.....my cold wet hands!!!
#1
Thread Starter
Junior Member
Joined: Sep 2013
Posts: 6
Likes: 0
From: NW UK
Bikes: MTB & Road
.....my cold wet hands!!!
Okay, summer was awesome - fingerless all the way...even the rain was warm!!
So now things are changin' I need new mitts but ideally only want one pair, mainly for the 10m e/w commute.
My issues.....
- go waterproof & thermal?
The more waterproof you go the less breathable the gloves becomes & rainy weather tends to be mild which means wet from the inside out
- go just waterproof
Would get cold on the frosty mornings
- go thermal
ONLY good on frosty mornings
What does everyone here use? I
I'm pondering wind/water resistant which wouldn't work in a deluge but would work in most - and use a liner for the crispy mornings hmmmmn
These are the gloves I'm eyeing up...any thoughts..
- Altura Progel Waterproof Gloves Winter Gloves
- Polaris Dry Grip Gloves
- Specialized Body Geometry Deflect Glove
So now things are changin' I need new mitts but ideally only want one pair, mainly for the 10m e/w commute.
My issues.....
- go waterproof & thermal?
The more waterproof you go the less breathable the gloves becomes & rainy weather tends to be mild which means wet from the inside out
- go just waterproof
Would get cold on the frosty mornings
- go thermal
ONLY good on frosty mornings
What does everyone here use? I
I'm pondering wind/water resistant which wouldn't work in a deluge but would work in most - and use a liner for the crispy mornings hmmmmn
These are the gloves I'm eyeing up...any thoughts..
- Altura Progel Waterproof Gloves Winter Gloves
- Polaris Dry Grip Gloves
- Specialized Body Geometry Deflect Glove
#2
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2012
Posts: 1,850
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From: Lancaster, PA, USA
Bikes: 2012 Trek Allant, 2016 Bianchi Volpe Disc
I'm not sure what the weather is like in NW UK, but over here the winter tends to be pretty dry. I wear some fleece mittens and they work great (as long as they don't get wet).
#4
Senior Member
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 132
Likes: 1
I've gone the multiple-choice route. I normally wear full-fingered out of habit from too many tasks done in gloves. My summer ones are fairly light, and suitable down to about 50 degrees. I have a pair of lightly insulated gloves that work down to the upper 30s, and I have some old PI Lobster Mitts that are pretty good to the 20s. All of these go up a bit in the wet, though the lobster mitts have to get pretty wet before I notice. I've sometimes considered adding a waterproof overshell glove, or if it were to be colder, some bar mitts.
I also needed something to keep my toes warm. My shoes have nice ventilation holes, that let cold air straight in and collect water. I have neoprene toe covers that are great for cold, and overshoes that do a pretty good job if I know it's going to be wet.
I also needed something to keep my toes warm. My shoes have nice ventilation holes, that let cold air straight in and collect water. I have neoprene toe covers that are great for cold, and overshoes that do a pretty good job if I know it's going to be wet.
#5
I have three things I use (I know, not what you wanted). A fingerless glove one that I got on sale, but turned out to be slightly too big for me. A wool liner glove that I got for like $3 that fits my hands fairly tightly. A waterproof full finger glove that will fit with or without the liner glove in it, again bought on sale. I vary the layers based on how much warmth/waterproofing I need. I think all 3 together came to $30 or less.
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Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),1990 Concorde Aquila(hit by car while riding), others in build queue "when I get the time"
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#6
ouate de phoque
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 1,781
Likes: 1
From: La Prairie, Qc, Canada
Bikes: Bianchi, Nakamura,Opus
You may have a hard time finding ONE pair of glove for all possible kinds of weather. Living in an area where you go from +35° celcius in the summer to -35 celcius in the winter (my personnal record for a 27.4 kms commute is -27°celcius) I must have at least 6 different pair of gloves.
