nabottle
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 329
- Location
- Lakeland, Florida, U.S.
Very nice jacket and an excellent review.
That was a superb review with pictures to complement your writeup and experience. I won't even ask what bike you will use for your new jacket. My only question is which watch?
My solution for loose snaps has been to place the ball end of a ball peen hammer into the rim of the male snap, while the snap resting face-up on a table. A second hammer is then used to gently tap straight down on the flat face of the ball peen hammer, which drives the ball into the rim. This will evenly expand the rim slightly in diameter, giving the snap assembly a better engagement.
I learned the hard way that one should begin with very light taps and then check for fit, working up to the expansion needed for proper engagement: you can always hit it again but you can't un-hit it.
Thanks Fanch! These days, I can't ride a bike. It's an agreement with my wife-kids/her, or bikes, and I think I made the right choice...that said, we're negotiating when I am allowed back on one. Haven't gone down the path of restoring a bike for restoration's sake, for my eventual return to riding, but that's the plan...someday.
For watches-these days it's usually a vintage 1968 Omega Seamaster 300, or a similar year Doxa Sub 300. Both slip under the sleeve no problem
Yeah, I agree on the back. Cow hides are larger than horse and I bet it's just a style thing. It's one thing to get a multi-piece A-2, and other for a civi jacket. I do wonder though if that affects the safety aspect of a biker jacket? Are seams inherently unsafe in a crash?