Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm?

Posted by: Equipped4Chicago

Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 02:02 AM

I've had them all (I think)

Leather with FUR. THERMOSLATE (something like that) SKI Gloves

Sorry..none of them seem to keep my hands warm.

What gloves really work in your opionion? If you are going to be outside for 2 hours, which will keep your hands warm?

I red mittens are the best. Perhaps links to websites where I can purchase would also be nice
Posted by: AROTC

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 02:31 AM

I inherited a pair of chopper mittens from my dad. They're heavy and thick but they're warm and durable as anything, bit of a trade off. They consist of a heavy wool mitten with a leather shell. Here's a website I found that carries them for $48 dollars you can get both the liners and the leather shells, not bad compared to something similar made of goretex and thinsulate. http://www.berlingloveco.com/admitdeercho.html They're just about exactly what I have. They're warm, but they're also pretty clumsy.
Posted by: Russ

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 02:48 AM

REI Backcountry Gloves work fine for me. But then I put polypro glove liners with leather work gloves and I'm okay.
Posted by: CJK

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 02:56 AM

Mittens will always be warmer than gloves.....your fingers have the warmth of the other fingers to help keep things warm.....gloves isolate each finger and results in needing more to keep each one as warm. That said....I have an old pair of the 'military' gloves. They are black leather and the liners are the 'wool' liners. I've never had them fail me. Just remember to 'sno seal' them to keep the water out.
Posted by: Frankie

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 02:58 AM

I would condider Raber, they make the Canadian military mitts with cheek warmers.

You can buy cheap glove liners to wick moisture away and cut the thumb and finger tips of one for delicate manipulating.

Another idea I want to try and is worth condidering is trigger mitts or "shooting mitts", an hybrid between gloves and mitts:



I tried contacting them to know if they have large size Newfoundland wool trigger mitts but I got no answer yet:

Posted by: KG2V

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 03:57 AM

OK - Leather gloves/mittens - thermax insulation - with seperate glove liners

That said - your hands are cold? Put on a hat...
Posted by: haertig

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 04:28 AM

Quote:
Sorry..none of them seem to keep my hands warm.
You and me both! My hands become painful and useless after only a short time out in the cold. I have not really been satisfied with any of my glove purchases when it comes to truly cold weather. Could be poor circulation in my hands.

I'll watch and see what this thread turns up for recommendations though!
Posted by: Alan_Romania

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 05:35 AM

In my learned opnion, you cannot go wrong with Outdoor Research's gloves. For a number of reasons I choose to replace my entire winter gloves with OR gear. They are durable, warm, lightweight and confortable. There are a number or good glove makers out there, but OR gets my money.

Like other's have said... if you feet and hands are cold, put on a hat and a vest!
Posted by: infrared

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 04:16 PM

I second the Outdoor Research line-I have two pair of black mittens I purchase cheap from Sportsmansguide-warm as can be-but I always wear liners too.For a less expensive brand but still effective I also use Manzella gloves and have never been let down yet.
Posted by: Be_Prepared

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 06:17 PM

I spent the weekend outside camping in below zero windchill 2 weeks ago, alternating between 2 sets of gloves. When I was working, setting up a tent, cooking, or hanging around the fire, I had some 300 weight polarfleece gloves, they are made by North Face. I think they call them their Denali gloves. They are ok when you're active, but, aren't going to keep those digits warm when you're not doing much to generate heat.

The more sedentary times of the weekend, I was wearing a 2 piece glove made by EMS (Eastern Mountain Sports). They don't make the particular model I have anymore, but, it's one of their technical climbing gloves. They probably have some more updated model, and, this style is also available from many companies. It has a Goretex shell, with leather reinformcements on the palm and finger tips. Inside of the shell it's lined with a thin polyester insulation and light fleece. There is also a liner glove that goes inside. The liner is also some synthetic material that seems to keep my skin dry. Having the liner allows you to pull your hand out of the shell when you need fine dexterity, without exposing raw skin.

Dry is key, with whatever gloves you have. As was mentioned, mittens will also generally keep you warmer, but, I personally find that I just tend to use my fingers too much when I'm outside, so I tend to go for the gloves.

You could also look at hand warmers that can go right into your gloves. If it's really cold, I have small chemical warmers in the palms of my hands inside the gloves. They work for about 6 - 8 hours, some a little longer.

Something to check also is the fit of the clothes you are wearing in general. Your hands will tend to be colder if there are any constriction points leading to them. I've had boys camping with us that had jackets with very tight arm holes, or who had very snug cuffs. You want to make sure that your gloves and jacket seal out the exposed areas, but, if the area around the sleeves is too constricting, it will make your hands colder. Some gloves contribute to the problem by having tight elastics around the wrists.

Another thing that helps keep your hands warm is thermal underwear that has extra long sleeves with holes for your thumb so that your wrist is covered. I don't know if I can describe this, but, when you wear them, the sleeve goes all the way to your knuckles, and your thumb goes through a hole to keep the sleeve from creeping up. They really help keep your hands warmer.

Lastly, if your hands are getting cold, your body is trying to tell you something. As others have mentioned, make sure that your whole clothing system is working to keep you warm, rather than just the gloves. Think shell, fleece, hats, boots, hoods, gaiters, etc. (And keep them all dry, if you start sweating, take off a layer)

Ok, that was a lot more than I intended to type, I must have thought I was talking to the boys in my troop... <img src="/images/graemlins/blush.gif" alt="" />
Posted by: AROTC

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 08:25 PM

Snow seal to keep them dry and since the wool liners are only another 12 dollars get another set of liners so that you can wear one while the other dries.
Posted by: jshannon

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/01/07 09:14 PM

http://www.campmor.com/webapp/wcs/stores...mberId=12500226

Dachstein Wool Mitts
Posted by: benjammin

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/02/07 12:59 AM

The best gloves I could recommend are diver's gloves made with neoprene. They hurt after a while, and since they don't breath, eventually your hands get quite soggy inside them, but they seem to do better for me than anything else. I've used the whole gloves and the ones with some or all of the fingertips removed. The whole gloves are dextrous enough that I can do field work on antenna towers in the middle of winter and not have the arthritis in my hands stove up my fingers. If I take the gloves off to do more intricate work, I have about 3 minutes before I have to use a screwdriver to pry my fingers open with.
Posted by: Menawa

Re: Gloves - Which REALLY keep your hands warm? - 02/02/07 05:36 AM

I agree with everyone's comments that mittens are warmer than gloves. I have several different kinds of mittens from leather, to heavy wool, to insulated gore-tex. Generally I wear the leather for ax or other heavy work, the heavy wool for extreme cold, and the gore-tex for wet. But I wear the same liner for all of them--cheap Wal-Mart acrylic gloves with the plastic gripping dots on the palm face. When I need to do delicate work (such as striking a match), I can slip off the mittens and do it with the grippy liners without freezing my hands.