2010年12月6日星期一

Scorpion EXO-1000 review -- Part7

The  <a title="Scorpion EXO-1000 Series Specifications" href="http://www.x-ck.com/blogs/scorpion-exo-1000-series-specifications">Scorpion EXO-1000</a> does have a relatively "dirty", aerodynamically speaking, shell, with lots of  vents, the rear spoiler, exhausts and those big round face shield removal knobs  that stick out in the air flow. This makes the helmet louder than I think it  should or could be.

Noise and tolerance thereof is subjective, of course, and I always wear  high-quality ear plugs, but there is a wind rushing noise that seems to be  generated around the top vents and the rear exhaust spoiler on the<a title="scorpion-exo-1000" href="http://www.x-ck.com/categories/scorpion-exo-1000-air"> scorpion-exo-1000</a>,  along with a continuous low-frequency wind rushing noise around the bottom of  the helmet, caused by turbulence and amplified when riding behind a short  windscreen.

What I don't hear is the annoying whistling noise that can be caused by air  passing over vent holes, and this is surprising. It isn't the loudest helmet  I've tried by any means, but I'd say it's probably in the bottom third.

Remember that we always wear correctly fitted, high quality earplugs and an  extra helmet liner when riding, and we strongly recommend that you always wear  hearing protection also.

And also remember that your experience with noise levels will probably be  different because it depends on many factors, including your head shape, the  motorcycle configuration, prevailing winds and more.

Score: I'll give it a break and rate the <a title="exo-1000" href="http://www.x-ck.com/">EXO-1000 </a>as "Acceptable" for the amount of noise  that it transmits.

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