Deliver to Kenya
IFor best experience Get the App
Full description not available
M**D
100% waterproof.Warm.
100% waterproof and warm.Touch screen surface could be better.
D**H
Go up a size and you are fine! But overall, well-built motorcycle gloves for under $30
The Mootoo Carbon Fiber Motorcycle Waterproof Protective Gloves work very well and are not expensive.Featuring fingertips (note: not all fingers, just the index finger on both gloves) that allow for working with touch screen devices, a special ergonomic carbon fiber shell, snug but not too constricting and warms your hands and breathes well.As for the 100% waterproof, I submerged my hands in a sink full of water and guess what, my hands did not get wet at all.The only thing I do recommend is going up a size. I wear size large, and I have to wear size XL for these gloves for it to feel just right.But overall, I love the durability, breathability of these gloves. Not too constricting or too tight if you go up a size and definitely worth it!Overall, a well-built pair of motorcycle gloves for under $30!
S**M
Lightweight and good fit. Perhaps a little tighter than one might expect.
I have been riding motorcycles for 50+ years. As one might expect, I have used up several pair of motorcycle gloves. I have also durfed one into the asphalt due to a deer collision, while not wearing gloves, a stupid thing to do. My doctor was amazed at my healing ability and the rate I was able to regrow the skin on the back of both my hands. In the winter you can't tell, but in the summer, scar tissue doesn't tan. My hands look a bit fuggly. If I had been wearing these gloves I would have suffered no injury in that accident. They would have saved a lot of skin. While these gloves will not protect as well as full leather racing gloves, they are certainly good for one decent crash. Since I have only had 2 pavement contact accidents in over 50 years, and the first one I was wearing proper leather gloves that survived with a little scuffing, but leather is heavy, bulky stiff and cold. These are thin, flexible, and warm. I like them a lot. I hope to never use their abrasion protective features. I am getting to old for pavement impingement antics.As a side note, the gauntlets are a little shorter and smaller diameter than some gloves I own. If your riding jacket does not have long tight fitting sleeves at the wrist you may not get a good weather seal. Some of my fabric riding jackets have bulky sleeve closures that are a bit of a pain to get tucked into these gloves. My leather jackets fit just fine.cheers! be safe.
H**E
Fairly warm gloves, competitively built and priced
I have a small collection of motorcycling gloves, particularly gloves for winter/low temperature riding. These MooToo gloves are standard rate in my experience and perspective.I have some Leather gloves lined with Thinsulate material, and I have some "Alloy Steel" gloves from ILM that I feel are comparable to these. I'll compare them in a number of categories:Fit: All three are bulky, as expected. But for my hands, the leather Thinsulate gloves fit best. They slide right on to my hands, but I don't think they'd come off should I go down. I haven't tested any of my gear in that regard, thankfully, and I hope I never do. The ILM Alloy Steels and these MooToo gloves are almost identical in fit, the fingers are a tad too long, making it tricky to use some controls on my motorcycle such as the turn signals and horn. Also, putting the second glove on when you have the first glove on one hand is a bit tricky with these MooToo's and the ILM's.Durability: Yep, I said I haven't gone down in my new gear yet, but I still have observations in this regard. I actually feel that these gloves are the most durable of the three I'm writing about. These MooToo gloves really feel like beefed up motorcycling gloves. The ILM gloves, while nearly identical to these MooToos, feel like standard snow gloves when you touch the outer fabric, on the top and sides of the hand. As I've had rocks strike my knuckles on rides before, I appreciate these MooToos and the ILM's having hard shells over the knuckles. The leather Thinsulate gloves do not have said shells, which makes me a bit uneasy if I get stuck following traffic, which of course is often!Feel and comfort: Again, the Thinsulate gloves win this one. They're VERY comfortable, and they do the best job at keeping my hands warm on rides. Only my fingertips will get cold on extensive rides or in particularly cold places. These MooToo gloves are second, they warm my hands all the way up to the distal joints of my fingers (a distal joint is basically the third joint of a finger, the joint close to the fingernail). The ILM's will warm my hands' palms and tops to the point of sweating, but my fingers will be cold.For those of you wanting numbers, here's some temperatures I've ridden at with this gloves. I'll specify the ambient temperature, since I ride in and out of towns, highways, and freeways and to try and specify temperatures with wind chill factored in will take too long for me to write and longer for you to read. Readings are in units of Fahrenheit.The Thinsulate gloves have seen the coldest temps, the lowest being approximately 25 degrees. My fingertips got VERY cold, but the rest of my hands were fine.The ILM gloves have been ridden in temps as low as 30 degrees. I was miserable, my palms were sweaty but my fingers were numb to movement but ached from the cold.I went for a ride this morning wearing these MooToo gloves, I'd say the lowest temperature I experienced was about 34 degrees. My fingers were uncomfortably cold but I kept riding without issue.So, in final thoughts: If you want the warmest gloves without going electrically heated, look for the leather Thinsulate gloves. If you want more road-oriented riding protection, I'd suggest these MooToo gloves. If you're riding in areas where the temperature might dramatically fluctuate, go for the ILM Alloy Steels or these MooToo's.
M**S
Not waterproof, too small, knuckles are offset
I was excited to get these gloves, unfortunately, they don't deliver what they promise. We had a good snow yesterday, and today I wiped some off the windshield with the gloves on. Water absorbed easily and my hands got damp and cold pretty fast. They are also VERY tight. The "special fibers" do nothing because I have to take the gloves off to use my cell phone or iPad, etc. The knuckle covers are hard but they are offset a little so that it doesn't fully cover my index fingers knuckle. That may also be because these are too small. I see that they also sell a xxl glove so this might have been better for me, because making a fist takes effort and I can feel it stretching the glove a lot, making it very uncomfortable.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
4 days ago