Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
 
Old 04 February 2016, 18:04   #21
Member
 
Maximus's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Wild West
Boat name: No Boat
Make: No Boat
Length: under 3m
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 5,304
Send a message via AIM to Maximus
If it's really Parkie...you'll not beat the chemical hand warmers placed inside you're gloves.
I've had tried loads of Glove Types/Brands over years,best solution I've found is to take at least a couple of pairs!!
If it cuts up rough and or rains on longish passage ...being able to change into a dry pair or two will help..A lot!

Keep you're Head Hands and feet warm as poss...(Ghecko worn with a thin technical Balaclava,also,with a neck warmer is best solution I've found)
Quality Footwear ( I use Musto HPX warm but a bit short IMO) and decent if poss Murano socks ..(..foot warmers work too) and try to keep Hands warm ...BEFORE they get cold..AND ALL as DRY as possible,to lower wind chill.
Best I've found but always looking to improve things!
__________________
A clever Man learns by his mistakes..
A Wise Man learns by other people's!

The Road to HELL ..is Paved with "Good inventions!"
Maximus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 18:06   #22
Member
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Glasgow
Length: no boat
Join Date: Jul 2008
Posts: 330
Has anyone tried heated gloves/mitts?
__________________
Siochair is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 18:17   #23
Member
 
mick's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Wakefield
Boat name: Bouncer
Make: Redbay Stormforce
Length: 6m +
Engine: 2x Honda 100 Hp
MMSI: 235025718
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 4,175
Click image for larger version

Name:	ImageUploadedByRIB Net1454613336.470918.jpg
Views:	241
Size:	76.7 KB
ID:	110636
Warm as toast except for Andy with no gloves 🤔 gave him some sealskins and he was still frozen
__________________
mick is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 18:41   #24
Administrator
 
John Kennett's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Brighton
Length: 3m +
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 7,106
Heavy duty rubber gloves like fishermen wear, Showa 660 for instance.

About a fiver a pair, easy to put on and take off, waterproof and wind proof. They are cotton lined, and you can add thin thermal gloves underneath if it's really cold.
__________________
John Kennett is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 19:05   #25
Member
 
jambo's Avatar
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Girvan & Tayvallich
Boat name: Breawatch
Make: Ribcraft
Length: 5m +
Engine: Mercury 150 F/stroke
MMSI: ex directory!!
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 6,203
RIBase
Quote:
Originally Posted by mick View Post
Attachment 110636
Warm as toast except for Andy with no gloves 🤔 gave him some sealskins and he was still frozen
And what kind of gloves have you on in the pic Mick?
__________________
jambo
'Carpe Diem'
Member of the ebay Blue RIB cover club
Member of SABS ( Scottish West Division)
jambo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 19:18   #26
RIBnet Supporter
 
willk's Avatar
 
Country: Ireland
Length: 4m +
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 14,685
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Kennett View Post
Heavy duty rubber gloves like fishermen wear, Showa 660 for instance.

About a fiver a pair, easy to put on and take off, waterproof and wind proof. They are cotton lined, and you can add thin thermal gloves underneath if it's really cold.
Funny you should say that Boss, 'cos I was thinking about an old fishing friend who swore by woollen gloves with rubber gloves over the top.

That said, he also used to say: "there's only one day a year when it's cold enough to wear gloves - and it's not today"
__________________
I'm sorry, but there IS no Mars Bar.
willk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 19:20   #27
Member
 
mick's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Wakefield
Boat name: Bouncer
Make: Redbay Stormforce
Length: 6m +
Engine: 2x Honda 100 Hp
MMSI: 235025718
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 4,175
Quote:
Originally Posted by jambo View Post
And what kind of gloves have you on in the pic Mick?

Cheap ski gloves fine for dry weather
__________________
mick is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 20:07   #28
Member
 
ppenman's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Wickford, Essex
Boat name: Wanderer
Make: Ribeye, Zodiac FR
Length: 7m +
Engine: Yamaha F300, 25 2S
MMSI: 235095667
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 219
Waterproof ski gloves with thinsulate.
__________________
ppenman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 20:47   #29
RIBnet admin team
 
Poly's Avatar
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Boat name: imposter
Make: FunYak
Length: 3m +
Engine: Tohatsu 30HP
MMSI: 235089819
Join Date: Sep 2005
Posts: 11,622
Personally I'm a big fan of some neoprene diving gloves I got (I think from Lidl or Aldi but there are many similar ones around). I've never been cold with them on even holding my s/steel steering wheel on days with ice and snow on the ground. The downside is they offer very little dexterity.

I have seal skins I use on the bike and they work well, but I wouldn't put my hand in the sea with them on and expect to remain warm.

My son uses some really thin (1mm?) neoprene gloves for kayaking where his hands are constantly wet and thinks they are great, I've noticed some places selling fishing ones similar to this recently with a couple of fingers that can become "fingerless" for tying knots etc.
__________________
Poly is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 21:49   #30
Member
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Inverkip / Angola
Boat name: Mach a Seo
Make: Princess
Length: 10m +
Engine: diesel
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 71
Back in my diving days when topside in winter i used Arco coldroom gloves, wool lined waterproof outer, warm as toast an 100% windproof. I dived all year round and mostly way out west of scotland.
I remember being under the mull of kintyre lighthouse in december in a dry suit, large thermAl high vis jacket, two hats and a pair of the aforementioned gloves.
No problem surface air temp -5!
__________________
I must go down to the sea again to the lonely sea and the sky
All I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by
the wheels kick and the winds song and the white sails shaking
a grey mist on the seas face and grey dawn breaking
Roger Barr is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04 February 2016, 22:17   #31
Member
 
kerny's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Ashton-under-Lyne Lancs
Boat name: IMOGEN
Make: Air-Craft 5.4
Length: 5m +
Engine: Suzuki df70a
MMSI: 235087492
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 7,078
RIBase
Send a message via Skype™ to kerny
Decathlon do so reasonably priced neoprene gloves so worth a look. For open boating I think that neoprene is the only answer.
__________________
Member of S.A.B.S. (Lancashire Division)
kerny is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 06:06   #32
Member
 
