Superior S13CXPNT Emerald CX Kevlar/Stainless Steel String Knit Glove with Micropore Grip Nitrile Palm, Work, Cut Resistant, 13 Gauge Thickness, Size 9 (Pack of 1 Pair)



Key features
- •Blend of Kevlar, wire core steel for stellar cut protection
- •Cut and abrasion resistance is twice that of a regular Kevlar glove
- •Micropore nitrile palm coating for better grip in wet/oily conditions
- •High abrasion resistance with great comfort and dexterity
- •2119 grams of cut protection
Superior S13CXPNT Emerald CX Kevlar/Stainless Steel String Knit Glove with Micropore Grip Nitrile Palm, Work, Cut Resistant, 13 Gauge Thickness, Size 9 (Pack of 1 Pair)
List Price: $24.15$21.74DEALYou Save: $2.41 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 24, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.0
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
0%
3★
20%
2★
20%
1★
0%
Not for arborists!! Great for knives tho.
V.✓ Verified Purchase•May 28, 2017
Ordered these and handed them to the crew to try out for tree service trade. Apparently they fall apart quickly, within a day. If they held up better, I could see them being more useful and worth the price, but, alas. They do well to resist cuts from knives tho so, major thumbs up on that part.
Five Stars
Spruceman✓ Verified Purchase•March 9, 2017
Finally a pair which can fit my large hands.
At this point im in my 3rd week in and on a budget so that was a waste for the price I paid
Herrera✓ Verified Purchase•August 24, 2016
It didn't last to what I had expected. The degree of friction from heavy lifting and tossing pallets they lasted me a week before the first few holes started to show. At this point im in my 3rd week in and on a budget so that was a waste for the price I paid. Now to handle these gloves for as long as they can hold up because I still require some form of extra grip or protection. At firs the grip wore down from my main fingers. Index and middle finger. While simultaneously it began to fray from the area between my thumb and index fingers. At first they held up but it was definitely a poor job done at the meeting points. At this point they are practically fingerless gloves. The nitrile is practically gone but still provide something. Aside from all this the string itself actually is very uncomfortable and begis to stab you after a while. I started to get some form of irritation on my fingers and worst of all from wrist caused glove its self . No, I am not allergic to any of the material I can guarantee you that. The gloves obviously are not mean't for use in long period of time. This price definitely was not worth the match up to quality either.
I didn't have my hand in the gloves when I ...
Satisfied buyer, Moody✓ Verified Purchase•January 24, 2016
I didn't have my hand in the gloves when I was testing it, but yeah, cutting brisket or pork butt.. NO worry of a sliced pinky. Work in a slaughter house, can't say. But I'd take these into a knife fight any day of the week... if I was ever in a knife fight. I'd definitely wear them under a pair of Service-able gloves.
Fair abrasion resistance
J. Dutch✓ Verified Purchase•November 10, 2015
I work pallet and boxed freight 40+ hours a week and run through a pair of gloves every other week.
I bought these to see if Kevlar and steel makes a difference....it does, but not much.
Since I spend about this much anyway on a pair of leather gloves, I'll probably try another pair.
2 weeks and these have already begun to tear.
All I do is lift wooden pallets, lift cardboard boxes, and use large rolls of plastic shrink wrap...the abrasion of this work ruins gloves pretty quickly, but upon seeing the hands of my coworkers, I'll continue to invest in gloves to save my flesh.
I think I can get at least a month out of these, so that is double what the same price in leather will get me.
I bought these to see if Kevlar and steel makes a difference....it does, but not much.
Since I spend about this much anyway on a pair of leather gloves, I'll probably try another pair.
2 weeks and these have already begun to tear.
All I do is lift wooden pallets, lift cardboard boxes, and use large rolls of plastic shrink wrap...the abrasion of this work ruins gloves pretty quickly, but upon seeing the hands of my coworkers, I'll continue to invest in gloves to save my flesh.
I think I can get at least a month out of these, so that is double what the same price in leather will get me.
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