Have been riding with mine for about one month and it's phenomenal! Incredibly comfortable and the AAA protection, along with the Knox micro-lock armor, is reassuring. Thank you for making such wonderful gear!
@@TheValbunnys Southeastern, coastal US. It gets hot as Hell here, so it’s great for ventilation and I wear it under my Helite Turtle vest. I’ve only had it for a month, and in the winter I plan to wear it under my leather jacket. What I love most about what Knox does is that the armor stays where it should. Nothing is fiddly and you feel extremely secure.
Would love to see this in a lighter, high-reflective, or hi-vis color scheme. Impressive protection, but I don't do all-black motorcycle gear for safety reasons.
Would you happen to know measurements and size of the male model? Just trying to find which size is best for me, I'm somewhere between a medium and large, 6ft tall 41inch chest 20inch torso length if any of that helps. Thank you for your time, amazing product, cheers!
Still rocking my 'Urbane Pro' MK2 but this is looking like a nice piece of kit should I upgrade.. Just bought a pair of the Spencer jeans but am yet to try them out.. Great products as usual
A interesting concept. Im surprised we have not seen or heard of anyone wearing this gear down in the southwest. I see this is designed to be a tight fit, how does it look and feel for real men with a belly?! Size up?
Thanks! Lots of riders using these now and with fantastic feedback. Fits all shapes and sizes, very flattering and sized fairly true. Thanks, Aaron KNOX
Man I so wish this had other colors then just black. I hate black it is not good for visibility yet for some reason is the standard for protective gear? Is there a good way I can alter the color to make me more visible?
No it doesnt flow as much air as the Urbane Pro which is our most ventilated product. Still great and has fantastic feedback, but not as good as Urbane Pro. Thanks 👍
I have one of your competitors AAA shirt, which like a light denim jacket. It is epic, and will be looking at your product (which seems even lighter and less bulky than what I have). Only wear my leather gear on the track, where it is mandated and wish track operators would wise up so AAA rated non-leather gear is permitted, as my *stars track suit is probably less safe than the AAA gear I have
I just ordered the Honister and am really looking forward to trying it out. I'm 5'9", 41" chest, and about 175 pounds and ordered the large. Hopefully, it fits.
Nice. I want one. But do wish there where some lighter color options for riding in hot climates. A light grey, good for a Honister pass in the Pyrenees?
Many thanks! Please bear in mind that the Honister jacket relies on massive amounts of ventilation to keep it cool. Ventilation on a motorcycle is significantly more effective than the idea of fabric colour solar absorptance. Hope that makes sense. Thanks, Aaron KNOX
Thanks Larry, appreciate it! Hope you are well? The 1st jacket shown was the Knox Dual Pro Jacket, and the thin waterproof one was Knox Welbeck Jacket. You can see them here - www.planet-knox.com/category/mens-motorcycle-jackets/. Hope that helps, Aaron KNOX
Hello I am 14 years old I am an experienced rider. I am looking to change my bike but I don’t know if a 150i husqvarna enduro or a 250 2t enduro husquvarna wat would you recommend me
As a Knox customer, I think it looks like a solid jacket. I own the lowly action shirt with upgraded level 2 armour. I wear it under leathers. One correction though, AAA is not the highest rating. EN 13595 is still active until September this year. Then it will be replaced by BSI 13595. 13595 level 1 is significantly more stringent than EN 17092 AAA and level 2 is almost twice is stringent. Textiles, jeans and of course leathers are available that are certified to EN 13595 level 2. I own several of each. Companies that emphasize safety still get their kit certified to level 2. And some even do both EN 17092 AAA and EN 13595 level 1 or 2. Putting performance grade cowhide in the same category as any textile kit is very misleading.
Hi Martin, thanks for the comment and continued support! Re the comments on CE performance, AAA is the highest rating of EN17092, which is the correct, mandatory and most developed standard for motorcycle PPE. You are right that the old EN13595 professional standard will lapse this year. Whether or not this would be replaced by a new BS standard is pure speculation at this point. AAA was designed for 1 or 2 piece leathers, so it is not misleading in any way to say that textile products approved to AAA are in the same category as the category that was designed for leathers. Thanks, Aaron KNOX
@@KnoxArmour Thanks for the reply. I could write an essay on all the problems specifically with the Darmstadt abrasion test (AART, developed in the 80's). It was developed way before the industry standard Cambridge machine. Unlike the Cambridge machine it was never peer reviewed as being suitable. Sure, the Cambridge test isn't perfect. I'd add a significant impact to make it more relevant. The Darmstadt machine has even less "impact". Call it just an abrasion test. There's no impact from 10mm. Suffice it to say that the biggest problem with EN17092 is that you don't get much information, except it passed or failed. This is just about useless for R&D and not very informative for customers. MOTOCAP is the only source I trust because they test to failure - or 10 seconds, whichever comes first - and publish unbiased independent results. Unfortunately, they've never tested any Knox kit. However, the picture is clear that even the AAA rated nylon textiles are failing at about 2 seconds. Some get 4 seconds with multiple layers. Whereas leathers in single layers achieve about 4-7 seconds and double layers max out at 10 seconds and the test stops. In studies where they tested to failure, double cowhide was getting 12-25 seconds. If I were to offer a constructive suggestion, I'd make a vastly improved Honister Pro with low-friction caps on the shoulders and elbows, similar in concept to Knox SPS sliders. This won't be tested by CE but in the real world it would potentially give the Honister repeat crash performance in any significant impact and subsequent slide.
@@martinfoster5163 Thanks for reply. Clearly you know best Martin... we've only been doing this for 40+ years and working on standards committees for over 28, so of course know nothing about the matter :)... All the best, Aaron KNOX
@@KnoxArmour Like Martin, I’m a Knox customer who likes elbow and shoulder sliders. They add significant abrasion resistance (which matters for even AAA textiles) and - when well-designed - can look stylish. And while we all know that decent leathers trump textiles (let’s not pretend otherwise), kudos to Knox for developing AAA rated textile kit. Often, it’s too wet or too hot for leathers. With the Honister, Knox has shown up more than a few competitors that have yet to launch AAA-certified textiles. It’s good to see a British company at the leading edge - showing that a AAA textile jacket is possible without costing over a grand like Klim, Hideout, etc.
@@KnoxArmour you seem a little too arrogant on your answer, yuo have to remember that we never never stop learning and improving . that said I like your product Aaron but not your answer.