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Cheap Chinese Heated Vest Review – eBay Bargain or Junk?

When it comes to staying warm on a motorbike, the traditional option is to layer up, loads of jumpers and thermals, but you inevitably end up feeling like a Michelin man with restricted movement issues. These days, however, there’s loads of great electrically heated cold weather motorcycle gear on the market, from gloves and socks to vests and pants. All nice thin layers that will keep you toasty without the bulkiness. The only problem is, much of this serious gear comes at a serious price.

best heated vest? read on to find outIt’s at this point you may have noticed there’s a lot of very cheap heated clothing on eBay from China. It can’t all be that bad, can it? So, in the name of research, we picked up a heated vest for the princely sum of £20 (delivered). A far cry from big-name brands costing £100-150 or more. Read on to see if we wasted our money or found a little far Eastern gem.

First impressions were pretty good, no obvious flaws in seams and construction. The vest has a deep V-neck design with a short zip and a diamond embossed neoprene outer, like some classy body warmer. It’s lined with a very soft thin plush of almost velvet feel, and then all the edges are finished with a rollover piping. The heating wires can be felt within if you search, but aren’t noticeable day-to-day.

A big, purchased separately, battery powers the vest

There are two pockets on the front, one containing a 15cm USB cable to power the vest and accept a battery, albeit no battery was supplied with the vest. Any generic battery with a USB socket will, as you may have already for recharging your phone. We picked up a big 2000mAh Li-Po battery for another £20 (a PowerAdd Pilot X7), which fits snuggly and keeps it powered on high for several days worth of journeys. It also has multiple USB sockets on it, giving the option to charge a phone in the other vest pocket.

A small rubbery light-up button on the left-hand breast turns the vest on and toggles heat level. A long press for on-off, or a quick tap to cycle high, medium, low with associated red, white and blue coloured lights. Product blurb claims these settings provide 65C, 55C and 45C temperatures respectively, however, I’ve not measured to confirm this.

Heated vest reviews
A light-up button that changes colour is your heating control

With the large battery in the pocket, it does have a little bit of weight (560g for a vest, plus 370g for battery), but certainly not bulky and the vest easily slips on under a bike jacket. When turned on it can take 5 minutes or so before it feels noticeable warm and even on high it only provides a modest warmth to touch. However, as a layer under your jacket (which probably has a thermal liner too), you really don’t need a lot of heat. Even in temperatures around zero and riding in wet snow, it produced sufficient warmth to keep the cold away. By no means hot or enough to build up a sweat, but comfortable and ample to keep the chill away.

Where the vest falls down is around the button to control it. Firstly being on the breast, you can’t see or really access it once you’ve got a thick motorcycle jacket on over the top. So, you’ve no idea what setting it’s on and it’s trial and error to try and press it through a jacket. Secondly, the button is really touch-sensitive. I would often set it to high, stick jacket over the top, get down the road and begin to wonder why it’s not producing much heat. When I stop and unzip the jacket to check it out, I would then find it’s flipped to medium or low setting, seemingly having cycled through settings from light brushing of a jacket over the top. Either that or it’s got some undocumented features to only stay on high for short time, to save power or some such. Either way, not ideal on the bike.

Chinese Heated Vest Verdict

As modelled by my Dad

Overall, it’s not a bad little heated vest, certainly can’t moan at the £20 price or long shipping time from China. Both Mary and myself have used it and we both came to the same conclusion that it’s only the control button that really lets it down for use on a bike. Additionally, it’s also super tempting to pop on when not on the bike, even for just a walk to shops on an icy day (my Northern relatives would be ashamed…) Nonetheless, I can see it is ideal for all kinds of outdoor pursuits, for example, hunting, horse riding, hiking, rambling, fishing, skiing etc.

Of course, as we’ve only had it a month, it’s too early to judge reliability, which can be an issue with heated gear. But we’ll report back here later in a year with our judgement of longevity. Like many Chinese products, eBay and Amazon are often flooded with very similar looking products that are tricky to distinguish, thus ascertaining the best-heated vests is tricky. Most probably all originate from the same factory, but there may be minor differences, be they improvements of corners cut. However, at this price, the gamble is certainly worth it.

Score: 7 out of 10.

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By Arthur

Seasoned London commuter, doing my best to stay rubber side down and never stop moving forward.

3 replies on “Cheap Chinese Heated Vest Review – eBay Bargain or Junk?”

Hi, Thank you for your review. I am looking to get a heated vest for my husband who works in an unheated workshop to keep the chill off. He often comes home straight in the bath as he is chilled to the core. I am interested to hear your thoughts on the longevity of this type of vest now that it has been nearly 2 yrs since you wrote this article. thanks again and look forward to your update.

Hi, I bought one of these. Similar experience. With mine, turning on went to high setting, but automatically changed to lower setting after a few minutes. Probably a power saving feature. The workaround is to cycle through the 3 settings when you first turn it on, back to high power, and it will stay there.

Hi, my son has one of these -the switch problem easily sorted by getting a plastic bottle top, slim type as on a milk bottle -use a pin or a dart to carfully poke 2 holes through the side wall as opposed the face, then using strong thread stitch it accurately above the switch being careful not to snag any wiring, stitch with enough slck to allow it to drop down-not stick out as such – he painted his bottle top matt black and its barely noticable – easy fix to an annoying issue !

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