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Leather
(There is an excellent supplement in an old
edition of What Bike? about leather jackets and jeans. This is an
unauthorised copy of all of the original article.)
The body was never designed to get hurled from a
bike and land on a hard, abrasive surface then bounce, roll, slide and hit even
harder objects along the way. Skin, muscle tissue, nerves and bone abrade, burn,
tear and generally get ripped to shreds as they're catapulted down the road.
Would you let a friend pull you down the road on your back or stomach at walking
pace (three mph) for 20 feet? No. It would be extremely painful, so why un the
risk at thirty times that speed wearing...
JEANS
Bikers wear a leather jacket, jeans and boots (stereo typically). It looks good,
it's convenient and it's cool. While the jacket and boots will help in an
accident, the jeans will not. Denim bursts open in a fraction of a second in the
first two or so feet of sliding, exposing all your delicate parts to damage.
Padded jeans are slightly better (very slightly) - don't rely on them.
KEVLAR
Kevlar-reinforced helmets, Kevlar-strengthened gloves, Kevlar suits.. new
materials sound great for advertisers and few manufacturers can resist cutting
just a little, low-quality Kevlar in their products to give them that
scientific-sounding edge. It's a load of cobblers, because in protective
clothing too little is used too sparsely. Kevlar can work, but normally at least
two layers of good-quality Kevlar are needed to give adequate abrasion
resistance. An average-standard Kevlar will tear open far too quickly to make it
worthwhile (see tear-time table). When World Superbike runner James Whitham
tested the abrasion resistance of Kevlar on his knee sliders last year, the
material burst open almost immediately. The leather he tested stayed intact.
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LEATHER
Dead cows and goats have their uses. We can eat them and then wear the skins to
give us very good protection indeed. However, a leather suit will not prevent
all injuries, especially fractures, but in many cases it will reduce their
number, nature and severity. It will also stop you being shredded by the
sharp-edged road surface. Dead cow and goat is good stuff. But there are many
unscrupulous manufacturers making sub-standard suits. Some of them claim that
because a grand prix racer wears their name, the product is good. That's
rubbish. For a start, while you will probably buy your leathers off the peg, the
GP boys have them tailor-made from the very best hides (if they've got any
sense). And the kings of the track are also paid "loadsamoney" to
advertise brand names. Just because Johnny Speed wears a suit with "Protectorama"
written up the side doesn't mean that the mass-market stuff is any good. You can
pay anything from £250 to more than £1,000 for a suit, here's what to look out
for:
One and
two-piece suits should be manufactured with the minimum number of load-bearing
components (panels, seams, fasteners, decoration).
Decorative
panels should not form part of the suit, but should be stitched over the basic
structure. The maximum number of panels for a one-piece suit are: arms, 4-6;
front, 4-10; back, 5-10; total panels 13-26 (stretched panels not included). The
reason you want few panels of leather stitched together is simple: seams are
always the weakest areas.
Leather
should have good impact, abrasion and tear strength. It should be a minimum of 1.2
to l.3mm thick. Any leather less than 1 mm thick is generally rubbish. Take a
set of Vernier calipers into the shop, pinch the leather tight between your
fingers, measure the thickness, halve it, and you've got an accurate enough
guide to how thick the hide is. It should have a tear strength of 8 to12 kg and
should be smooth on the outside so it slides easier.
Leather
should be full grain split and full chromed tanned (or the equivalent). Ask the
sales people what it is, if they can't tell you, it tells you enough about the
shop and the gear they're selling to go elsewhere.
Dyes should
never run - they can cause cancer. If you end up with red knees and a green
crotch after a damp ride - take them back to the shop.
Secondary
protection. A second layer of leather should cover the shoulders, upper arms,
forearms and elbows, bum and hips, knees and crotch seam should be reinforced.
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Stretch
panels may be used above the knee, back of the waist and back of the shoulders.
A cut-out may be used behind the knee.
Ventilation
panels can be used on the chest, lower abdomen, inner thigh and inner arm, and
-should not decrease the performance of the suit. Holes must be not less than
9ne inch apart. A few big holes ventilate better than lots of tiny ones.
Lining
should be good airtex nylon, cotton or-a polyester/cotton mix. The lining should
allow the body to breathe so that sweat can evaporate.
Seams
should be well protected and doubIe or triple stitched. Single stitching is a
total no.
Thread
should be low-twist, bonded monofilament polyamide (size Ticket 20) at seven or
eight stitches per inch. Very strong leather can-accept a Ticket 40 thread at
1-0 stitches per inch. Anything over 12 per inch will weaken the leather.
Zips should
be low profile, nylon, with no rough edges or raised parts. They should be well
seamed, away from impact points and have a leather protective flap behind. Metal
zips are out.
Two-piece
suits should be joined by a heavy-duty zip. Body armour. If the stuff is made of
the right material, it will reduce the risk of injury, but many firms use
rubbish foams and claim it will help in a crash It won't. The ONLY protective
foam that should be used is called POLYNORBONENE, (brand name Norsorex) and
should be 8mm thick. You can identify Polynorbonene, because it is black, heavy
and very dense. Tests prove that Memory foam will not help protect you.
Jackets
sold with back protectors are a gimmick. Spinal protectors, like all other body
armour, will only provide soft tissue protection. They won't stop a broken back.
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The Time Table - This is how
quickly some materials take to hole:
| Material
|
Seconds |
| Denim |
0.2 to 0.5 |
| Some race gloves |
0.6 |
| Most leather gloves |
1.0 to 1.8 |
| Keprotec stretch material |
0.9 |
| Poor Kevlar |
1.0 |
| Two layers of waxed cotton |
1.3 |
| 1.3mm thick cow hide |
3.8 |
| Two layers of 1.3mm thick cowhide |
18 |
| Three layers of 1.3mm thick cowhide |
55 |
| Two layers of Kevlar plain weave |
5.6 |
| Suede |
18 |
| Boot leather (generally 2.2mm thick) |
20 |
| Leather stretch panels |
20.4 |
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