Categories: Kit

An Argument About Gloves

Points-of-contact, these are three areas of scrutiny and argument for Velominati; saddles, chamois creme, shoes, socks, handlebar tape so why not gloves?

Picking grit out of your palms is bad.

Yes, it is very bad. The fear of this might be the number one reason people get into the habit of wearing gloves, and it does become a habit, like donning a helmet. And just like picking gravel out of your scalp, which is also very bad, avoiding that activity is worth it. Points of contact on the bike are one thing; points of contact once off the bike are another. So do we wear gloves only to protect our hands if we crash? Or do we wear them to stay more comfortable on the bike?

I’m regretting typing this as I type it but I don’t crash often, once every few years, and usually for stupid self-inflicted reasons. The last two times I have crashed and they were stupid and self-inflicted, both times I came away with nothing more than some light abrasions and a sore hip. I was wearing gloves. But I can’t even say if my hands got involved in either crash; all one understands is sliding across the road in a tangle of limbs, bike and embarrassment. Still, gloves are not uncomfortable to wear. There is no big downside to donning gloves as one kits up.

Racing produces crashing. One would think racing Paris-Roubaix would produce the most crashes yet the number of people racing sans gloves is remarkable. There is Boonen and most of his Quick-Step badass teammates battling over the stones without gloves. They want to feel the bike more than protect their hands. They are tough.

Riding naked feels great.

That would look very bad but it might feel very good. Riding without gloves feels a little like something is naked and it does feel great. If you always ride with gloves, try it. It makes for a very different ride. Handling the brake hoods or handlebars without gloves is so much more tactile. Recently forgot my gloves and re-remembered why I’ve spent around a third of my time bike riding without them. It just feels right. There are no Rules about glove wearing nor should there be. Does one look or feel more Pro without gloves? I do. If one feels like they have to wear gloves to protect their hands on the bike then it might be worth investigating how one’s weight is distributed on the bike. Hands should not be doing much weight bearing.

If we subscribe to the argument that we should dress for the crash not the ride we wouldn’t be wearing little more than lycra. Riding is a balancing act in many ways. If you ride you have to accept injury and accidents as parts of the deal but unless you are racing criteriums on a weekly basis, the pleasure of riding naked might outweigh the fear of crashing naked.

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

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  • No one made an argument about sweat and other body juices?

    When it's hot, your palms will sweat and make your brake hoods slippery, your leathery bar tape slippery or your spongy bar tape smell like rotten pickles.

  • Need to overlay the white bar tape debate with the gloves debate. Sunscreen and sweat + no gloves = new white bar tape required after every ride.

  •  

    In the lede photo he’s Doing It Wrong. I was taught to keep my hands on the bars while crashing. Two concussions, separated shoulder, broken ribs and ankle, but never injured my hands or wrists, so it must be working.

    As to the cause of the tire rolling, I’ll hazard a guess: 650c tubular rims for funny bikes were often a narrow 17-18mm (Mavic CX18, Wolber Profil 18) radiused for 18/19mm tires. Manufacturers warned not to use anything wider, but we did, and adhesion was not optimal. I’ve also found significant inconsistency in diameter with vintage 650c and 600c tubulars, but that may be due to age. (The tires’ rather than mine.)

  • @Pete

    I was ok except for my left hand which was sliced open on the outside knuckle. I clearly remember marveling how white all the tendons were and how they operated when I opened and closed my fist.

    This made me laugh.. Sometimes it's almost worth the crash to see such wonders!

  • Always wear gloves racing, never when training.

    The only time it's PRO to wear gloves is when you wear them because the sponsor's name is on the palms and you want to give maximum commercial exposure after a win:

  • the only reason I need for wearing gloves is that I cant work with shredded hands.

  • @minion

    "MTB is for children" reads to me as "I crashed once and am now forever afraid of less than ideal traction scenarios." HTFU, bud.

  • Yeah...when it gets hot I favour gloves, for sure.  Slippery grips have no place in the peloton.

    When it's a bit cooler out though, I will happily admit to enjoying the cool breeze across my hands and the light and tactile connection of fingertips to tape that you get from going bare.

     

     

  • @pistard

    In the lede photo he’s Doing It Wrong. I was taught to keep my hands on the bars while crashing. Two concussions, separated shoulder, broken ribs and ankle, but never injured my hands or wrists, so it must be working.

    Brilliant! I'm impressed anyone can fight the urge to put your hands out and break the fall with the face instead. That is very pro.

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