I did say 'do not stop'. Stopping for tolls is a guarantee of a leak, either immediately as you found, or 3 miles down the road when you have not quite sealed it up again.Supermofo wrote: ↑Fri May 31, 2024 3:05 pmMy favourite one piece oversuit moment was riding for 4 hrs in France in rain so heavy it was bouncing off the tank, up under my chin and soaked the lining of my lid! However I was dry in my suit. Right up to the point I unzipped it just that touch too at the toll both and let a load of water flood into my lapCousin Jack wrote: ↑Thu May 30, 2024 8:20 pm I have done just 1 long very wet ride where I stayed completely dry. Lots of others, with varying results, from damp at the edges through drowned.
Anyway, the secret. Decent waterproof kit, including boots and gloves. Then boil in the bag waterproof oversuit on top, followed by overboots and overgloves. Make sure everything is tight, especially neck and wrist seals.Waddle to the bike, shut the visor, and don't stop. If you stop you will overheat in seconds, and opening anything will inevitably lead to a leak.
It can be done, it is not comfortable, and not practical for most journeys. I don't bother, I tolerate minor leaks.
I succeeded just once, until I ran low on fuel with about 30 miles to go. Dry as a bone at the stop, but the last few miles got very soggy.