an mtb glove any more (same with the dirtpaws)
notice the trend yet?
They literally sell the same shit for each purpose but just rotate who they market them to
Dirt paws and troy lee...light to medium and handle a hand landing skid very well...not too worried about the back of my hands and knuckles are already solid from certain sports over the years.. carbon knuckles I tried on my old street bike and on my thumper mx...can't stand em. Feels like the knuckle plate digs in over time especially long desert runs...There are obviously variations but that's more manufacturer and model, not sport. I've had plenty of different pairs of moto gloves and they're no different than what I own for mtb gloves (and now I obviously use the same ones for both)
They used to sell dirtpaws as mtb gloves and still do sell several of the same ones as both.
Yeah Eastcoaster Mid-Atlantic here. We might get a few weeks a year that riding without gloves is nice. And I'll keep a pair in the pack for rocky downhills between trees.this. it's either humid and you're sweaty as fuck, or chilly enough to need/want them for most of the year. not much between the two.
i have had a few wrecks that they have for sure protected things, and i do like the padding provided on some (particularly the outer knuckles) for the inevitable pilot-error tree punching times.
thin gloves, no palm/heel padding, some knuckle protection, screw the little bits of stuff they stick on the finger and thumb tips for grip - it all peels off anyhow. just make the thumb and index finger bits seam-less and tougher materials.