PDA

View Full Version : Hand grips


bpdchief
01-19-2013, 08:36 PM
Just bought these Granturismo GT Grips on ebay. Same or copy of hand grips I had on my 1979 Suzuki GS1000E. Fatter around and more comfortable than stock grips... no more hand cramps. About 1/8th inch shorter than stock grips but that is a mild cosmetic issue. $15 and $4 shipping. Not bad for more comfort.
http://s1.postimage.org/f9kzdmd3v/granturismo2.jpg (http://postimage.org/image/f9kzdmd3v/)

Water Warrior 2
01-19-2013, 10:11 PM
Those grips should work well. A good alternative is Grip Puppies or the similar foam sleeves that you can put over bicycle grips. I had the Grip Puppies on my Vstrom and it was much more comfy and a little less fatiquing to the hands.
I also found that a slightly tight glove will fatigue your hands a lot faster than a slightly loose fit with softer material. I wound up giving away all my gloves except for my Red Wing gauntlets which were soft pliable leather with a thin Thinsulate lining. Comfy as all get out.

bpdchief
01-19-2013, 10:23 PM
I'll start looking for the Red Wings next payday... good gloves are worth the price. Right now I'm wearing the same brand roping gloves I've worn for 20 years.

Thought about grip-puppies but was afraid they were soft foam that would hold rain water.

Water Warrior 2
01-19-2013, 11:09 PM
Pardon the shaky pics but here are my gloves. 6 years of abuse in sunshine, rain and whatever else might occur. 40 gram Thinsulate on the inside that is a bit worn and thinner but still comfy. Would I buy them again..........hell yes. But not in the GWN. They are nearly twice the price up here.

GZ250
02-06-2013, 10:19 AM
WW, looks like from WW-II........ just kidding.

jonathan180iq
02-06-2013, 10:30 AM
You aren't kidding, GZ. Let's be honest. ;)
That being said, there is nothing better than something you've had with you since the late 1940s; something that has done it's job, stood the test of time (decades in this case) and also managed to still operate while also having all of the well-earned battle scars to go with it. Those gauntlets are awesome.

Water Warrior 2
02-06-2013, 09:45 PM
You want old???? Get a load of these. My father had these custom made by an old Native Lady back in the early 40's. He wore them for years before finally setting them aside for more modern handwear. I was given them when I was a teenager and have had them set aside ever since. He also had some white leather fur trimmed gauntlets made for my mother. My brain dead sister tossed them out after my mother gave them to her. They were really a work of art and hardly worn at all by the time my sister tossed them. The guantlets predate my birth and likely my parents marriage.

bpdchief
02-06-2013, 10:43 PM
Those are really neat. Oh Lord did I date myself just then! Too bad the halfknit nitwit threw mom's gloves away.

Water Warrior 2
02-07-2013, 12:10 AM
Those are really neat. Oh Lord did I date myself just then! Too bad the halfknit nitwit threw mom's gloves away.
Ah, you are still years away from me. Turning 68 in a month and am proud to say I have beat the stats by years and years. Should have passed on about 12 years ago.
As for the halfwit, she was very materialistic and stressed so much about loosing her house she ended it all in her early 50's. Many options and she takes the fool's way out.

jonathan180iq
02-07-2013, 02:21 PM
Those are in incredible shape considering their age. Unlike most of you posters... ;)

I forget sometimes that I'm the baby around here... I guess I always have been but I never really stop and think about it. The demographic for this bike seems to be "well-aged" gentlemen, and some women. I'm not really sure what that makes this freshly-pruned 30 year old.

mrlmd1
02-07-2013, 03:59 PM
LOF - That's OK, we don't hold it against you (not too much anyway). I know I do, and I bet some others do too - have a pair of jeans or some clothes hanging around older than you. like WW's gloves. I even have some stuff from my father too, that's probably 75+ years old that I can't throw out and I'll probably give them to my kids to save. They don't make stuff like that anymore.
And speaking of women, whatever happened to the gals on here? We don't seem to hear from them much anymore.
And whoever said that you're just as old as you feel, all of a sudden it starts to catch up with you and you begin to realize how old you are and that you're not a kid anymore. So just enjoy it as long as you can and that's what us senior and more seasoned guys are doing.

jonathan180iq
02-07-2013, 04:12 PM
Oh, man. The coolest stuff that I have is from my grandfather and my dad. Like my '76 MG Midget, the photo collection I have of their old cars, and my '79 Suzuki T250 (That I still haven't finished restoring...) Old watches from the 60s, pocket knives from the 50s...Just all kinds of crazy stuff. Speaking of Indian fringe, I also have a handmade suede-fringed hippy jacket... I think it was my free-spirited mom's though. It's so cool it has 3/4 sleeves and shows hairy stomach if you don't wear a shirt, which I do quite often.

JWR
02-07-2013, 04:17 PM
Those are in incredible shape considering their age. Unlike most of you posters... ;)

I forget sometimes that I'm the baby around here... I guess I always have been but I never really stop and think about it. The demographic for this bike seems to be "well-aged" gentlemen, and some women. I'm not really sure what that makes this freshly-pruned 30 year old.



Yeah, I got boots older than you.
Now if I can remember where I put them... :??:


67 last month, not through yet.


P?S. Cool gloves.

bpdchief
02-07-2013, 07:21 PM
We weren't "keepers" in my family, but, I do have my bowl from when I was a baby...it is 54 yrs old this year. Somewhere I have a sock my grandmothers grandmother knit for her as a baby. My Uncle Hugh Edward O'Rourkes naturalization papers from 1881 when he came from Ireland as well as my grandparents marriage license from 1917 is around in a box
http://s11.postimage.org/amnuc1b3j/oldbowl_001.jpg (http://postimage.org/image/amnuc1b3j/)

http://s11.postimage.org/v877hoi27/oldbowl_002.jpg (http://postimage.org/image/v877hoi27/)

mrlmd1
02-08-2013, 12:53 PM
Those things as well as the ones we all have from our parents and grandparents are totally priceless and irreplaceable.

jonathan180iq
02-08-2013, 01:03 PM
Those things as well as the ones we all have from our parents and grandparents are totally priceless and irreplaceable.

No doubt. :cool: