Henriettaah wrote:I've got my leather pants which, I have to admit, aren't the most comfortable. I guess this comes with the protection they offer, but I've spotted a [air of textile trou which are made from Dura Guard. Is this the same kind of stuff as Kevlar and Cordura? I'm guessing they'd be a bit more comfortable than leather (and they'd be waterproof), but would they offer the same protection in the event of meeting tarmac?
Like bikeguy joe said, maybe you'll probably have to give them a bit of time till they break in, but I've found that wearing a 'base layer' under your leather trousers (even if they are lined) makes them 100% more comfortable. Edz do a good base layer in two parts, top and trousers. The trousers are just a pair of long inner pants which reach down to the ankles. They're made of very thin material which wicks sweat away from your body to keep you more comfortable in hot weather, and they also help the leathers slide around more as you shift position. They make sweaty leathers a hell of a lot easier to get off too.
Cheers
Hud
“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley
sv-wolf wrote:I've found that wearing a 'base layer' under your leather trousers (even if they are lined) makes them 100% more comfortable
This thought did cross my mind, especially concerning sweaty trousers sticking to your legs! Or is that sweaty legs sticking to your trousers? What I thought of was a pair of tights... what do you call them in the US... pantyhose, I think?!
Never having had much experience in the wearing of tights, nylons, pantyhose (?) or leotards [cough, cough] I can't claim much experience in this department, but aren't nylons supposed to be really sweaty? Not the sort of thing you want to wear under leathers on a hot Sunday?
Err... Please feel free to complete my education for me, would you?
Hud
“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley