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Michael A. Terrell Michael A. Terrell is offline
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Default Mechanics gloves


Larry Jaques wrote:

On Sun, 31 Mar 2013 08:31:07 -0600, gary wrote:

Anyone suggest mechanics gloves that are thin, VERY durable?

Hate trashing a set when the tip of the index finger wears through.


Not a single brand lasts worth a hoot, from Mechanics, to Mechanix
(nice comfy glove), to Western Safety, or any of the rest of the
imports.

I've easily gone through a gross of gloves and the one style I've
finally adopted is the #90913 latex-dipped knits from HF. They're
thin enough to pick up coins or dropped nails/screws, thick enough to
protect my hands from splinters and sharp objects, and I get about 2
months out of them before a finger or two wear out. At $1.59 a pair,
it works out to 80 cents a month.

I buy lots of different types of gloves there, including the knits
(cold weather wear), sticky fingers (glass handling), roping
(fencing), nitrile (chemicals), poly (food handling), thin/single knit
(wear under thick nitrile), latex (painting), cotton sheeting
(gardening), long thick suede (welding), goatskin (TIG), to string
knits (I'm chainsawing up a downed doug fir and moving the detritus
with these.) None are bright, striped, and -ugly- like the silly
American-made gloves are wont to be nowadays. sheesh

At $5-6 a dozen ($9 for 3pr welding gloves, $6/pr goatskin), I keep
stacks of all types around. I give a pair (usually latex-dipped) to
each worker who works a day with me. Not only do I get more work out
of them that day, they're happy to keep the blisters down and to take
'em home with them for use another day.



You left out your gloves that reach your elbows. ;-)

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