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Arai TX-5 Long-Term Ownership Review: Two Years, Thousands of Kilometres, Every Condition

Arai TX-5 Long-Term Ownership Review: Two Years, Thousands of Kilometres, Every Condition

Two years. Tens of thousands of kilometres. Every surface South Africa can throw at it. From superbikes to adventure machines, daily commuting to overland slogs across the Karoo, this is a no-nonsense, long-term ownership review of the Arai TX-5 helmet. Not a launch impression, not an advert – just what works, what doesn’t, and how the TX-5 compares to the TX-3 and TX-4 when you actually live in it.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

Adventure mode engaged.

I’ve been riding with the Arai TX5 for just over two years now. Not weekend coffee runs or the odd launch ride, but almost daily use across road bikes, superbikes, adventure bikes, commuters and the occasional commercial hack. Tar, dirt, highways, goat paths, summer heat and Highveld winter mornings, this helmet has seen all of it.

That makes this less of a “first impressions” piece and more of a proper longterm ownership review, warts and all.

The Riding It’s Done

Mid-2025 I put the TX5 through a proper endurance test: a 2,500 km, five day overland ride from Cape Town to Johannesburg. Two days carving around the Cape Peninsula and surrounding mountain roads, then north through the Klein Karoo, Southern Cape, the vast nothingness of the Great Karoo, swarms of miggies, a brief Gariep stop for a classic hobo’s breakfast (a piss and a look around), and then the long haul home via Bloemfontein and the N1. For that trip the helmet ran in full road mode, peak removed.

Outside of that, it’s been used on multiple offroad adventure rides in deep summer heat and bone chilling Gauteng winter mornings. Terrain has ranged from long, dusty gravel highways to steep, rock strewn climbs out of gullies, narrow mountain goat paths and game trails through the bush. Add weeks of commuting in sunshine and pelting rain, and the TX5 has genuinely lived the life.

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Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

Full Off Road mode.

First Adjustment: The Chin Bar

My very first reaction to the TX5 was surprise. The chin bar sits noticeably closer to the face than on my old TX4 and TX3. Initially, it felt almost claustrophobic, and it took some time to adapt. Today, I’m completely comfortable with it, until things get very physical.

When you’re muscling a heavy adventure bike through technical sections, breathing hard, that closer chin bar means your hot, garlic laden breath has nowhere to go but straight back into your face. That amplifies the huffing and puffing and sends your core temperature climbing fast. This is where the TX5’s ventilation philosophy becomes obvious.

 

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

The chin bar sits noticeably closer to the face.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

The chin vent is larger and flows significantly more air.

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Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

Road_streetfighter mode.

Ventilation: Less Aggressive, More Refined

Compared to the TX3 and TX4, the TX5 is not as aggressively vented. The two forward top vents have been reduced to a single centre vent. The eyebrow vents in the visor are gone entirely, however they have been replaced with one massive slide vent above the high impact line, thus not affecting the structural integrity of the TX%. On the plus side, the chin vent is larger and flows significantly more air, and the rear exhaust vent has been redesigned into a single, larger unit with better extraction aerodynamics.

What Arai has effectively done is take a road helmet approach and adapt it for dual purpose use. The result? Less raw airflow at low speeds offroad, but noticeably improved stability, airflow management and comfort at sustained road speeds.

Noise and Comfort: A Big Step Forward

The biggest improvement over the TX3 and TX4 is comfort. The TX5 is quieter, significantly so. Wind noise is reduced, especially at highway speeds, and the interior is far more plush.

The liner materials manage sweat better, soaking it away quicker and staying comfortable across a wider temperature range. Long days in the saddle are simply easier. Going back to a TX4 now, it feels comparatively hard and utilitarian – still good, but not in the same league.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

The two forward top vents have been reduced to a single centre vent with and a big central vent.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

Ventilation is less aggressive and more refined.

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Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

The peak isn’t pretty, It’s designed to be functional rather than fashionable.

Visor, Seal and Fog Control

The visor has been subtly but importantly redesigned. It’s contoured around the Pinlock insert, giving a better seal and more consistent contact. In real world riding, it works extremely well. Fogging has been a non issue for me in both rain and cold conditions.

Peak Design and Practicality

The TX5 peak isn’t pretty. It’s clearly designed to be functional rather than fashionable. That’s fine by me.

More importantly, Arai has finally fixed one of my biggest frustrations with the TX3 and TX4. Those helmets worked well, but switching between road, adventure and MX configurations was a chore. Worse still, the plastic screws held both the visor and the peak.