#7
Señior Member
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 13,748
Likes: 10
From: Michigan
Bikes: Windsor Fens, Giant Seek 0 (2014, Alfine 8 + discs)
I use "mechanics" gloves when it's cold but dry. About $6
https://www.harborfreight.com/mechani...rge-93640.html
I use "windproof/weatherproof" gloves from Kohls when it's wet too. About $8. These take me down to probably about 10 to 15 degrees F.
When it gets properly cold, I use "hunters" gloves - blaze orange, they're basically cheap ski gloves with thinsulate lining. < $10 at the department stores around here during deer hunting season. That's when I got my high top thinsulate lined, camo colored winter "riding boots" too. I've ridden with the hunting gloves down to -25*F, and at that point my fingers were getting a bit nippy but at that point I have more things to worry about, like having to use a neoprene face mask to avoid frostbitten face.
https://www.harborfreight.com/mechani...rge-93640.html
I use "windproof/weatherproof" gloves from Kohls when it's wet too. About $8. These take me down to probably about 10 to 15 degrees F.
When it gets properly cold, I use "hunters" gloves - blaze orange, they're basically cheap ski gloves with thinsulate lining. < $10 at the department stores around here during deer hunting season. That's when I got my high top thinsulate lined, camo colored winter "riding boots" too. I've ridden with the hunting gloves down to -25*F, and at that point my fingers were getting a bit nippy but at that point I have more things to worry about, like having to use a neoprene face mask to avoid frostbitten face.
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Work: the 8 hours that separates bike rides.
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#10
__________________
Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),1990 Concorde Aquila(hit by car while riding), others in build queue "when I get the time"
Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),
#11
Banned
Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 43,586
Likes: 1,380
From: NW,Oregon Coast
Bikes: 8
I got Riv Bike's Large, they got Grundens to make, in 2 sizes ..
.. C.A.T. Oregon makes 3 sizes and if you ask they will likely make one even bigger ,
since they sew them JIT , there.
https://www.catoregon.org/cat-store/ultrex-rain-cape/
.. C.A.T. Oregon makes 3 sizes and if you ask they will likely make one even bigger ,
since they sew them JIT , there.
https://www.catoregon.org/cat-store/ultrex-rain-cape/
#12
The Recumbent Quant

Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 3,094
Likes: 8
From: Fairfield, CT
Bikes: 2012 Cruzbike Sofrider, 2013 Cruzigami Mantis, 2016 Folding CruziTandem
#13
Senior Member


Joined: Jul 2008
Posts: 30,465
Likes: 4,547
From: 25 miles northwest of Boston
Bikes: Bottecchia Sprint, GT Timberline 29r, Marin Muirwoods 29er, Trek FX Alpha 7.0
for me it was thin glove liners and various other gloves over. when it got very cold I used hand warmers. when things got wet I made sure I had extra gloves around. bike to work, dry the liners and use a fresh pair of over gloves for the ride home.
#14
One Man Fast Brick
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 1,121
Likes: 0
From: Chicagoland
Bikes: Specialized Langster, Bianchi San Jose, early 90s GT Karakoram, Yuba Mundo, Mercier Nano (mini velo), Nashbar Steel Commuter, KHS Tandemania Sport
I use "mechanics" gloves when it's cold but dry. About $6
https://www.harborfreight.com/mechani...rge-93640.html
I use "windproof/weatherproof" gloves from Kohls when it's wet too. About $8. These take me down to probably about 10 to 15 degrees F.
When it gets properly cold, I use "hunters" gloves - blaze orange, they're basically cheap ski gloves with thinsulate lining. < $10 at the department stores around here during deer hunting season. That's when I got my high top thinsulate lined, camo colored winter "riding boots" too. I've ridden with the hunting gloves down to -25*F, and at that point my fingers were getting a bit nippy but at that point I have more things to worry about, like having to use a neoprene face mask to avoid frostbitten face.
https://www.harborfreight.com/mechani...rge-93640.html
I use "windproof/weatherproof" gloves from Kohls when it's wet too. About $8. These take me down to probably about 10 to 15 degrees F.
