We decided to look into the field of gloves to see exactly where the the gloves touches the road, or in this case, the belt sander. It may look very simple, however the longer a glove lasts on the belt sander the more damage prevention it holds. Do you think you’re as risk-free with inexpensive safety gloves as you are with proper road safety gloves? How about wearing nothing at all? Here is what happened.
Grinding and Winding
As an alternative to messing up a street motorcycle several times wearing gloves on we decided the less dangerous thing to do was to use a sander. But instead of placing our actual hands inside of a glove and positioning it up against the spinning wheel (which we actually thought about before), an orange fruit was decided on as the substitute hand. The orange features a peel quite like skin and we decided that when the glove wore through to the peel, the time is halted. The second the glove hit the sander the timer was started, The clock continued to tick up until the rough surface wore through the glove and hit the the citrus’ peel.
To make certain completeness, we tested both knuckle areas of the gloves plus the palms simply because these are the crucial spots that often times take in the biggest strikes within a crash. The same pressure was placed on each item since the degree of force behind the glove would alter the results.
Bare orange
Seconds to reach the fruit
(AKA, bone): 1.4
MX (lightweight) gloves
Seconds to reach the orange
Palm: 1.5
Knuckles: 0.7
Leather street/race (heavy duty) gloves
Second to reach the orange
Palm: 5.13
Knuckle: 39.6
(Practically all studies were performed 3 times and then averaged.)
Myth Busted
Just as we suspected, the heavier the glove the greater the safety and merely not wearing any in anyway is simply ridiculous. Even though the approach to attaining these numbers isn’t an apples-to-apples comparability of a crash, the ratios can be applied.
As an illustration, the palms of the leather racing glove lasts 3.42 times longer than the MX gloves. Over thrice much longer means leather-based street mitts have considerably far more damage resistance compared to their cheap off-road counterparts. A look at the knuckles shown far more of a disparity as the heavy duty ones lasted 56.5 times longer than the lighter ones, how’s that for some toughness?