Recommend me a Heated Vest

I feel I ought to revisit my comments about Keis kit.

My initial reaction to getting a heated vest and gloves was anything other than positive, and I have to say if I could go back a fortnight or so, I certainly wouldn't buy the Keis kit again, but it isn't quite as bad as my initial reactions might suggest.

SIZING:
I got an 'XL' sized vest, and although I'm a fat bastard, I have to say (still) that the vest is just NOT XL sized.

I can wear it, but only as a base layer on top of a thin t shirt......even then, it is a bit tight to zip up......if you're a skinny fekker, it would be fine, but seriously, before you buy a Keis vest, wear one and make sure you can fit into it.

The gloves fit well and are comfy under my BMW summer rally gloves.

EFFECTIVENESS:

The vest is good......considerably warmer around the lower back, but that suits me nicely being a long bodied bloke.

The vest heats up fairly fast and the heat output is fine....not as good as my own home made one that I made for about 15 quid with some resistance wire and a couple of crimps......That one has better heat distribution for ME, but that's because I designed it and sewed the wire exactly where I wanted it......kidneys and neck area plus a bit all over the rest.....Now though, I have a vest that Rosie can use and one that's just as good for me to use, so although on reflection I'd not buy the Keis vest again, it hasn't been a total loss (and it'll be a nice surprise when I can toastify Rosie next time she's out on the bike this winter)

The gloves are a slightly different matter.
They DO get warmish, but it's not a noticeable warmth, it's just enough to negate the freezing fingertips that I would otherwise have in my summer gloves inside the muffs.

So they keep that chill off, and it's good that they warm down to the fingertips, but in a couple of week's use on the bike, I haven't consciously thought "Ooh, my hands are toasty, this is nice....."
It's more of a case of just not noticing the chill, and frankly, I was hoping for more, particularly as I'd paid for a bundle with a heat controller (39 quid normally) that implied to me that there might be a need to turn the heat down.

USE:
This is my biggest issue with this kit.
The connector plugs, although sheathed so they look like they should fit nicely inside eachother, merely butt up together.
There's no way they are waterproof, and for an all year around rider who wants heated stuff in rain, snow, ice, fog and everything else, that's not good enough.

There is a pocket on the inside of the vest that is supposed to take the loose wires, but if the vest has to be worn deep inside several layers, that's silly......you have to set yourself up for fishing out the wires right as you get dressed in the morning......thermal t shirt, Keis vest which you have to attach THREE wires to in those not particularly secure plugs/sockets, then my lambswool thin jumpers, a thick synthetic fleece fluffy jumper, windproof gillet and finally my Rukka or whatever.

(My windproof gillet is great by the way, it's a "Result performance' gillet that I got from an army surplus place, and it's sized Medium, yet it's only snug even as the 4th layer....go figure :nenau)


So there you are, layered up from the moment you get dressed because the vest HAS to go underneath, two wires trailing down the inside of your jumpers that will inevitably get lost and you'll spend ten minutes fishing them out.....they also pull out of the sockets, which are stupidly placed under the armpits in this Keis vest :mad:

The gloves are worse to use......the material is nice and thin so it fits under any gloves as they're meant to, but it feels TOO fragile, and when you put the gloves on, the sockets are therefore too floppy on the fragile material.

I do like the fact that they use carbon panel thingies so that the warmth (not heat, see above) goes right to your fingertips, but the thin material also rucks up inside the gloves, so you can't conveniently pull off the outer gloves of your choice plus the inner heated ones and put them back on again....you have to treat them as two pairs of gloves (which is what they are) but that's a pain in the arse, sorry.

So, you've overheated over breakfast (I don't do breakfast so not as big an issue for me as it might be for others) and then you struggle to match up gloves, inners and wires, plugs and sockets.

Now you get on the bike, and that FUCKING LEAD that comes out of the bottom of the vest is, of course, several layers down (especially if you've had a piss since you got dressed)

Now of course you have to remove your gloves, all four of them, find the lead from the vest, dislodging all of your carefully prepared layers, plug it in, put all your gloves back on and then you fumble for the heat control.....its too fiddly, but you make it.

The heat controller....sorry, the EXPENSIVE TO REPLACE heat controller is a foot or so of wire with the heat control tab and a short flying lead, it plugs inline between the bike lead and the vest lead.......I just KNOW that soon, I will lose it.....that's why they sell them (so expensively) as separate items :blast

CONCLUSION:


Heat ok, was expecting better from gloves though.
Convenience: Wiring and design crap, could be much better...it's fiddly, inconvenient and poorly conceived.

