Battery heated socks, vests, gloves on sale at Costco

Relax

Well-known member
I saw these at Mississauga Dundas / Dixie last night and picked up the socks. Those socks are advertised on the Costco web site, so should be available at all locations. All of my other gear is 12v plug-in, but I shouldn't need anything more than the low setting for them, and they're still wool socks when the batteries die, unlike the 12v heated sock liners I've seen which are like pantyhose.

The gloves and vests might not be the best for riding, but could suit short rides or other purposes (like skiing, which Karbon designs their products for).

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Well if you need to charge your rental Tesla let me know I’m around most of the day.

Don’t need any heated gear but good to know. The socks always intrigued me.
 
I looked at them when I was at Costco last week. The vest has very small heating pads so it seemed like effectiveness may be very limited. Same for the socks I believe based on what I saw. Not sure about the gloves.

I still absolutely love our FiredUp gear that I bougtht here on the group-buy a few years ago. Both vests still work perfectly and the infrared vs resistance heating is just unbeatable. Even on the coldest days, when I turn that vest on it's like someone wrapped a nice warm waterbed around your entire torso.


I think it's one of those things where, yeah, you very much get what you pay for.
 
I bought the HOMES heated gloves 3 yrs ago. I use them everywhere. Love em...got mine for 89.00. Now $99.00 great battery life, comfortable..now available in tan colour 😁
 
I looked at them when I was at Costco last week. The vest has very small heating pads so it seemed like effectiveness may be very limited. Same for the socks I believe based on what I saw. Not sure about the gloves.

I still absolutely love our FiredUp gear that I bougtht here on the group-buy a few years ago. Both vests still work perfectly and the infrared vs resistance heating is just unbeatable. Even on the coldest days, when I turn that vest on it's like someone wrapped a nice warm waterbed around your entire torso.


I think it's one of those things where, yeah, you very much get what you pay for.
If only I could find the charger for my FiredUp vest I’d be a happy man…
 
If only I could find the charger for my FiredUp vest I’d be a happy man…

I hardly use the batteries anymore, I made my own 12v cord with a cigarette lighter plug on the end that just plugs in between the vest and the bike directly. I've found you get a lot better level of heat as well this way as well, I suspect my batteries are getting old, it was at least 4-5 years ago I bought these.

I did use mine on battery a few weeks ago while motocamping however - I tossed one of the vests set to low into my sleeping bag and it was like having a nice hot water bottle in there.
 
I looked at them when I was at Costco last week. The vest has very small heating pads so it seemed like effectiveness may be very limited. Same for the socks I believe based on what I saw. Not sure about the gloves.

I still absolutely love our FiredUp gear that I bougtht here on the group-buy a few years ago. Both vests still work perfectly and the infrared vs resistance heating is just unbeatable. Even on the coldest days, when I turn that vest on it's like someone wrapped a nice warm waterbed around your entire torso.


I think it's one of those things where, yeah, you very much get what you pay for.

Well, I did say the vest and gloves may not be the best for riding unless you're just heading to Timmy's. I personally prefer 12v plug-in gear so I don't have to worry about battery life. That said, I decided to try the socks since my feet only get cold at the toes and sweat everywhere else, and being battery heated I can wear them off the bike too.

Funny you should rave about the FiRed-Up gear. That's what I was referring to when I was comparing to pantyhose. My first experience with heated gear was a full set of their stuff (socks, gloves, vest) from Costco and I returned the gloves and socks almost immediately.

The gloves not only weren't warm enough, but with the batteries in the wrists, they didn't fit under my multiple layers of sleeves and gauntlet gloves, so I could only wear them with wrist-length gloves which defeated their purpose. The batteries also didn't last long.

I never tried the socks on, but I remember them being really thin, and was worried about how they'd stand up to being washed.

Their vest was about $180 tax-in back then and was nice at first, but on longer rides, the heat pads caused me to sweat because they weren't breathable, which caused me to get even colder when the battery eventually wore out. The heat control button being on the chest was also inconvenient. Then the batteries started losing capacity and one of them would only last a few minutes. So I decided to hard wire it for 12v, and I found that one of the wires had frayed right at a heating pad, so very difficult to repair and I wasn't confident it would last even if I could.

A friend had raved about his Venture Heat plug-in jacket liner, and GP had them on sale along with no tax, so I got one for about $220 tax-in. It had more/larger heat panels as well as heated sleeves and neck. It was an amazing difference with my arms and neck being toasty along with the rest of my torso, and the remote heat control was easy to access mounted on my bars. But the more I used it, I found I was constantly switching between the 3 fixed heat settings because one level was too warm and the next level down wasn't warm enough. Then the main zipper pull tab broke off and GP honoured the warranty with a store credit that I used to buy my Scorpion mesh jacket that happened to be the exact same price.

I now have a Warm 'n Safe liner with full rheostat control, and finally happy. Funny thing is, this turned out to be the cheapest of all the ones I've owned at $129 USD shipped to my US address. It's also windproof, rainproof, breathable, and designed to be worn as a standalone jacket off-bike, so very versatile.
 
Or if I can find the conversion harness I made to run it off your bike battery, you can come by and try it out if you have a standard SAE charging pigtail connected to your battery.
 
Or if I can find the conversion harness I made to run it off your bike battery, you can come by and try it out if you have a standard SAE charging pigtail connected to your battery.
Thanks but right now the battery is pooched on my bike. Didn’t know you could connect it to the bike in all honesty.

Guess a little McGyverin never hurts!
 
I looked at them when I was at Costco last week. The vest has very small heating pads so it seemed like effectiveness may be very limited. Same for the socks I believe based on what I saw. Not sure about the gloves.

I think it's one of those things where, yeah, you very much get what you pay for.

First thing I noticed when I looked at the images on the boxes. The chest/back elements are less than half the size of the ones in my Milwaukee quilted jacket, it has shoulder elements as well, and was only 25% more money.

If only I could find the charger for my FiredUp vest I’d be a happy man…

Any universal 12v charger with assorted plugs will work.

That's the advantage of the Milwaukee gear. It uses their 12v Fuel cells in a Power Source holder so you can hot swap the batteries.

71p158qNuWL.jpg
 
First thing I noticed when I looked at the images on the boxes. The chest/back elements are less than half the size of the ones in my Milwaukee quilted jacket, it has shoulder elements as well, and was only 25% more money.



Any universal 12v charger with assorted plugs will work.

That's the advantage of the Milwaukee gear. It uses their 12v Fuel cells in a Power Source holder so you can hot swap the batteries.

71p158qNuWL.jpg

One of those would power the FiredUp vest as well since it's also 12v.
 
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