P.S. For n=2, it is not orientable, because it is the moebius strip.
I'll use the notation RP^(n-1) for G1(Rn), and refer to it as "real
projective (n-1) space".
Your space, which I'll denote X, is orientable iff n is odd.
To prove this, note that the sphere bundle of the canonical line
bundle over RP^(n-1) has total space equal to the (n-1) dimensional
sphere, S^(n-1), and its projection is the canonical double cover
f: S^(n-1) --> RP^(n-1). Further, if this projection is used to
attach an n-cell D^n to RP^(n-1), yielding the complex:
D^n \cup_f RP^(n-1)
then the result is RP^n, alias real projective n-space. The normal
bundle of RP^(n-1) in RP^n is the canonical line bundle over RP^(n-1),
so the space X is homeomorphic to a tubular neighborhood of RP^(n-1)
in RP^n. I'll identify X with that tubular neighborhood.
If RP^n is orientable, then X (being an open submanifold) must also be,
and if X is orientable, then RP^n must be orientable, since RP^n \ X is
contractible (it's a disc), .
Finally, RP^n is easily shown to be orientable iff n is odd: RP^n is
the quotient of S^n by the antipodal map, and that map is orientation-
preserving (allowing one to produce an orientation on the quotient) iff
the map x |--> -x is orientation-preserving on R^(n+1).
Dale