Touch screen gloves

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Mike Alexander

Active Member
I'm looking for some good winter gloves that are touch screen compatible so that I can use my iPhone (which I use with the Cyclemeter app as my bike computer) without having to take the gloves off. I recently purchased some Craft Siberian gloves, but found that they don't work very well at all with my iPhone 4.

Does anyone have any experience of other similar gloves?
 

Oldspice

Senior Member
They just need a conductor so stroke a sausage roll then use your ipnone and it will work... Brought to you by Greggs
 

Oldspice

Senior Member
This thread is getting a little harsh.

PS the gloves thing also works with crisps and 99p gloves off the market......brought to you by Walkers Crisp (salt and vinegar)
 

Andy_R

Hard of hearing..I said Herd of Herring..oh FFS..
Location
County Durham
That wasn't the question. Are you saying tapping a Garmin or CatEye requires stopping?
No, what I'm saying is if it doesn't work while I'm riding, I'll wait til I get there.....got more important things to think about when riding...like numpties in tin boxes paying more atttention to gadgets than the road....oops, sound familiar?:whistle:
 
OP
OP
Mike Alexander

Mike Alexander

Active Member
I agree with you in regards to texting or whatever, but if your phone has an application that turns it into a GPS cycle computer then I can see the need for a glove that lets you use the touchscreen in winter.
That's the exact reason I'm looking for touch screen cycling gloves; my iPhone is my GPS cycling computer and mounted in a case on my handlebars. With mitts in warmer weather I can easily switch between ride stats (cadence, speed, heart rate, etc.) and a map (for when I get lost!). I'd like to be able to do the same on rides like this morning when it was just above 0°C.
 

Andy_R

Hard of hearing..I said Herd of Herring..oh FFS..
Location
County Durham
I agree with you in regards to texting or whatever, but if your phone has an application that turns it into a GPS cycle computer then I can see the need for a glove that lets you use the touchscreen in winter.
Still the same answer....pull over, stop and have a good look at the map, instead of letting it distract you (after all, you are one of the most vulnerable road users out there.) Even when hiking, if I want of find out where I am, I stop, get the map out, work out where I am, work out where I want to be, then continue. GPS on a bike, on the move, is a recipe for disaster. Too many people are relying on gadgets and losing basic skills. Do you just blindly follow the machine when it directs you to Gibraltar?
 
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