![]() This allows the rider to move while the armor stays in the right place. ![]() Floating Armor System (US Patents 607274, 6260196) – which attaches shoulder and elbow armor with a Velcro harness for easy adjustment or removal. Under the entry vent is a heavy mesh that keeps the sleeve from expanding – while the outer material of the sleeve forms an air scoop.Įnhanced protection comes from our F.A.S. Vent System (US Patent 5704064), with a zippered vent safely at the crook of the elbow for air to enter, flow past the armpits and exit through the rear vents. Opening both front and rear vents lets air flow through the jacket shell. There are two exit vents on the back near the underarm. Behind the perforated leather front panels are water- and air-proof nylon curtains that can be unzipped and rolled down for airflow. All our venting is controllable, and allows air to pass through the shell by making the vent area non-stretchable but air-permeable, so the shell keeps its correct shape, the protection stays where it should be, and the jacket itself does not become (literally) a drag on the rider.įull Throttle jackets use our Air Curtain Vent System (US patents 5507042, 6883178, 6868557) in the front panels. Our patented innovations all start from the principle that controllable air-flow and protection don’t have to be mutually exclusive. Crash forces twist an oversized garment around, with the protection areas likely to move away from points of contact, leaving little or no benefit from having the armor in the first place. See this and you'll know that any protective armor in the jacket has probably shifted. ![]() Most so-called vent systems were nothing more than zipper slits - when open they expanded the jacket shell forming an air brake around the rider. Until another Vanson innovation solved the problem. We’ve all seen a guy like this – jacket filled with air, holding onto the bars for dear life with the wind trying to rip him off his bike. As Miss Vikki in the Vanson Showroom once said: “If a Cobra 2 and a Drifter had a baby – what would you get? You’d get a DRAC!”īack in 1995, when we first worked on designs with variable venting, the idea was to allow airflow into the jacket to cool the rider without creating a billowing puffed-up bag of humanity coming down the road. ![]()
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