Value OK(ish)
I got the gloves and vest for £139 from a large ebay stockist....not bad.

Would I buy Keis again....fuck no.

If I could do it again, I'd buy better gloves only, and stick with my home made vest, or better still, convert my windproof gillet to a heated vest myself.

Ah well......You live and learn :rolleyes:

YMMV


Oh, I should add that after 1 day use, the inner liner was marked up....after 2 weeks, its looking well worn......I doubt it will last.
 
I have had a Keis vest for nearly four years now. The first one packed up after it was out of warranty but they replaced it instantly with no quibbles. The second one has been ace. As Fanum says, it is a little snug but isn't that how they recommend them to be - a close fit? I was able to try it on before buying. All I wear under it is a Rohan T shirt. I've never powered it off the bike's battery as I bought 2 x 2200 mah batteries with it. On the middle heat setting they last for up to 6 hours. I usually use them on setting 2 and one battery will last me all day. If it does go flat I change the battery! It saved me from freezing when I had my recent accident. Because of a suspected spinal injury I had to lie still on the road for an hour before the ambulance came. The heated vest kept me nice and warm. The paramedics were freezing!

Whatever you buy, get one with a battery option. No leads to mess about with and you are still nice and warm when you get off the bike.:thumb2

PS Paula has a Gerbing with a battery and she loves it.
 
Guys a bit of advice please.
I'm looking to get my wife some Gerbings gloves and maybe a jacket as well but I need to know will she be able to plug into the accessory socket on the back of the bike.
I see there is an adaptor to BMW socket but would there be any problems with this such as overloading the circuit?
I have no idea about bike electrics and what you can or can't use as I've read the canbus on the GS can be a bit funny with certain things connected.

:beerjug:
 
Guys a bit of advice please.
I'm looking to get my wife some Gerbings gloves and maybe a jacket as well but I need to know will she be able to plug into the accessory socket on the back of the bike.
I see there is an adaptor to BMW socket but would there be any problems with this such as overloading the circuit?
I have no idea about bike electrics and what you can or can't use as I've read the canbus on the GS can be a bit funny with certain things connected.

:beerjug:

Look at the total draw of the jacket and gloves.
The canbus powered sockets will cut out at 5 amps, so it could be quite close.

It's half an hour's job (at most) to fit a new socket, directly to the battery through an inline fuse though, then you can pull 20 amps or so if you needed to (you won't come close to that though)

Parts for doing that will come to well under £20 including postage or will be available at nearly all motorist type shops (Or Dr Farkoff supplies kit, or I do as well), and if you needed, simple instructions could be posted here very quickly, including photos I'm sure. (the only bit you may need to take a deep breath for is cutting a hole to take the socket, but there are many panel mount din plug sockets available if you didn't feel brave enough to do that)

Go for it :thumb2
 
Not wanting to hijack this thread but anyone looked at or tried the EXOGLO stuff that was at the bike show and advertised in this months Bike, looks the business and not overly expensive...
 
Guys a bit of advice please.
I'm looking to get my wife some Gerbings gloves and maybe a jacket as well but I need to know will she be able to plug into the accessory socket on the back of the bike.
I see there is an adaptor to BMW socket but would there be any problems with this such as overloading the circuit?
I have no idea about bike electrics and what you can or can't use as I've read the canbus on the GS can be a bit funny with certain things connected.

:beerjug:

If you're looking at the Powerlet kit or want an easy way to wire up to the battery, I can recommend the WarmNSafe wiring kits:

http://www.warmnsafe.com/bmw-socket-adapter-cable-6-inch-coax-plug/

This will replace the existing socket, is much smaller than the Powerlet and doesn't have the rubber boot.


http://www.warmnsafe.com/power-harness-with-coax-connector/

This uses the smaller blade fuses so IMO is neater than the Gerbing's cables.

Also, what isn't shown anywhere are the sockets and plugs, they don't 'butt' up against each other, there is a small lip so the wiring is covered.

You can order on the USA site and he'll deliver to the UK, no customs grief either.

If you use heated gear a lot, the wireless heat controller seems like a bit of gimmick, until you use one.
 
Theory900 - where did you buy your Gerbing from ? Does it have arms or is it just the vest ?

I bought mine from Riderz http://www.riderz.co.uk/ and their man Terry was extremely patient with my stupid questions:blast

I got the jacket rather than the vest - why would you not want warm arms too?

If you get both the jacket and gloves they draw a combined 8 amps when on full power, which is too much for the 5 amp limited GS socket. I haven't needed them on anything like full power yet, but decided connecting to the socket wasn't worth the risk. Connecting directly to the battery was a doddle using the fused spur that comes with the kit.

