I can currently stay pretty comfortable down to 0°F with bar pogies and a thick + thin glove on each hand. However, it’s been about -15°F in the mornings where I live and my fingers feel like they’re about to fall off by the time I get to work. I already don’t have great circulation to my hands and, predictably, it gets even worse when my body is ready to sacrifice my appendages to keep my core temperature up (even though I’m sweating by the time I get there sometimes).
Looking for recommendations for gloves/mittens based on personal experience if possible, all the review sites I’ve found either:
- Say something generic like “full winter range”. Not too helpful when that’s pretty regionally specific and cycling review sites are often in the UK and are more concerned about water than extreme cold (as far as I’m aware) or
- Are aggregating Amazon reviews and not doing any useful research on their own, just trying to collect affiliate link money
Any advice appreciated, thanks!
That’s your problem! I find that it takes at least 15 minutes for my body (and hands) to warm up sufficiently to carry me through the next few hours of cold-weather riding.
In that case, pre-heat your gloves (usually by just wearing them for 5 minutes indoors) and see if that helps. If you keep your bike outdoors, the cold bars will speed up the feeling of cold on your hands, so those work gloves may give you a nice buffer from the cold contact.
Re: bar mits. i also have a neoprene pair, as well as a few with liners in them. The ones with liners are warmer, but because I signal with my hands, I find them more difficult to safely ride with because the linings catch on the gloves every time you put your hands back in.
Yep, same concern here about getting my hands back on the bars after signaling too. I’ll for sure try preheating my gloves.
I’m also looking at getting a heater for my itty-bitty garage soon for reasons unrelated to my bike, which may help with the bars making my hands cold. Although, I’m somewhat skeptical of how much of an effect is really there since rubber grips ought to do a certain amount of insulating.