Winter Gloves.

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cyberknight

As long as I breathe, I attack.
Just "won" a new pair of aldi winter gloves on evilbay for £8 still in packaging and in a large so i can retire my old pair that have been sewn up a number of times and are wearing thin now .
 
gloves do get ratehr smelly as the interior gets wet from sweat
Yes agree, The best (warmest) I bought were ski gauntlets for about £15 at Decathlon. They were good but cleaning/washing the inside is one thing, but drying is best done in summer on the line.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
I have found the windproof semi-waterproof fleece gloves to be reasonably good. I've had bike specific ones from (I think) Altura and also Aquafleeece from Mountain Equipment.

I have also been rather impressed by a 3 part set of gloves from Assos. There was an outer rubbery lobster claw glove, a mid-layer semi-waterproof fleece layer and an inner thin glove. You could wear them in various combinations. Not cheap but mine were somewhat less brutally expensive as they were last-year's colour or some such. Good kit though

Tried motorcycle gloves but not really satisfactory
 
OP
OP
Saracenlad

Saracenlad

Über Member
Found them at last. The best winter gloves I have ever had. Buy from SafetyGloves.co.uk. Be careful with the size choice. I ordered a 10 and the fingers were a bit too big. A size 9 were perfect for me. What a find.

New Gloves.JPG
 

accountdeleted

Active Member
Found them at last. The best winter gloves I have ever had. Buy from SafetyGloves.co.uk. Be careful with the size choice. I ordered a 10 and the fingers were a bit too big. A size 9 were perfect for me. What a find.

View attachment 795101

Oh I'm late to this thread but that's an interesting option as a pair of cycling gloves - never thought of "industry" gloves.
I've tried 3mm, 5mm wetsuit neoprene gloves, couple of Aldi cycling gloves, Sealskinz waterproof gloves (Christmas gift...) in the past. They're all good until "feels like" 1C; beyond that I get numb / painful fingers, loss of grip and just plain unpleasant after 10min of ride.

Currently landed with handlebar mitts (Giyo, off eBay) with Aldi cycling gloves (wearing thin now) / Sealskinz waterproof gloves (though this makes my hand sweat noticeably more!). I've also got £4.99 Aldi ski gloves but haven't tried them yet.

Just had a look on https://www.safetygloves.co.uk/: Ejendals Tegera 295 Waterproof Thermal Work Gloves £18.90 + £4.95 delivery = £25.00 not a bad option!

I appreciate it's very much subjective and individual, how good do they keep your hands tolerable in "feels like" cold temperature?
 

scotsbikester

Senior Member
I've done a study!! Sort of. Maybe not quite up to drug trial standards, but still, I used a control (my left hand) and the test object (the right). And the results are in.

From top to right, here they are:

IMG_6934.JPG


First point to make, is that glove sizing seems bizarre. I definitely do not have "large" hands, at least not for a man. I used to work in construction, some of our labourers had hands almost as big as their shovels - that's what I'd call large. These days I teach guitar to teenagers. Some of the 14 year old girls have hands bigger than mine. But I still ended up getting "large" gloves. Maybe the sizing is across all ages, and includes children's gloves?

So if you're shopping for gloves, try them them on if possible, or buy from somewhere with a decent returns policy.

The first set of "gloves" are actually silk liners, as recommended here. They made the gloves a little warmer, in every case. But not by a huge amount. What was noticeable was how much bulk they added, considering they are very thin. If you're going to use liners, on a bike, it's the equivalent of going down a size (I had two pairs, size 8 and 9, of the Skytec gloves).

As well as "subjective" testing - "do my hands feel warm/cool/cold/freezing/I can't tell I've lost all feeling" - there was some "objective" testing. Also known as taking the gloves off the moment I got back in the house and asking my wife to tell which was warmer.

2nd set are some Altura gloves. I don't think they're really intended as cold weather gloves, just maybe "cool" weather. Right one with silk liner, left one without, my right hand felt a bit warmer, but still uncomfortable. Around 3/4/5 degrees centrigrade.

3rd set are those Carnac crab things. These are "medium", but are still a bit tight. They go on, but don't leave me with as much dexterity as I'd like. And I'm not a fan of the two fingers together arrangement. They were nowhere near as warm as I'd hoped. A little warmer than the Altura+liner, but not much. Because they are a bit small, I never tested with a liner.

4th set are Skytec Argon builders gloves, as recommended here. The warmest so far, and a little warmer if there was a liner in one. But still not as good as I'd hoped. I bought two pairs, I'll return one and keep the other for actual DIY, gardening etc.

5th set are Decathalon ski gloves. As far as I could work out from the chart in the shop, these are the lowest temperature rated (down to -11 deg C). There are these: https://www.decathlon.co.uk/p/adult-warm-ski-gloves-gl500-green/347696/c219c382m8937395

They were warming than any of the others, and the liner seemed to make a bigger difference than it did with any of the others. To be clear, I tried them against the Alturas, and the Skytecs, with and without liners. I also tested them having the Decathalons on both hands, but a liner only on the right hand. I wonder whether there's a perception thing going on. That if one hand is comfortable, but the other is cold, you feel the difference more. Whereas if both hands are cold, you don't feel the difference as much. Anyway, the liners seemed to make a bigger difference here.

So, that's the results.

Couple of considerations:

This was on a bike with drop bars and STI shifters (Ultegra 9 speed triple). So dexterity matters more than it might on a flat bar bike. I could handle the controls fine with all, but didn't really like the Carnacs.

Temperature was in the low single figures, might even have been just above freezing where I was cycling.

The ski and builders gloves don't have gel pads or similar on the palms. I could feel the difference, and on a long ride might get problems. But on these 14 miles rides it was fine. Worth pointing out that I don't "need" gel as much as some people might. My position is fairly upright, and I've put a huge amount of work into setting up the bike for comfort (saddle lower than bars, short stem, Nitto noodle bars, long lay back seat-post, etc. etc.). If you rely heavily on padded gloves, bear that in mind.
 
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Jon62

Senior Member
Location
south west
What is the durability like? I tend to wear the palms and thumbs clean through on gloves within 6 months of riding. Does the material hold up?

Unfortunately I cannot help with the long term wearing out information, as I only cycle once a week, but they are work gloves, so should be pretty wear resistant, unless you ride 24\7 with sand paper grips.
 

simongt

Guru
Location
Norwich
Having had Raynaud's since I were wee lad and despite taking recommendations from many sources, I've yet to find a glove / combination that works for me. Sheepskin mitts do a fair job but of course, mitts aren't always a practical option. Sheepskin gloves may be but I'm still reluctant to pay another possibly hefty price tag for somehting that may not do the job. Over the years I shudder to think how much I'v already spent on gloves that fail to do 'what it says' etc..
Maybe I just have a weird form of Raynaud's, but at least now that I'm retired I can be more choosey about the weather conditons that I go out in - ! :laugh:
 
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