They look pretty good, like I'm lookin' for, thanks Dan. How do they work for you?
They worked well. As I said, I went skeet shooting, and for part of the time, I left the gloves on while I shot, and they allowed me enough feeling that I could feel the resistance from the trigger, and they did not affect my shooting. If you want a set of gloves that keeps you warm and lets you use your fingers some, they are nice.
If I had one pair and only one pair of gloves, these would probably not be them. I would never have just one pair, but if limited, I'd like unlined, heavy rubber gloves, teams up with a few sets of thin wool gloves. When I spent a winter working a dredge, this was the best combination. When your wool gloves got wet, you took them off, put on another pair, and put the rubber ones back over them. Any work with your fingers, like threading a nut, required the rubber to come off, and you could work in the wool alone. The thin wool was not enough when you were out in the cold working for a long time, but for a few minutes, they were okay. The neoprene would not have stood up to that envirinment, but there is not much I could have done with only the wool gloves on, that I could not do in neoprene.