When it gets properly cold, I use "hunters" gloves - blaze orange, they're basically cheap ski gloves with thinsulate lining. < $10 at the department stores around here during deer hunting season. That's when I got my high top thinsulate lined, camo colored winter "riding boots" too. I've ridden with the hunting gloves down to -25*F, and at that point my fingers were getting a bit nippy but at that point I have more things to worry about, like having to use a neoprene face mask to avoid frostbitten face.
#15
xtrajack
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 2,058
Likes: 0
From: Maine
Bikes: Kona fire mountain/xtracycle,Univega landrover fs,Nishiki custom sport Ross professional super gran tour Schwinn Mesa (future Xtracycle donor bike)
Multiple pairs of gloves, in various weights and waterproofness, used in combinations to suit the weather, is the solution for me.
#16
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2007
Posts: 1,536
Likes: 4
From: central ohio
Bikes: 96 gary fisher 'utopia' : 99 Softride 'Norwester'(for sale), 1972 Raleigh Twenty. Surly 1x1 converted to 1x8, 96 Turner Burner
Same here. I use four different styles according to the weather conditions. Fingerless for spring and summer. Cheap cotton jersey gloves that you find in convenient stores for around $2.50. I use those when the weather starts to cool. They're good to about 25f. After that I use a pair of convertible mittens for the really frigid stuff. I also have a pair of waterproof fishing gloves for the rain. They were cheap and they perform cheap. They leak after about 20 minutes, but they still keep my hands warm in a cold rain. Also the jersey gloves fit inside them for extra protection if I need it. But I don't think there is really just one glove to cover it all. It would depend on your temperature range I guess. Mine goes from 90f+ down to below zero. So I need the different varieties.
#17
Maybe they don't work because of sweating, but I haven't seen anyone suggest latex gloves first under the regular gloves. I would think they would do a pretty good job of blocking the wind that are hitting your hands and possibly blowing through any gloves. That would allow a little lighter glove to keep more dexterity in the hands. But, I don't know, I don't yet have experience in riding in the cold. I hope to here in the coming months because I plan to continue riding until the snow flies.
I have some winter Mechanix gloves that I use when clearing the driveway with the snowblower. That is what I plan on using when it starts to get too cold. I'll probably wear some latex disposable gloves under them for the wind protection since the Mechanix gloves I already know won't hold back wind penetration.
I have some winter Mechanix gloves that I use when clearing the driveway with the snowblower. That is what I plan on using when it starts to get too cold. I'll probably wear some latex disposable gloves under them for the wind protection since the Mechanix gloves I already know won't hold back wind penetration.
#18
Yeah, I wouldn't want latex (or nitrile) gloves next to my skin. That's a recipe for a cold clammy mess. If anything, you'd want those outside of your other gloves, but even then your other gloves could get wet if they can't breathe then.
__________________
Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),1990 Concorde Aquila(hit by car while riding), others in build queue "when I get the time"
Bikes: 1996 Eddy Merckx Titanium EX, 1989/90 Colnago Super(issimo?) Piu(?),
#19
Senior Member
Joined: Sep 2012
Posts: 1,262
Likes: 23
From: Lexington Park, Maryland
Bikes: Current: Origami Crane 8, Trek 1200 Former: 2012 Schwinn Trailway
Wifey tried latex last year - she didn't like it. Then again, we were using cheap cotton gloves, so that might have been the issue.
Dottie from Let's Go Ride a Bike suggested wool glove liners under waterproof mittens. She lives in Chicago, which they tell me is cold but I've never been.
M.
Dottie from Let's Go Ride a Bike suggested wool glove liners under waterproof mittens. She lives in Chicago, which they tell me is cold but I've never been.
M.






