troy lee stage: xxl too short, won‘t fit
bell super air dh: xl fits, chin guard feels whimsical, too similar to my bell sixer
fox proframe: xxl too short, won’t fit
kali invader II: xxl fits like a glove, bought. wouldn’t use it in a bike park though, feels more like an airy trail helmet with additional chin guard.
me, 64cm oval head most helmets won’t fit on
troy lee stage: xxl too short, won‘t fit
bell super air dh: xl fits, chin guard feels whimsical, too similar to my bell sixer
fox proframe: xxl too short, won’t fit
kali invader II: xxl fits like a glove, bought. wouldn’t use it in a bike park though, feels more like an airy trail helmet with additional chin guard.
me, 64cm oval head most helmets won’t fit on
What do you think of those lenses?I just got the Stage helmet in M/L. The pads that you swap to adjust the fit actually work. It was too tight for me with the stock pads, but I ended up with the smallest check pads and the medium rear pad and it fits great now. I got the stage because I knew my glasses would fit on it. I ride prescription Oakley's with the trail torch lens, and in the heat that I live in I prefer them over goggles unless I am sitting on a lift.
I have never in the past noticed much of a difference with lenses, but with the trail torch lenses it really does make things like the rocks and roots stand apart from the dirt. I can honestly just read the trail better with them.What do you think of those lenses?
My first gen Flak Jackets are about dead, and was looking at a replacement gen 2. The trail and trail torch lenses are both of interest....
I second that.The pink/purple ("Low Light") Oakley Prizm lenses are amazing for riding in trees, fog, and overcast conditions. They really help with contrast & accentuating trail texture.
The Prizm Trail is nice too but doesn't work as well when it's really shady / foggy / dusk.
Great. I just purchased an Endura Pro SL road helmet and was wondering right about that topic after my first ride with it - so no chance for an easy return it anymore. The Koroyd has relatively sharp boundaries on the inside of the helmet. On the other hand I had exactly one crash in my whole 30 yrs long road riding career and that only resulted in classical road rash after my front wheel slipped on a trail of oil on the road. When I compare this to my number of soil sample taking adventures on all mtbs... easy going.Not very interested in helmets with detachable chin bars and Leatt just released a new one with the superfluous third option of removable ear protection.
Still it's fairly decent looking and pricing isn't insane. What I did find more interesting was the discussion on pinbike about baldies getting scalped by Koroyd equipped helmet during crashes. Being folically challenged myself I'm curious if anyone here has experienced something similar.
here's some feedbackCan anyone who has tried more than one make/model provide some feedback on what's good?
looks like the chinbar stays on at leastHave the troy lee stage love it
I look at that and see a success, not a failure.looks like the chinbar stays on at least
edit: oops, nevermind
Herbs in Santa Cruz, California, United States - photo by herbertmarcusavich - Pinkbike
Photo of Herbs in Santa Cruz, California, United States. Broken chin bar on TLD Stage Helmetwww.pinkbike.com
bootlickerI look at that and see a success, not a failure.
You are missing my point, quit being so relentlessly negative, it’s gonna give you fucking gout or something.bootlicker
when's the last time you saw a dh helmet do that?
"our frames are designed specifically to release the headtube in order to absorb hard impacts"
that's what you sound like
Pretty sure hanging out here is a sadomasochism thing for kidwooYou are missing my point, quit being so relentlessly negative, it’s gonna give you fucking gout or something.
every time rideit breaks, I consider it an utterly outstanding success in design, not a failurePretty sure hanging out here is a sadomasochism thing for kidwoo