Chainsaw gloves

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When you think about how chaps work, they have enough kevlar fiber in them to jam the sprocket. Will the fingers of a glove hold enough of that to jam a sprocket and still be flexible functional gloves?

sorry about your fingers dude. BTDT, except a table saw took a good bite instead of a chainsaw. Tip of one finger is still numb where it cut a nerve.
 
I think mechanics wear, matco and snap on all make Kevlar reinforced gloves. I had a pair and I really liked them. They were lightly insulated and had hard protection on the top nuckles and extra on the others. After seeing your pictures the cost is no longer a reason to keep me from buying another pair now.
 
I was lucky, it could have been much worse. My glove does look bad, a lot of that was from pulling back out of the saw.
When I pulled my hand away the glove came off and stuck in the clutch cover
 
When you think about how chaps work, they have enough kevlar fiber in them to jam the sprocket. Will the fingers of a glove hold enough of that to jam a sprocket and still be flexible functional gloves?

sorry about your fingers dude. BTDT, except a table saw took a good bite instead of a saw. Tip of one finger is still numb where it cut a nerve.
i got a pair of chaps jammed up in a 460/28" bar about 15yrs. ago. it was my first time using skip chain. that saw earned a whole lot of respect in just a matter of seconds.
 
i bought a kit from husqvarna that had some glove in it and I think they would help if it came down to it, and one day it probably will. I just cut a few cords of fire wood and occasionally drop a tree for someone, but I almost always wear chaps, gloves, and head/face protection. Watched a bunch of videos on youtube of chainsaw mishaps and went out and bought some chainsaw boots as well. you really can't be too careful with a chainsaw in my opinion
 
Not yet...cases ain't in yet :). I don't have a source for replacement left pinky fingers...but I can source those gloves!!!:surprised3: Freaks me out to see that sh*t!!!
 
I'm not trying to be a smart ass here but it looks to me like the gloves are what got caught in the chain and dragged his fingers in.
In most of the machine shops I worked in you did not want to be caught wearing gloves on a drill press cus sooner or later a glove would catch on a spinning drill or a part would catch and spin and catch a glove and this all ends in a bloody mess.
I think he would have better off without gloves, I never use them until gets cold, I dunno maybe chain mail would work.

John









catch on catch on a drill on the catch and start
 
I'm not trying to be a smart ass here but it looks to me like the gloves are what got caught in the chain and dragged his fingers in.
In most of the machine shops I worked in you did not want to be caught wearing gloves on a drill press cus sooner or later a glove would catch on a spinning drill or a part would catch and spin and catch a glove and this all ends in a bloody mess.
I think he would have better off without gloves, I never use them until gets cold, I dunno maybe chain mail would work.

John









catch on catch on a drill on the catch and start
Yes, agreed completely. Just being funny about the saw welding. I don't wear gloves either because I think they are dangerous due to less control. I own a fab and machine company and we are always discussing when too and not too wear gloves.
 
Which chainsaw gloves you guys using these days? The search I did all came up older threads.
It took this for me to finally get a decent pair.
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