I learned this lesson the hard way on a 3,500 km trip to Victoria Falls. Losing a single screw meant both visor and peak flapping uselessly in the wind. A memorable Sunday ride from Palapye to Kasane, aptly 666 km's of pure misery followed, held together with duct tape and desperation, speed limited to under 100 km/h.

The TX5’s simplified mounting system is a massive improvement. You can remove the peak entirely, lose the bolts, and the visor stays firmly in place. It’s quicker, easier and far more practical. For TX3 and TX4 owners: carry spare bolts. Trust me.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

The visor is contoured around the Pinlock insert, giving a better seal and more consistent contact.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

This is a proper long term ownership review.

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Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

After nearly double the mileage I did in my TX4, the TX5 still looks almost new.

Safety and Build

The TX5 uses Arai’s PBcLc² shell construction, multi density EPS liner, emergency release cheek pads, and meets ECE R22-06 certification. As always with Arai, build quality is excellent, and the helmet feels solid, protective and well finished.

Interestingly, after nearly double the mileage I did in my TX 4, the TX5 still looks almost new. It stays cleaner, fresher and shows less wear.

Final Thoughts

Yes, the TX5 looks like what it is: a modified road helmet. It’s not particularly pretty. But I don’t have to look at it while I’m wearing it.

For the kind of riding I do, it feels safer, more cocooning and far more comfortable than its predecessors. My days of trying to look cool are long gone. I care about comfort, practicality, usability and safety.

I won’t fit oversized rims to a Ranger Raptor just to impress strangers. I’ll take something that works properly every time. That’s exactly what the Arai TX5 does.

Click here for more info or your nearest stockist.

Arai TX5 Long Term Ownership Review.

Two years and thousands of km's later and it still looks fresh.

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Words and Photographs by:

Sean Ridez

From Grease Monkey to Industry Pro: A Life Under the Hood: They say in Afrikaans, "die koeël is deur die kerk".... the bullet is through the church. Once it’s done, there’s no turning back. For Sean Hendley, that moment arrived in 1974. At just four years old, he was already in the garage with his father, swinging spanners to build his very first motorcycle, a late 60s Yamaha 50cc FS1. The mechanical bug didn't just bite; it left a permanent mark. Sean grew up in an era where speed was earned through grease and grit. Raised by a single father who balanced the demands of three children with a passion for machinery, Sean learned early on how to "make a plan." Their garage was a sanctuary of gifted projects, from a restored Norton 750 Commando to a BSA 250 Bantam. By the age of ten, Sean wasn’t just riding, he was diagnosing. His first Yamaha eventually met its end in a rubble skip in the mid 80s, but only after a lifetime of abuse. He pushed that small road bike through Moto-X tracks until the chassis snapped, frequently seeking out neighbours to weld the frame back together. When the two stroke engine seized from long stretches of wide open throttle, Sean would hammer the piston out with a block of wood and polish the internals with toothpaste, a resourceful substitute for the Brasso he couldn't afford. The 1980s served as a masterclass in automotive hustle. Sean rebuilt a rusted out Toyota 1200 bakkie so effectively his cash strapped Dad traded it for cash and a '68 Ford Escort Station Wagon that had been salvaged from a chicken coop. While his school mates spent their winter holidays tanning on the KZN South Coast, Sean spent his days in a workshop, stripping the Escort’s seized motor to the crankshaft and professionally fitting old carpets to replace the bird ravaged interior. By the time school resumed, his friends had tans, but Sean had a high performance daily driver. This relentless hands on education continued through his youth, from dropping the engine out of the family’s '69 VW Kombi to rebuilding the Jaguar XJ6 differential on his father’s custom Ford Transit van. Even his marriage has mechanical roots. Shortly after his military service, he met his wife and helped her source parts to rebuild her recovered stolen motorcycle. Today, they still ride and wrench together. With over 25 years in the motorcycle industry, Sean has transitioned from the garage floor to the forefront of automotive media. Having tested and reviewed countless bikes and cars, he brings a perspective that can't be taught in a journalism class. Because he has spent over a million kilometres in the saddle and a lifetime under the hood, he can instinctively sense when a machine is truly special, merely adequate, or simply putting on a show. Sean’s reviews are defined by this "insider" honesty, no candy coating and no brand bashing, just the raw truth from a man who knows exactly how the gears turn.

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