View Full Version : Gerbing heated jackets
diamond
29-12-06, 02:17 PM
Any one have any experience of any of the gerbing heated products. I'm looking at getting a jacket liner but not sure if i need to buy the battery connectors seperatly or if they come with the Jacket.
Any view good or bad appreciated as it's not a cheap thing to discardif it's useless, but if it works it might make my 120 mile a day commute a little more tolerable.
Thanks Liz
northwind
29-12-06, 02:39 PM
I'ev been looking at the Exo stormrider vest for a while... It has a seperate battery back, you can run it off the bike or from its own battery. Seems like a good thing to me. Saw a review in one of the mags this month which reckoned it was great, more even heat than other vests.
I'm sure RandyO wears Gerbing... And he knows a bit about riding in the cold.
diamond
29-12-06, 02:49 PM
I was looking at some other makes Klan is one and there's some Widder vests on ebay for £69 but i'm not sure if they are as good as others or if they have lifetime warranty like the Gerbing.
I was looking at some other makes Klan is one and there's some Widder vests on ebay for £69 but i'm not sure if they are as good as others or if they have lifetime warranty like the Gerbing.In all honesty Liz my little fruitbat, they are all the same. The SV battery/cahrging system is the weak link in the equasion, and im sure you aint commuting on the 749?
Gerbring and Klan are both very good and i have a fair few mates that wear the stuff, but they are girls...and so are you, so you are forgiven. As for the connectors, i think that they come with a plug that goes into an accesrary socket. Id email a supplier and ask them as im unlikely to see my mates who ise the stuff.
diamond
29-12-06, 04:29 PM
and im sure you aint commuting on the 749?
Not at this time of year, but i will be from spring onwards.
Maybe i'll just stick with my heated grips on the SV thanks fella.
Any one have any experience of any of the gerbing heated products. I'm looking at getting a jacket liner but not sure if i need to buy the battery connectors seperatly or if they come with the Jacket.
Any view good or bad appreciated as it's not a cheap thing to discardif it's useless, but if it works it might make my 120 mile a day commute a little more tolerable.
Thanks Liz
IIRC, the battery connector comes with the jacket liner and the thermostat is a separate item (I highly recommend the thermostat/heat-troller, without it, the jacket liner will be heating to max potential and cooking you)
I've been in rides 100± miles in -10°F (-25°C) and stayed toasty warm
diamond
29-12-06, 06:03 PM
Ok cool thanks for the info i think i'll get one and see how it goes.
Sid Squid
29-12-06, 06:59 PM
I'ev been looking at the Exo stormrider vest for a while... It has a seperate battery back, you can run it off the bike or from its own battery. Seems like a good thing to me. Saw a review in one of the mags this month which reckoned it was great, more even heat than other vests.I've got one of these, very toasty. When using a battery pack off the bike only the kidney area gets power, presumably heating the whole thing would just be too great a drain and the battery life would be unacceptably short. Not that I ever have of course, only been used on the bike.
I've been using a Gerbing heated jacket and gloves for a couple of years now. They make an incredible difference during cold weather. I've also got the heated socks this year, which again I can only recommend.
Whether or not you need a controller unit depends very much on the ambient temperature and on the riding you are doing. Unsurprisingly, high speed stuff in cold weather, you'll want it on full anyway, if you're in town on a slightly milder day, with the kit on full blast you will be roasted.
diamond
02-01-07, 12:54 PM
Thanks for the replies, i ordered the jacket liner and it should be here tomorrow. I haven't gone for a controller as i do 120 miles of fast dual carriageway riding as my commute, no town stuff at all. I also wanna cut down on the layers i wear cos this morning i could barely move in all the layers so i'd probably just were a base layer underneath and have it on full.
I bet it the weather starts to get warmer now :roll:
Thanks for the replies, i ordered the jacket liner and it should be here tomorrow. I haven't gone for a controller as i do 120 miles of fast dual carriageway riding as my commute, no town stuff at all. I also wanna cut down on the layers i wear cos this morning i could barely move in all the layers so i'd probably just were a base layer underneath and have it on full.
I bet it the weather starts to get warmer now :roll:You WILL Cook
diamond
02-01-07, 01:21 PM
I'll be fine i like to be nice and warm, i always have the grips on my SV on full blast and this morning i was wearing 6 layers under my bike jacket which also had it's thermal liner in.
Don't worry about me, i can always ride faster to increase wind chill :lol: :lol:
Those Gerbing jacket liners are the absolute dog's danglies. Once you have used one you will never go back! I don't have a thermostat yet, and only plug it in just as I am going onto the motorway. When you exit the motorway and slow down, you will be scrabbling to unplug it. When Viney says you will cook, it is not a figurative off-hand comment. If it is not below 5 degrees Celcius, and you are not doing 100mph plus you WILL COOK! It heats to above 50 degrees and will leave your skin bright red and all of you drenched in perspiration if it is left on for longer than absolutely necessary. As you can gather, I will be ordering a thermostat soon...
CB1ROCKET
02-01-07, 02:06 PM
Gerbing are great, i used their heated gloves, and god do they work!! even in strong winds!
I had a couple of faults but a quick phone call and replacements are on the way!!
No waiting for your old ones to go back. The new one arrive first class post the day after the phone call and they are covered by lifetime guarantee on the electrics!
All in all grerat service and i sent my old ones back the next day, no questions asked!
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