B
blo
Guest
Hi folk
Back when I was getting my license, my instructor told me something interesting.
He was a semi pro race driver and very picky on equipment.
He would get the best fitting helmet he could (by this he used to say that you should not be able to chew gum in a good fitting helmet), and he then proceeded to find out where the helmet "pinched", e.g around the forehead or ears. Then he would sit in front of the TV with the helmet on his lap and squeeze the trouble areas with his fingers.
This amounts to the same as using a wooden spoon, or just wearing the helmet, but speeds things up a little.
The point is to have the helmet lining form itself around your "humps and bumps" without taking anything out.
Has worked for me.
Cheers
-blo
Back when I was getting my license, my instructor told me something interesting.
He was a semi pro race driver and very picky on equipment.
He would get the best fitting helmet he could (by this he used to say that you should not be able to chew gum in a good fitting helmet), and he then proceeded to find out where the helmet "pinched", e.g around the forehead or ears. Then he would sit in front of the TV with the helmet on his lap and squeeze the trouble areas with his fingers.
This amounts to the same as using a wooden spoon, or just wearing the helmet, but speeds things up a little.
The point is to have the helmet lining form itself around your "humps and bumps" without taking anything out.
Has worked for me.
Cheers
-blo