Riding Gear Complete
- drrhythm39
- Veteran
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2007 2:11 pm
- Sex: Male
- Location: Albrightsville, Pennsylvania
Riding Gear Complete
AS you guys know, or maybe you don't, before I took my MSF Course (last Oct) I made sure I pruchased a full face helmet, gloves and armored jacket. Finally today I purchased a pair of riding pants. They're made by Harley Davidson, and are VERY thick leather. I was supprised that they were designed to be worn by themselves or over jeans (Elastic Waist) Very comfortable and they have the high waist in the back w/a kidney belt. I know that they will be very warm in the summer months ( even tho leather does breathe) but I figured I would rather sweat a little then bleed alot! They set me back a bit but the saftey of my body is worth it. You see guys, some of us noobs are listening.
2007 V Star 650 Custom (Raven)
Star Touring and Riding
Star Touring and Riding
- drrhythm39
- Veteran
- Posts: 53
- Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2007 2:11 pm
- Sex: Male
- Location: Albrightsville, Pennsylvania
- RhadamYgg
- Legendary 2000
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- Years Riding: 7
- My Motorcycle: 2006/Yamaha/FZ6
- Location: Linden, NJ
He's got thick calluses on his feet?Flesher wrote:Boots ... don't forget boots.
I'm a noob too. I haven't gotten through the course yet. I bought a set of boots first. I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
RhadamYgg
RhadamYgg / Skydiver / Motorbike Rider / Mountain Climber
FZ6/11302 mi|Suzuki B-King/5178 mi|Ninja 250cc/5300 mi| (rented)ST1300 850 mi
Hoping my kids don't hate me too much in the future.
Random 2003/Corwin 2006/Cordelia and Morrigan 2009
FZ6/11302 mi|Suzuki B-King/5178 mi|Ninja 250cc/5300 mi| (rented)ST1300 850 mi
Hoping my kids don't hate me too much in the future.
Random 2003/Corwin 2006/Cordelia and Morrigan 2009
Once you do have time to go to a dealer, try the different sizes of each brand and see which one suites you. Then go home and order your helm off the internet. I highly recommend NewEnough.com; they have great prices, excellent customer service, and an awesome return policy.RhadamYgg wrote:I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
I am in no way affiliated with NewEnough.com or its subsidiaries*
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Last edited by R3sp4wN on Tue Feb 24, 2009 11:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Skier
- Site Supporter - Platinum
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Don't do this. If you try a helmet on in a store, buy it there. If everyone follows the "try then buy somewhere else" plan, dealers will have no reason to carry helmets at all.R3sp4wN wrote:Once you do have time to go to a dealer, try the different sizes of each brand and see which one suites you. Then go home and order your helm off the internet. I highly recommend NewEnough.com; they have great prices, excellent customer service, and an awesome return policy.RhadamYgg wrote:I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
I am in no way affiliated with NewEnough.com or its subsidiaries*
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]
The markup on helmets is rediculus. I paid 149.99 for my helmet from NewEnough; one local store was charging 209.99 and the other, 219.99.
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Last edited by R3sp4wN on Tue Feb 24, 2009 11:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
+1Skier wrote:Don't do this. If you try a helmet on in a store, buy it there. If everyone follows the "try then buy somewhere else" plan, dealers will have no reason to carry helmets at all.R3sp4wN wrote:Once you do have time to go to a dealer, try the different sizes of each brand and see which one suites you. Then go home and order your helm off the internet. I highly recommend NewEnough.com; they have great prices, excellent customer service, and an awesome return policy.RhadamYgg wrote:I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
I am in no way affiliated with NewEnough.com or its subsidiaries*
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- Brackstone
- Legendary 1500
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I wish I could agree with you on this Skier but I'm just not that much of an optimist anymore. With the way the dollar weakening and the inflation growing I'm looking to save money anyway I can.Skier wrote:Don't do this. If you try a helmet on in a store, buy it there. If everyone follows the "try then buy somewhere else" plan, dealers will have no reason to carry helmets at all.R3sp4wN wrote:Once you do have time to go to a dealer, try the different sizes of each brand and see which one suites you. Then go home and order your helm off the internet. I highly recommend NewEnough.com; they have great prices, excellent customer service, and an awesome return policy.RhadamYgg wrote:I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
I am in no way affiliated with NewEnough.com or its subsidiaries*
Ducati Monster 1100 (Vrooom!!)
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Aprilia Shiver 750 (sold)
2007 Kawasaki Ninja 250cc (sold)
- Skier
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- Location: Pullman, WA, USA
The dealers have to pay the sales personnel as well as the store itself. You pay for the convenience of knowing if a lid fits your right away rather than waiting several days for it to show up, trying it on, realizing it doesn't fit well, sending it back, getting another size, realizing the brand doesn't fit you, sending it back, getting another one, etc...R3sp4wN wrote:The markup on helmets is rediculus. I paid 149.99 for my helmet from NewEnough; one local store was charging 209.99 and the other, 219.99.
With a store, the worst-case scenario of having to try on three or four different brands of helmets take an hour or two at most. If you need to keep shipping lids back to an online store it could take months. However, most riders figure a helmet fits them "well enough" and stop looking. This can lead to dangerously incorrect fits.
My point of view is a pessimistic one: the dealers are only there to make a buck and if they can't compete with Internet sales, why bother stocking those items?Brackstone wrote:I wish I could agree with you on this Skier but I'm just not that much of an optimist anymore. With the way the dollar weakening and the inflation growing I'm looking to save money anyway I can.Skier wrote:Don't do this. If you try a helmet on in a store, buy it there. If everyone follows the "try then buy somewhere else" plan, dealers will have no reason to carry helmets at all.R3sp4wN wrote:Once you do have time to go to a dealer, try the different sizes of each brand and see which one suites you. Then go home and order your helm off the internet. I highly recommend NewEnough.com; they have great prices, excellent customer service, and an awesome return policy.RhadamYgg wrote:I want to buy a helmet, but I can't seem to get the time to go to a dealer to get one and I'm leary of buying something so personal online.
I am in no way affiliated with NewEnough.com or its subsidiaries*
[url=http://www.motoblag.com/blag/]Practicing the dark and forgotten art of using turn signals since '98.[/url]