Lol. Brian De Palma style.
Ditto on the Shark Spartan. Best street helmet I've owned, by far. It's very stable and quiet (for me, on my bike, YMMV) and the sun visor actually comes low enough to fully shield my eyes, no bright band at the bottom of my vision. Any integrated sun visor is a safety compromise, but the convenience of not having to muck with sunglasses or swap visors is well worth it to me. The liner is really soft, too.owned/worn many helmets over the years
just bought a Shark full face as the Nolan is timed out and stinky
the Shark Spartan GT is an extremely comfortable helmet for my pumpkin shape (round)
fairly quiet and the opticals of the sunshade and visor are the best I've had
totally happy with the purchase
Actually, correction. The thinner pads I bought didn't feel safe, so I went back to the original cheekpads but I surgically removed some foam from inside of them. Now they're the cat's ass.My HJC used to squish my cheeks far too much, so I bought thinner cheekpads for it from Revzilla, problem solved.
Maybe a bit but if that's true where are the round oval Shoeis? Which Shoei models are round oval?It may be a bit of a generalization to say that you're a Shoei head, or an Arai head, or a Sh1t-head, etc.
Different models within the same brand might have different shell shapes and padding. You won't know till you try it on, and even then, you won't *really* know until you're an hour or two into your ride.
There are certain things you can do to make a new helmet more comfortable, you can stretch the padding using vices, clamps, books, etc. Dampen the pads a little bit before you stretch them. Some manufacturers also sell thinner pads for cheeks/crown that you can replace the stock padding with.
This! I ended up cutting out the blatters. Helmet was then relegated as a back up. So not sure if the air pump helmet would help. Maybe get a larger helmet with the air blatters?It just feels like a torture device more often than not, the right side of my head is in intense pain after some miles, in addition the cheeks are always pushed in (@Lightcycle another layup) so more times than not, I end up biting my cheeks etc
The idea is to help the cheek pads hold your head better so when the impact happens the eps foam will be as close to your head as possible. The cheek pads are soft in just about any helmet, they aren't meant to cushion the hit.I don't understand how the pump helps? Sure it may change the static fit but as soon as you are in a crash, the air you added does nothing. I vote gimmick.
Find a helmet for a different head shape. Shoei is obviously not the right shape for you.
For a "custom" fit a lot of the time people need the crown pad portion and the cheek pad portions to be different thicknesses/sizes to fit best. It's one solution offered by a manufacturer to solve that problem instead of expecting the owner to get additional pads themselves or just dealing with an uncomfortable or poorly fitted helmet. I've heard mixed but mostly positive reviews.I don't understand how the pump helps? Sure it may change the static fit but as soon as you are in a crash, the air you added does nothing. I vote gimmick.
Find a helmet for a different head shape. Shoei is obviously not the right shape for you.