Welding gloves

/ Welding gloves #1  

gnaws628

New member
Joined
Jan 18, 2010
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14
Location
NE Oklahoma
I am looking to buy a pair of welding gloves for MIG welding and Plasma cutting and not sure which are the best. I know some of them are so thick and stiff they are hard to work with and after they get hot they get even worse. Please reply with any suggestions you have. Thanks
 
/ Welding gloves #2  
lotsa option on welding gloves.

I prefer a soft lined long gauntlet cuff.

tractor supply sells them.. harbor freight even.. welding supply shops.

my sugestion... go stick yer hand in any of those that you got locally.. see what feels best.. then buy them.

some places have a few premium types.. and some basics.. and even some multi packs.

I like to keep a pack of the generic multi pcks around. IE.. HF 3 par for like 10$.. good for handling hot metal after torching...etc.

i have a nice brown soft set for torching.. has to be supple to move the valves and such.

I don't mig.. just stick.. so any old piece of cowhide works for that.. ;)

get a good apron.. and show protection or boots... :)

sparks can find their way into tennis shoes.. :)
 
/ Welding gloves #3  
Wouldn't over think the whole glove thing. The ones from Home Depot work fine, or Lowes. You're not going to be stringing beads together here. All you need is to be able to squeeze the trigger and not burn your hands/arms.
 
/ Welding gloves #4  
I prefer tillman tig welding gloves.
they are soft goatskin gloves with lots flexibility and feel.
nice for picking up parts etc. and they have the heavy gauntlets

TILLMAN TRUEFIT MECHANICS WORK GLOVES 1470L STIHL CHAINSAW LARGE GOATSKIN | eBay

you can pick them up on ebay cheaper than shops usually or try online retailers.
find the size that fits you and look them up online.
everyone has their own opinion and i like the feel you can get with goatskin and the ability to pick up items easily.
tom
 
/ Welding gloves #5  
I had a bad experience with a pair of welding gloves from Harbor Freight. They were bundled with a welding apron. There was so much dye still left in the leather that they stained anything they touched as soon as they got wet. Even sweaty hands would make the dye rub off on my hands and clothes. YMMV!

I've heard very good things about Tillman gloves. See if you have a place nearby where you can try a few on. Remember, properly sized gloves are equally important as the material that is used. Good luck!
 
/ Welding gloves #6  
I don't put a lot of thought into welding gloves, I'm easy, if my hands fit I'll wear them. Only thing I can suggest is, I worked for a company years ago that bought us Black Stallion welding gloves. The key word here being BLACK! We were all welding 400 + amps running Innershield! Can you imagine the heat 400 + amps puts out? Then have to wear BLACK gloves!:duh:
 
/ Welding gloves #7  
I am a hobbyist welder at best...
I tend to buy the cheapest gloves that I can find...
Several weeks ago I was surprised to find a pair at a lower price at Lowes than Northern Tool...
They were on sale for around $5...
No better welder than I am they are fine...
And the comments on the apron, shirt, and shoe protection are correct...
I know from experience...
 
/ Welding gloves #8  
Tillman gloves are the top of the line welding gloves. The Tillman glove also seem to not get hard as quick as other brands when handling hot metal. They offer styles for TIG (thin, very flexible, able to pick up a nickel from a flat surface) MIG (more heat shielding but still a bit flexible) Stick Welding (heavy leather and lots of liner for better handling of hot materials, sewn with Kevlar threat so sparks dont burn the threads).They even make a 3 finger mitt that is pretty good for high temp work.
Even with a particular brand, each glove has a unique fit so I like to try them on to make sure there is no uncomfortable bulges between the fingers etc. A good glove will cost $15-30 depending on the type but they will last a hobbiest many years compared to the $5 that have cotton threads in the seams that wear out rather quickly.
A glove needs to fit snuggly but not to tight that you cant remove it quickly if needed. I always preferred the pigskin or deerskin for TIG welding and for light duty welding around my shop that is all that I wear. I am not running 250 amps or higher welding so I dont need the super thick insulation that a professional stick welder would want.
 
