Headed gloves

I have these. I see they're currently unavailable but I expect there are others. Toasty warm with 3 heat ranges and decent battery life.

Roughly ZERO dexterity when wearing them tho. Holding on to snowblower controls is about the limit. Maybe running a snow shovel.
 
I posted about this a few weeks ago. I'd like to see them in a store to see if they fit my needs but all I see are online and the testimonials are always positive.
 
What is a good headed gloves. I want one with rechargable battery
Around here we have a sporting goods chain store named Dunham's. They have a good selection of heated gloves at reasonable prices. I bought a pair for $25 but they use AAA batteries. The set did include the batteries tho'. They sell rechargables too. I had previously ordered a set from Amazon and they were too small. It seems XL wasn't really XL. I will not buy gloves anymore without trying them on....yymv
 
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What is a good headed gloves. I want one with rechargable battery
I don't know about heated gloves, but when I was a teen there was a "Jone-e pocket hand warmer" thing that had a wick type combustion area and used lighter fluid. To use it you remove the top cover, the combustion chamber, fill the tank, put the combustion chamber back on, light it and wait till the flames go out and the chamber is glowing, put the cap on and away you went. It fit in your pocket or the palm of your hand, ran for a couple of hours and worked really well at warming your hands when they got cold. Don't know if they still make something like that or not.
 
I don't know about heated gloves, but when I was a teen there was a "Jone-e pocket hand warmer" thing that had a wick type combustion area and used lighter fluid. To use it you remove the top cover, the combustion chamber, fill the tank, put the combustion chamber back on, light it and wait till the flames go out and the chamber is glowing, put the cap on and away you went. It fit in your pocket or the palm of your hand, ran for a couple of hours and worked really well at warming your hands when they got cold. Don't know if they still make something like that or not.
I have one of those somewhere that belonged to my grandpa. Have just seen them recently at a local hardware store.
 
I don't know about heated gloves, but when I was a teen there was a "Jone-e pocket hand warmer" thing that had a wick type combustion area and used lighter fluid. To use it you remove the top cover, the combustion chamber, fill the tank, put the combustion chamber back on, light it and wait till the flames go out and the chamber is glowing, put the cap on and away you went. It fit in your pocket or the palm of your hand, ran for a couple of hours and worked really well at warming your hands when they got cold. Don't know if they still make something like that or not.
I don't think they make anything that actually burns fuel but they make battery heated ones that are supposed to last a long time. Amazon has many, both rechargeable and not. They also have heated glove liners that you can use inside your own glovees.
 
Everyone up north just switches to chopper mitts when it gets much below zero, when I did carpenter work, I drove lots of 6 penny nails wearing chopper mitts, by spring the right one was full of holes! (I'm left-handed)
 
I don't know about heated gloves, but when I was a teen there was a "Jone-e pocket hand warmer" thing that had a wick type combustion area and used lighter fluid. To use it you remove the top cover, the combustion chamber, fill the tank, put the combustion chamber back on, light it and wait till the flames go out and the chamber is glowing, put the cap on and away you went. It fit in your pocket or the palm of your hand, ran for a couple of hours and worked really well at warming your hands when they got cold. Don't know if they still make something like that or not.
We had those. Came in two sizes. Probably still have one or two somewhere at the Farm. Those chemical hand warmer packets you can buy at Walmart work pretty good for half a day or so.
 
I have one of those somewhere that belonged to my grandpa. Have just seen them recently at a local hardware store.
REALLY!!!!! Well worth your time. They work great!
When plowing snow I stop and put my lined leather gloves in the microwave for about 15 seconds. When I put them back on they warm my fingers right up.
That is an interesting and as you said functional solution. Neat idea.
 
We had those. Came in two sizes. Probably still have one or two somewhere at the Farm. Those chemical hand warmer packets you can buy at Walmart work pretty good for half a day or so.
Well those worked great till they ran out of fuel but lasted for several hours.
 
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