i thought a simple way of testing how the work/compare is to touch/measure the temperture of the bar. If that is were all the heat is going it must get pretty hot when measured just outside the grips compared to the rubber grips?
i thought a simple way of testing how the work/compare is to touch/measure the temperture of the bar. If that is were all the heat is going it must get pretty hot when measured just outside the grips compared to the rubber grips?
i thought a simple way of testing how the work/compare is to touch/measure the temperture of the bar. If that is were all the heat is going it must get pretty hot when measured just outside the grips compared to the rubber grips?
If all else was equal that would work, the question is do the new aluminium bars actually conduct the heat away faster that the old steel bars leading to colder fingers compared to the old bike. Heat and temperature are two different things so if the old and new bars had the same element in the grips, the amount of heat being supplied to the bars would be the same but the temperature of the new grips would be different due to the higher rate of heat transfer away from the source
and here comes the science part![]()

scientifically, i think it's spelled 'frisbee'
sometimes i wonder......"WHY IS THAT FRIZBEE GETTING BIGGER ? "and then it hits me

Has anyone fitted replacement grips to a 2008 GSA. My left hand grip has died and I'm not sure if the BMW extended warranty covers replacement. An alternative type may be cheaper and most importantly much warmer.
I've looked at the wording on the extended warranty and it doesn't specifically mention heated grips, plus they state if it isn't listed, it isn't covered. Keeping my fingers crossed on that one - once they've thawed out.