Deep South Divers
Contributor
That's one heck of a testimonial right there.
...And I use mine for scraping barnacles and oysters... And cutting pilings with a hydraulic chainsaw. I've even cut steel I-beams with mine, using a hydraulic rip saw (think SawZall underwater).
I've had a leak once, when a sharp oyster part got caught between the outer ring and the stretched part of the glove... But I had JUST loaded that set on the rings, so I may have actually damaged it during a heavy-handed install. Not sure. I DID see a piece of an oyster in there when I unloaded the gloves from the rings, but there were lots of oyster pieces everywhere in both gloves and only one hole.
Truth be told, they're tough as nails... Even better than the 660s, and that's saying a lot; but then, there's all that warmth and dexterity and tactile feel and flexibility too. I'll never go back to a PVC glove after this.
I have so much confidence in the 720s that I have cut my wrist seals out completely so that my suits are that much easier to don and doff. The seals weren't doing me any good anyway - all wrist seals leak on my big tendons... Yes, even the silicone ones.
...So my entire dive is bet on a set of drygloves staying dry. I'm not stupid - I always have a spare set, just in case, already loaded up... But I have yet to use them, and I probably have 300 or 400 dives on the 720s - in a really, really tough environment that includes a ton of hurricane cleanup and salvage.
They're like buying a Ferrari... That rides like a Cadillac... And seats like a Suburban. It's the best of all worlds, for sure.
...And at an average of what - $10 with shipping - they beat out the PVC-only DUI ZipGloves by like 96%. (ZipGloves are $180).
...But I've said enough. I know I sound like a salesman - and truly, the only drygloves that affect me are my own. Feel free to do whatever for your own setup. I did, and am really happy with the results.
...And I use mine for scraping barnacles and oysters... And cutting pilings with a hydraulic chainsaw. I've even cut steel I-beams with mine, using a hydraulic rip saw (think SawZall underwater).
I've had a leak once, when a sharp oyster part got caught between the outer ring and the stretched part of the glove... But I had JUST loaded that set on the rings, so I may have actually damaged it during a heavy-handed install. Not sure. I DID see a piece of an oyster in there when I unloaded the gloves from the rings, but there were lots of oyster pieces everywhere in both gloves and only one hole.
Truth be told, they're tough as nails... Even better than the 660s, and that's saying a lot; but then, there's all that warmth and dexterity and tactile feel and flexibility too. I'll never go back to a PVC glove after this.
I have so much confidence in the 720s that I have cut my wrist seals out completely so that my suits are that much easier to don and doff. The seals weren't doing me any good anyway - all wrist seals leak on my big tendons... Yes, even the silicone ones.
...So my entire dive is bet on a set of drygloves staying dry. I'm not stupid - I always have a spare set, just in case, already loaded up... But I have yet to use them, and I probably have 300 or 400 dives on the 720s - in a really, really tough environment that includes a ton of hurricane cleanup and salvage.
They're like buying a Ferrari... That rides like a Cadillac... And seats like a Suburban. It's the best of all worlds, for sure.
...And at an average of what - $10 with shipping - they beat out the PVC-only DUI ZipGloves by like 96%. (ZipGloves are $180).
...But I've said enough. I know I sound like a salesman - and truly, the only drygloves that affect me are my own. Feel free to do whatever for your own setup. I did, and am really happy with the results.