/ Welding gloves #9  
...I couldn't disagree more w/ the gentlemen who suggest
you shouldn't over think gloves. True, I get accused
a lot on this board for "Over Thinking" (makes me laugh actually)
but usually my ways work VERY well...not always, but usually...

Maybe I have graduated to a professional welder?
Doubt it...but this set up is soooooooooooo nice!

I found that trying different gloves was a God send and now
I run for my elbow length gloves, AND, I accessorize each
glove with a back-of-hand/knuckle protecting heat reflective pad!

The right protection make all the difference in the world.

Here are the heat reflectors I have been running;

BX-BP-wl.jpg


Here are the gloves I run, there awesome! LOVEM!

1878-bb.jpg
 
/ Welding gloves #10  
People focus on different things. You can buy very expensive driving gloves if you choose but do they make you a better driver? Expensive welding gloves make no sense economically and have limited practicality. It's a poor return on investment. Perhaps you'll get bragging rights, but for many, welding gloves are the means to an end and no more. Sorry Artisan, but that's what great about the Internet, right? All kinds of opinions, all in the same place. If you go around buying the best of everything, you'll end up owning very little unless you're rich but then you would hire someone else to do things for you.
 
/ Welding gloves #12  
For the guys who weld maybe 1/2 hour a month, I suppose anything will work for them. I can recall (still remember) the days when I welded for a living and back then buying a cheap pair of gloves just meant that you would be buying another pair fairly quickly. I found that paying for a premium glove like Tillman would more than pay for itself in lasting durability and not to mention much more comfortable. I have a toolbox full of gloves that I have been supplied with on jobs where I did inspection of welding tests (got a few extra pairs at the time) and mostly I wear a pair of Tillman Tig gloves. I had purchased a pair of no name brand from Atwoods low cost at about $10 but the threads burned out in just a few times of use. I have been using the Tillmans for several months and they are dirty but still like new from heat and sparks damage. They dont insulate from hot materials too well since they have no liner, so you have to look at hot stuff pretty quickly if you pick some hot metal up but they are great for welding and cutting or brazing.
 
/ Welding gloves #13  
When tig welding, 99 times out of 100 I'll grab the Ove gloves. But I do own a pair of Tillmans.
 

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/ Welding gloves #14  
I have a dog that just loves my leather gloves. She will lay around outside the shop just waiting for me to lay my gloves down. I can just about guarantee if I am welding something, and leave the area for even a minute, she will go inside the shop and sneak off with my left handed glove everytime. When I go back to welding, I cant find the glove or the dog. For this reason, I buy whatever welding glove happens to be on sale at the time. I am finding out that for tig welding, lighter gloves are easier to work with, and clean, grease/dirt free gloves are a must for aluminum.
 
/ Welding gloves #15  
Please read I was sure to use words like "gentleman".
I provided an opinion. Nothing more. Those gloves
MSRP for 29 dollars, IRL maybe 22 or so, I find
that "cheap" for what you get...

It's all good...
 
/ Welding gloves #16  
I do not weld much but I have discovered two things that make it more enjoyable and productive: an auto-darkening helmet and a decent pair of gloves. I found that TS has the Hobart pack that contains 2 pair of heavy welding gloves and 1 pair of decent work gloves that velcro at the wrist. The pack of three cost $20 bucks. I have found that deal hard to beat...
 
/ Welding gloves #19  
As an hobby welding and quite often to lazy or forgetfull to remove the welding gloves while grinding for the next dob. I will end up with a nice grind wheel cut - only with new expensive gloves - I seem to be carefull with the cheap gloves. I usually have more cheap gloves around than expensive gloves.
 
/ Welding gloves #20  
gnaws628 said:
I am looking to buy a pair of welding gloves for MIG welding and Plasma cutting and not sure which are the best.
I can't say what's best. But what I like for mig and plasma is the gloves from COSTCO that cost about $20. for three pair. But you have to be careful not to let them get too hot as they are stitched with nylon thread and the seams will open up.
For stick welding I am using the Harbor fright welding gloves.
 
 
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