I would have thought using your muffs with heated grips would be real toasty. I put a pair of infill deflectors on my BMW a couple of weeks back hands are totally out of the wind, still on summer gloves and heated grips off.
a face silk and a neck warmer really make a difference in the cold..
kidney belt anuva must too....
I think the handlebar muffs or deflectors good too, although never actually owned either!
an of course the Callis big screen and the V twin engine keeps one warm too....Guzzi rule!!
Hi all....For what it's worth...windproof/waterproof over-mitts (Gerbing do electrically heated ones, 'sposed to be very good, I'll tell you in mid-January), forget gloves just on their own. If your on a budget, have a look at mountain bike / cycling winter thermal clothing, I use a 'Parrot' top sometimes under the leather jacket, super lightweight, totally windproof, folds up into a tiny packet (as it's designed for stowing on a racing bicycle), and, I got it for silly money in in a summer bargain bin sale at my local cycle shop...... Motocross placcy hand-guards do a good job of keeping the icy blast directly off your hands too 'specially on long Mway hauls, if you aren't fussy about looking all posh.... Thermal leggings under the leathers, and if you can find a good quality pair, silk socks to go under your winter ones, oh and the most comfortable/waterproof boots I've ever owned are a pair of Hein Gericke's Rallye's, really comfy, bulletproof, and nice and warm, plus, so far, haven't let the water in..(4 years daily wear).. I've fitted a BMW accessory plug to the Yam' (worth doing, very easy to do, makes sure you use an in-line fuse rated at about 10amps ) so will be able to power a heated 'under-jacket' this year, necessary 'cos I don't own a car, it's the bike 365 for me...and the winters seem to be getting very bitter?.....
my winter bike , a 30 year old 250 superdream, now slowly evolving into a rat bike, i couldn't bear to see my new 1250 bandit sliding down the road again !
Ski gear. Cheap ski gear and lots of layers and cheap oilies. Before I invested in heated grips it was all down to layers. Lots and lots of layers. Silk glove liners, gloves, then waxed cotton over-mitts. Down side - time taken for a comfort break. You look like the Michelin man. Upside - You are the Michelin man! When a car pulls out in front of you then you bonce off the roof - saved me.
granted i dont ride in snow or ice but for me its thermal base layers from decathlon... the middle of the range gear is aimed at skiers/mountain climbers and it does help (granted for womens its £15ish a piece unsure on blokes) but i wear that with my bike jacket (plain textile rayven jacket, textile triumph mens trousers) and an extra jumper and dont have too much of a problem.
heated grips count as a modification and are meant to be declared to insurance so i dont have them (im 22, insurance is expensive as it is)
either that or i jump on the back on my mates bike... with his size hes a wind block for me!
Layers, layers, layers. I stay mostly warm with lines textiles, base layer and jumper on the top. The neck thingy is a must. My only issue is cold hands, even with base gloves underneath. I should just get heated grips and be done with it!