JeffG
Contributor
String once bubbled...
People ive spoken to have a few reasons.
Firstly, the air in your suit is often (via a straw) connected to the gloves to precent squeeze. The result is fingers full of air which makes them hard to bend (as early astronauts found out!).
Well, your hands are usually the lowest point, so most of the air is forced out of them anyways. (They only get "filled" with air when the straws fall out and you ascend)
The gloves are not snug (more excess material), but I find the gloves (I have the Skaana gloves) more pliable than wet gloves. So IMO its a wash.String once bubbled...
Another factor is you need to wear gloves underneath the dry gloves in most cases as the air and material alone provides no insulation (just like a membrane dry suit).
This makes them thick and hard to move.
String once bubbled...
Ive heard a few people complain that although cold numb hands where near impossible to use, dry glove hands were just as bad.
As far as comfort goes, I will never give up my dry gloves. (And it does fix the leaks from skinny wrists )