I have the 'new' dual controller which seperately controls the heat of the jacket and gloves by repeatedly pressing two buttons, each of which has a 1 to 5 setting, after which you start at 1 again. Very easy to use with gloves on and you can see it in the dark. I think that the older dual controller used knobs. You can buy a pouch type thing for the older controller whereas you can't for the new one, suggesting (to me anyway) that the new one has better weather protection. I've used mine in torrential rain with no problems.
 
t

I got the jacket rather than the vest - why would you not want warm arms too?

Because you only have a limited amount of power (=heat) available to you and the core body is far more important.

Better to have that double toasty rather than waste precious amps on your arms :nenau
 
I bought mine from Riderz http://www.riderz.co.uk/ and their man Terry was extremely patient with my stupid questions:blast

I

I have the 'new' dual controller which seperately controls the heat of the jacket and gloves by repeatedly pressing two buttons, each of which has a 1 to 5 setting, after which you start at 1 again. Very easy to use with gloves on and you can see it in the dark. I think that the older dual controller used knobs. You can buy a pouch type thing for the older controller whereas you can't for the new one, suggesting (to me anyway) that the new one has better weather protection. I've used mine in torrential rain with no problems.

I'd guess the new controller is down to cost. The rotary one lasted me 3 years, with no pouch and always exposed to the elements. That's three years of nigh on daily use in winter, spring and autumn. It failed when the plug for the power broke. Now I have a wireless controller.
 
I have got to vote for WarmnSafe, mine arrived this weekend and it's brilliant, with excellent customer Service.

I ordered a Gen3, but there where none in stock, so they upgraded me to a Gen 4 for free and a double heatroller. They got it to me from Sweden in 48 hours to. I used it this weekend to ride to work in Cardiff and it's fantastic, wafer thin and super warm, having that heat up in the collar is fantastic to.

The only place I could not feel the real heat was in the arms, but that's down to the flappy arms on my twat suit. Just a set of thermals, the warmnsafe and twat suit and I was more than comfy, even had to turn the heat down a bit. Seems to real quality kit
 
Yes but with a jacket liner you have the facility to connect your heated gloves in the arm cuffs!
:thumb:thumb

http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Dels-Deals

I do with my Keis vest as well.

I must admit, it's not the best design in the world though, having a wire coming from under each armpit and having to get dressed with them finally exiting from the cuffs.

At some point I am going to sew some sleeves in and sew the wires to the inside of the sleeves, but I honestly haven't ever felt the need for having the sleeves heated.
 
Just received my Keis X10 heated vest and tried it out this morning with a nice ride and am seriously impressed. Granted its mild today but made riding far more enjoyable and look forward to seeing what it's like on colder days.
 
I posted in beakchat about this last night but thought I'd add it here:

yesterday evening at 6pm I sent an email to warm'n'safe.eu who I bought my heated jacket from 2 years ago. I stated how good it had been but that the controller was behaving oddly, now going through a battery a week instead of every 6 months. I asked if there was anything to check or if I'd have to send it back for repair or simply buy a new one.

By 7:30pm I'd received a reply saying 'send it back to us and we'll send out a new one that uses a different type of battery. Best wishes and a Happy new year'.

On a Friday night. After office hours. On a 2 year old item.

Pretty impressive customer service I thought.
 
I bought mine from Riderz http://www.riderz.co.uk/
Ditto

and their man Terry was extremely patient with my stupid questions:blast
Ditto

I got the jacket rather than the vest - why would you not want warm arms too?
Damn right.

I love the warm collar - so important to keeping warm on a cold day.

If you get both the jacket and gloves they draw a combined 8 amps when on full power, which is too much for the 5 amp limited GS socket
I have the connector wired directly to the battery and coming out by my seat. I am careful to make sure that the jacket is switched off before the engine goes off and isn't back on until the bike is running.

I have the 'new' dual controller which seperately controls the heat of the jacket and gloves
I have a single variable controller for jacket and gloves. This was an error as I like the gloves warm and to get that I have to turn the jacket right up - and even at -5o that's too hot for me. I keep the jacket on at maybe 15-20%. At full whack it's simply too hot for me.

Cheers

m
 
Anyone got the Ultimate Touring Heated Gloves?

Could you tell me how they work in connedction with a Rukka jacket. IE the jacket with the inner sleeve inside the glove and the outer sleeve outside of glove.

Just wondering how the connector would manage connecting to the heated liner?

Do you understand what I mean doh:eek

(Also they state waterproof. Anyone verify that please?)
 


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