CABRATS REVIEWS

Work Gloves Reviews

Grip gloves, thermal gloves, cut-resistant gloves and more — rated by the drivers who rely on them every shift.




HOW WE RATE

Review Categories

Every work glove is rated across five key areas that matter most to professional drivers.

Grip

How well they hold ratchet straps, curtain rails, pallet wrap, and ropes. Wet and dry grip performance on different surfaces.

👚

Comfort

How they feel over a full shift. Flexibility, breathability, fit, and whether they cause hand fatigue or sweating.

🌡

Warmth

Insulation quality, wind resistance, and performance in cold Irish winters. Essential for night shift and outdoor loading work.

Dexterity

Can you still do paperwork, use a phone, operate straps, and handle small clips? Thin enough for fine tasks without removing them.

💪

Durability

How long they last before the grip wears out or seams split. Cost per week of actual use compared to cheaper alternatives.





KNOW THE STANDARDS

Glove Safety Ratings Explained

Work gloves in Ireland are rated under EN 388 for mechanical risks. Here’s what the numbers mean and how to read the label.

How to Read EN 388

Every certified work glove carries a shield icon with up to 6 ratings. The pictogram shows performance levels from 0 (lowest) to the maximum for each test:

a
Abrasion Resistance

Levels 0-4. How many cycles the material withstands before wearing through. Level 4 = 8000+ cycles.

b
Cut Resistance (Coup Test)

Levels 0-5. How many cycles a rotating blade needs to cut through. Level 5 = 20+ cycles.

c
Tear Resistance

Levels 0-4. Force required to tear the glove material. Level 4 = 75+ Newtons.

d
Puncture Resistance

Levels 0-4. Force required to puncture with a standard nail. Level 4 = 150+ Newtons.

e
Cut Resistance (TDM/ISO)

Levels A-F. The newer, more accurate cut test. F = highest protection (30+ Newtons).

f
Impact Protection

Pass (P) or Fail. Tested if the glove has impact protection features (knuckle guards, etc.).

What Drivers Actually Need

General Driving Work

Abrasion level 3+, basic cut protection. A standard grip glove like the MaxiFlex or Showa 306 is fine.

Curtainside / Flatbed Work

Good abrasion (level 4) and tear resistance. Straps and curtain rails will shred cheap gloves.

Sheet Metal / Strapping

Cut level C or higher (ISO test). Steel strapping and sharp edges need serious cut protection.

ADR / Chemical Handling

Look for EN 374 (chemical resistance) as well as EN 388. Standard grip gloves are not sufficient for chemical work.



RIGHT GLOVE, RIGHT JOB

Best Gloves By Task

Different tasks need different gloves. Here’s what works best for the most common driving jobs.

🛒 Curtainside Work

Pulling curtains, tensioning straps, handling ratchets. You need excellent grip that doesn’t slip on wet nylon, plus abrasion resistance for curtain rails.

Our picks:

  • Mechanix Wear Original — best all-round grip and dexterity
  • Dirty Rigger Leather Grip — leather palm outlasts synthetic on rough straps

Tip: Avoid smooth rubber palms — they slip on wet curtain rails. Textured grip is essential.

📦 Pallet Handling

Moving pallets, stacking boxes, using pump trucks. Good grip on wood and cardboard, plus enough dexterity to use a scanner or sign paperwork.

Our picks:

  • MaxiFlex Ultimate 42-874 — lightweight, breathable, touchscreen compatible
  • Showa 306 — great grip on cardboard, breathable for all-day wear

Tip: For multi-drop work, you need gloves thin enough to use a handheld scanner without removing them.

Winter Driving

Cold starts, icy trailer connections, frozen load straps. Warmth is the priority but you still need grip and enough feel to connect airlines and suzie cables.

Our picks:

  • Wonder Grip Thermo Plus — warm to -20°C, double latex coating grips in wet and ice
  • Portwest Thermal Grip A140 — budget-friendly, buy in bulk for the winter months

Tip: Keep a spare pair in the cab. Wet gloves in winter are worse than no gloves.

Chemical Handling (ADR)

Handling IBCs, connecting tanker hoses, checking chemical loads. Standard grip gloves are not enough. You need chemical-resistant gloves rated under EN 374.

Our picks:

  • Portwest Cut-Resistant A665 — for physical protection when handling drums and strapping
  • Specialist EN 374 gloves — your employer must provide gloves rated for the specific chemicals you handle

Important: Check your ADR documentation for specific PPE requirements. See our ADR certification guide for full details.



HEAD TO HEAD

Quick Comparison

How do the top-rated work gloves stack up at a glance?

Glove Overall Grip Comfort Warmth Dexterity Durability
Mechanix Wear Original 4.6 4.8 4.7 3.2 4.8 4.3
Wonder Grip Thermo Plus 4.5 4.4 4.3 4.9 3.5 4.2
MaxiFlex Ultimate 42-874 4.5 4.3 4.8 2.5 4.9 4.1
Showa 306 Breathable 4.4 4.3 4.6 3.3 4.4 4.2
Portwest Thermal Grip A140 4.3 4.5 4.0 4.2 3.4 3.5
Dirty Rigger Leather Grip 4.3 4.7 4.1 3.3 3.8 4.7
Uvex Phynomic XG 4.2 4.7 4.2 2.3 4.6 3.5
Portwest Cut-Resistant A665 4.1 4.2 3.5 3.2 3.3 4.8



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