Quote Originally Posted by dickiedeals View Post
My questions about this setup or should I say concerns is the width. Is this wide enough to stop shoulder and ear buffeting? Does the wind go up over your head? More so is RAIN. How does this perform in the rain. Looks like you would get blasted in the face with water. Living in Florida and riding daily you get rained on a lot to put it mildly. I've ridden 550 miles with it raining so hard you could hardly see your front wheel. How would this setup perform? Have any of you ridden in the rain with this configuration?.......Dickie
Dickie, D-Shark posted this a little earlier. (Looks to answer both the width answer and rain protection):

Just finished a 2,300 mile round trip from IL to FL and back. I was really impressed with the cold weather wind protection offered by my Madstad. I wore a Bell Pit Boss half helmet with zip-in neck curtain that covers the ears and back of the neck. My head was always warm, exposed skin did not get cold (to my surprise) and eyes did not tear from the cold.

On the way down I started off at 28 degrees and rode most of the day in the low 30's, 12 hours total. Last day on the way back started out at 42 degrees and steadily dropped over 9 hours to 19 degrees for the last hour. I had heated grips, Powerlet heated glove liners and heated jacket liner. Hands were always nice and warm with liners and Klim Powercross gortex gloves. At 19 degrees the heated jacket liner kept me warm enough. No heat on the feet which did get chilly due to the 9 hour exposure but not painfully so.

I had plenty of time to take note of where air was moving and where it was not. My 10" Madstad Base is 26 inches wide from edge to edge and I think the extra width of the 10" Base really helps to create a wide swath of calm air. Air is calm well beyond each shoulder to the left and right (and I'm a big guy). Also noted that air was very calm around the hand grips. Wind out by the bar end weights and about 3 inches below the grips but none in the area around the grips where my hands rested.

First day coming back rode through a couple of downpours on the Interstate and the amount of water hitting me in the face was comparable to a traditional windshield that you would be looking over. Did not get a chance to adjust the shield up to where I would be looking through it since I was pushing to make time.


I'm sure we will get more reports from others that ride in the rain.