I take the carMy question is, how do people keep dry on their way to work?
Any advice would be greatly appreciated. TIA.
Handlebar muffs, bought or cobbled together to try them. Made my bike ones from the reflective stuff off a traffic cone! Helmet that takes a visor might help. I have some goggles that go over my glasses when cold or wet. (£3 Aliexpress!, yellow for foggy/rain, grey for sunny/rain)I just ordered some glasses with hydrophobic lenses - am hoping they will enhance my wet-weather riding experience. What stopped me riding the last winter I tried though was poor circulation in my fingers. Will see if I manage any better this year...
With respect I disagree having commuted all year round with my suit trousers and shirt on. We have 600 staff and two showers often with hour plus queuesThis Chap has it covered Jon
Seriously when it is cold and wet, without some warm dry clothes and somewhere to change, it gets to be an issue. Nothing I have ever bought has kept me 100 % dry in torrential rain.
If you have to wear a suit at work and no whwre to change you are on a hiding for nothing, lobby your employer tell them you are saving the planet establish a changing room utilising a portacabin in the car park. Might encourage more to cycle to work.
Strong solution of good fabric conditioner can form a pretty good dwp - not long lived, but cheap.With respect I disagree having commuted all year round with my suit trousers and shirt on. We have 600 staff and two showers often with hour plus queues
I’ve done this for 7 years (2 years with 2 miles each way and then last five years with 7ish each way)
Cheap trousers are never worth it. They leak at the seams in no time. Having said that I am trialling a 25 quid decalthon pair that are doing very well for the price so far
Cheap jackets are kinda worth it. But not very breathable. I have a Lidl thick padded , waterproof workman’s jacket for depths of January . A Aldi 25 quid fluro yellow jacket that is amazing for the price and a very nice lightweight and breathable gore tex
I have learnt over the years that the factory waterproof coating wears out. And despite trying many brands and methods for reapplying I do not believe the factory level of coating can be achieved.
So I do this - I keep my best jacket and trousers in plastic bag in my backpack. They only come out when torrential rain requires it. Otherwise I use my cheapo ones which do fine in light rain. Just won’t cope with 7 miles of monsoon conditions
Oh and keep a cheap shirt and trousers at work for emergencies ! It happened to me once when my trusty trews failed after 2 years . Soaked to the bone !
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I have said before, my Quiksilver jacket is the absolutely most waterproof, windproof and comfortable outer I have ever owned.Nothing I have ever bought has kept me 100 % dry in torrential rain.
Nor was I keen on £160 - I think I paid about £50 (maybe plus P&P). Definitely an end-of-season/surplus stock purchase.I'm not keen on £160 for a jacket Bob, like the sound of your Aldi boots. Remember I'm a tight Yorkshire man
For unfit me, in "damp" weather, going slower keeps me driest! Never underestimate how much sweat you can produce. Depending on your route, my experience is; stop sweat, stop roadwater (dirt etc) & only then worry about the falling stuff! That doesn't sell items, but I reckon it is the "commute" way. Much better to have a softshell on many ocassions that lets you get a little wet, than a rainjacket you sweat in! Poncho many suit on some days - that's usually what I carry when "going somewhere".My commute is 7 miles each way, all down hill going to work and uphill all the way back, not quite, but near enough. I will only get chance a couple of days a week to ride my bike as I cover most of the UK. I’m determined to ride my bike when I can wet or dry. Nice to gain lots of post from experienced riders and thank you all. I guess I’m going to have to see what works for me.