Deekus's Avatar
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Wirral
Boat name: Tigger
Make: Osprey Vipermax
Length: 5m +
Engine: Suzuki DF140
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 320
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chris Caton View Post
good tip A1an, but no good for Deekus, he's toooooooo tight to turn his heater on, drives a beamer
Mr. C
Let me describe my ungloved hand. It has a raised clenched fist with middle finger pointing skywards 😜
__________________
Deekus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 07:17   #33
Member
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Retford
Boat name: Spy-sea-one
Make: Excel 435
Length: 4m +
Engine: Suzuki Outboard/25/4
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 7,454
RIBase
having dived commercially for years cold hands part of the norm look at the northern diver web site for titanium lined neoprene gloves they reflect the heat back if you put a pair of surgical gloves on too much warmer. i also use fur lined rubber gloves for the boat you can buy them with latex seals to keep water tight, the secret is layers to trap air so the sking stuff very good with the down type material too.
once the hands are cold tough you need to warm up chemical hand warmers are good especially the reusable ones where you boil them up to reactivate plus charcoal hand warmer they last a long time.if using neaprene take a flask of hot water rinse them and put straight on the layer of water stays warm. lastly the tail tale off the engine at tick over can be a lot warmer than ambiant tempratures just to get the circulation going again in the extrematies.

cheers
__________________
jeffstevens763@g is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 09:55   #34
Member
 
Last Tango's Avatar
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Denny
Boat name: Highland Bluewater
Length: 6m +
Join Date: Mar 2013
Posts: 1,647
Quote:
Originally Posted by Last Tango View Post
Pair of "Extremes" from Lomo (Glasgow)

Sorry "senior moment"........Tri X. (on their web site £17)
__________________
Last Tango is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 10:36   #35
Member
 
jambo's Avatar
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Girvan & Tayvallich
Boat name: Breawatch
Make: Ribcraft
Length: 5m +
Engine: Mercury 150 F/stroke
MMSI: ex directory!!
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 6,203
RIBase
Quote:
Originally Posted by Last Tango View Post
Sorry "senior moment"........Tri X. (on their web site £17)

I was just about to pm you as I could not see extreme on the site👍


Sent from my iPhone using RIB Net
__________________
jambo
'Carpe Diem'
Member of the ebay Blue RIB cover club
Member of SABS ( Scottish West Division)
jambo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 14:02   #36
Member
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Retford
Boat name: Spy-sea-one
Make: Excel 435
Length: 4m +
Engine: Suzuki Outboard/25/4
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 7,454
RIBase
these are what i use from seaskin £30.64
Attached Images
 
__________________
jeffstevens763@g is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05 February 2016, 17:19   #37
Member
 
Country: UK - Scotland
Length: 5m +
Join Date: May 2013
Posts: 184
Try Endura Strike waterproof mountain bike gloves. I wear them all winter on wet windy cold rides both commuting and off-road. I'm usually 60mins each way on a commute and longer off-road on days when it's too bad to take the rib out.

I've tried neoprene gloves and ski gloves and these win (ahem) hands down

http://www.edinburghbicycle.com/prod...terproof-glove
__________________
Chunk is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08 February 2016, 09:47   #38
Member
 
Country: UK - England
Town: Retford
Boat name: Spy-sea-one
Make: Excel 435
Length: 4m +
Engine: Suzuki Outboard/25/4
Join Date: Oct 2011
Posts: 7,454
RIBase
outdoor GB have a sale on sealskinz up to 45%.

cheers
__________________
jeffstevens763@g is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 February 2016, 23:59   #39
Member
 
Daibheid's Avatar
 
Country: Ireland
Town: Cork
Boat name: Cúr na dDonnta
Make: Excalibur + Zapcat
Length: 6m +
Engine: Merc120TDI,Tohatsu50
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 321
Ski or motorcycle gloves tend to be the gauntlet type which will funnel rain off your sleeves into the gloves so not much use. Neoprene gloves are great most of the time but if you're out for hours in continuos cold rain eg SAR work your hands will suffer. Showers are ok but continuos rain just takes the heat out of the gloves and your hands . Maybe a pair of rubber gloves over the neoprene might do the trick but haven't tried it yet. As someone else said if your hands are cold before putting them on your hands will never warm up in neoprene gloves.
__________________
Daibheid is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 11 February 2016, 19:18   #40
Member
 
Country: UK - England
Town: N. Devon
Boat name: (Not Another) Nutkin
Make: Highfield
Length: 6m +
Engine: Outboard, Honda 135
MMSI: 232036183
Join Date: Dec 2008
Posts: 2,020
RIBase
Beaver or decathalon dive gloves, with a pair of military over gloves over the top (keeps all the wind off) if really cold.

British Army Issue MK IV Olive Leather palmed Arctic DPM Mittens - Surplus and Outdoors
__________________
Andy

Bude Dive Club - www.budediveclub.co.uk
GAFIRS - www.gafirs.org.uk
treerat is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off




All times are GMT. The time now is 04:41.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.