Driving glove recommendations.
Discussion
I wouldn't bother unless you have a suede wheel or very very sweaty palms.
But as you want recommendations, I have some OMP gloves from my westy days and I would avoid them unless quality has improved over the last two or three years. I had boots and gloves from the same range and both have had stitching come apart and were generally poorly made.
My wife has similar age and price Sparco kit and it is vastly superior in quality.
But as you want recommendations, I have some OMP gloves from my westy days and I would avoid them unless quality has improved over the last two or three years. I had boots and gloves from the same range and both have had stitching come apart and were generally poorly made.
My wife has similar age and price Sparco kit and it is vastly superior in quality.
AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
Although I dont wear gloves for driving, my hands were bloodyfreezing this morning when out hooning (with the roof off).AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
Sweat destroys a suede wheel very quickly. Gloves increase the life of the wheel. The driving equivalent of a sacrificial anode 
Cactussed said:
I have 2 pairs of dents driving gloves. One string backed, the other leather. Both very nice to wear.
Another vote for Dents here- their factory shop in Warminster has a great selection. My tip- go for a snug fit. My pair have loosened up as they've worn in, and I now wish I'd gone a half size smaller.
rhinochopig said:
AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
Sweat destroys a suede wheel very quickly. Gloves increase the life of the wheel. The driving equivalent of a sacrificial anode 
AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
I remember the first ever Sunday Service at a train station car park somewhere in the depths of Kent. I took the MX-5, it was a freezing cold but gorgeous February morning without a cloud in the sky. I had to drive for 20 minutes with the heater on full blast before the roof was warm enough to be dropped. I was fully wrapped up - thick coat, scarf, woolly hat, but my hands were bloody freezing! They are the business in cold weather on a leather wheel, but if you have a thinner wooden rimmed wheel (I don't like them except on classics) you need them IMHO as they are too slippery.AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
Because when I am driving fast, on bendy roads, I don't move my hands from the wheel - they stay at "quarter to three". This results in a bit of sweat build up between the wheel and my hands, especially as my current car has metal sections in the wheel at those points.Manks said:
AdeTuono said:
Serious question; why would anyone need driving gloves in this day and age? I could understand it years ago before decent in-car heating/ventilation, but why would they be needed nowadays? Genuinely interested; am I missing something?
Because when I am driving fast, on bendy roads, I don't move my hands from the wheel - they stay at "quarter to three". This results in a bit of sweat build up between the wheel and my hands, especially as my current car has metal sections in the wheel at those points.http://www.meliorclinics.co.uk/promotions/hyperhid...
They do hands/palms.
Dunhill:
http://www.jonathantrumbull.co.uk/gloves-c36/acces...
Reassuringly expensive - now you need an Iso Grifo to go with them...
http://www.jonathantrumbull.co.uk/gloves-c36/acces...
Reassuringly expensive - now you need an Iso Grifo to go with them...
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