Charlie
Active member
Anybody have any experience with the evaporative type cool vest? Do they work? Will they work under a mesh jacket? Has anyone adapted the "Fast" cool suit to a motorcycle? Thanks in advance for your input
Googled them and their web address doesn't work www.coloradocoolwear.com Maybe they are not in biz anymore. Thatcolorado coolwear, little outfit out of colorado builds a great vest.
+1MiraCool works very well. It is a little heavy when full of water but it will last for days. there are a number of places to buy them. The cheapest I found was an outfit called Tough Rhino in Florida.
Must be my computer. Tried it again and only get a blank screen. I'll have to try another computer.bvail, you must have had a bad link to it. I googled and here is what I got:
https://www.coloradocoolwear.com/
Worked just fine for me. Good luck on the link from here. There is a note that due to a family incident, they will not be shipping until September 15th.
I thought the same thing about evaportive cooling and I live here in Colorado, where the humidity is quite low most of the time. I recently went on a ride to the four corners of the U.S. My first check point was Key West and it was very hot (around 95) in Florida and Louisiana. Humid too and I was very uncomfortable (ATTGATT with Cycleport Kevlar mesh suit). I had my wet vest soaking in the big baggie and thought "What the hell, I'll give it a try". So I did and it reduced my body heat considerably, much to my surprise. A good soaking lasted quite a bit longer, since the evaporation was significantly less. About a month later when I finished my ride and was returning home across the Great Basin Desert, the wet vest saved my ass (and maybe even kept me out of the hospital), since the heat (high was 113) was making me all gooned up. It was so hot, I couldn't even open my face shield. It was much cooler with the shield closed. But the wet vest wouldn't even last between gas stops and you just don't want to stop out there in the desert unless it's absolutely necessary, since there is no shade. Only shade I came across was the canopy over the gas pumps. Someone asked me to move my bike after a fill in Baker CA and I told them they would have to wait until I was ready or move to another pump. I was busy hydrating :blink:+1MiraCool works very well. It is a little heavy when full of water but it will last for days. there are a number of places to buy them. The cheapest I found was an outfit called Tough Rhino in Florida.
I bought from them, too. They are a good outfit with speedy shipping.
I bought the vest for 100+ weather in the desert(s) for WFO-5. It worked very well out west. It more than paid for itself each and every day I used it.
I have no intention of trying it out in the mid-atlantic, though, where it is frequently near 100F and 100% humidity during the summer. Today's 200 mile ride ended in a cooling, but dramatic, high-voltage drenching.
Basically, that vest is the bomb in drier climates where it will actually live up to the "evaporative" part of its description. In humidity below 50%, it is fantastic. In the mid-atlantic summer, donning the cooling vest would be the mark of the *******. It may be reasonable to summarize that the cool vest is really good for travel west of the Mississippi River, south of Canada, and north of Ecuador during summer. YMMV.
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