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Cabela's GORE-TEX® Pinnacle 2-in-1 Gloves at Cabela's
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Cabela's GORE-TEX® Pinnacle 2-in-1 Gloves
Regular Price: 
$84.99
Item: IK-982549
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Cabela's GORE-TEX® Pinnacle 2-in-1 Gloves

  • Waterproof, breathable GORE-TEX
  • Thinsulate Supreme Insulation
  • Innovative, dual-chamber design
Even the near-arctic cold and freezing precipitation can't break through the superior warmth and waterproof protection of our Pinnacle Series. Waterproof, breathable GORE-TEX membranes block heat-robbing moisture. Lightweight, Thinsulate™ Supreme Insulation has even more loft than the original for incredible warmth. Choose dexterity or warmth with this 2-in-1 gloves' innovative, dual-chamber design. Slide your hand in the top chamber for maximum insulation and warmth in bone-chilling weather. Use the palm-side chamber for improved feel and flexibility without exposing your hands to cold, wet conditions. Durable 320-denier nylon shell with 150-gram Thinsulate Supreme insulation in the palms and 300-gram on the backs. Deerskin fingertips and palm. Imported.
Sizes: S-2XL.
Color: Black.
Text Size: AAA
Additional Information
Product Videos
Overall Customer Rating: 
3.5 out of 5
3.5 out of 5
4 out of 6(67%)customers would recommend this product to a friend.
Open Ratings Snapshot
Rating breakdown 6 reviews
5 Stars
2
4 Stars
2
3 Stars
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Product ReviewsReview This Product
Overall Customer Rating: 
2 out of 5
2 out of 5
dealfinder
Location:Cleveland, OH
Would you recommend this product to a friend? No
Warm, but already falling apart
Date:
I bought these at the end of the last season and barely wore them. They stayed in the back of my closet until this year. I've worm them a few times this year, most recently at an outdoor hockey game and the outside edge of the left hand glove is already coming apart. I had higher hopes for these gloves- considering the price. One good thing about them- I was able to sit outside for over an hour in 15 degree windchill weather without my hands being cold. Near the end of the game, my hands were definitely getting cold.
Overall Customer Rating: 
5 out of 5
5 out of 5
XtremeOutdoors
Location:Southern Colorado
Age:36-45
Gender:Male
Would you recommend this product to a friend? Yes
Outstanding Performance
Date:
I've been very impressed with the way these gloves have performed. I purchased them right before Christmas and have used them over the past two months in varying conditions. I've used them on six different ski trips to ski the highest and deepest chutes at Wolf Creek and Telluride. On more than one occasion the temps were well below zero and I've never had cold hands while using them. I'm very pleased and impressed with how the leather palms have held up to the snow and wet conditions I've put them thru thus far. GREAT gloves Cabelas!!
Overall Customer Rating: 
4 out of 5
4 out of 5
Mxtyphoon
Location:Prairie Du Chien, WI
Age:56-65
Gender:Male
Would you recommend this product to a friend? Yes
Nice glove for the price
Date:
Got these for snowmobiling and figured that with the hand warmers that you wouldn't need to put you hand in the more insulated part, but I was wrong. It seems that it's a little too thin by the end of your fingers to do that when it's -35. But they worked good in the outer section, a little baulky and I usually take a XL, but need the 2XL so there not too tight. In the outer section they worked good in those cold temps all weekend long with the hand warmers on high most of the time. It's just nice to be able to switch up the thickness on the palm side with the different compartments. I thought it was a good value.
Overall Customer Rating: 
4 out of 5
4 out of 5
peacefulpaul
Location:PA
Age:65 and over
Gender:Male
Would you recommend this product to a friend? Yes
The right purchse for me
Date:
I received these gloves two days ago and have used them some, but not fully tested them. The key issue is what you need them for -- how you expect to use them.
1. If you need warmth in the arctic, go for mittens. That\u2019s a no brainer, except that you also need dexterity at times. In which case, you can use your liner alone, but it may not be up to the task. They\u2019re slippery, they snag, and they\u2019re not strong. The real problem with mittens and liners, or with most warm gloves that you see advertised, is that they are great UNTIL they get wet. I see lots of compliments on toasty warm wool and wool blend gloves and mittens. And some dry fairly fast. But if they get wet in a rain in a cold rain, setting up a tent, cooking, or whatever (and they likely will), YOU WILL FREEZE AND BE MISERABLE. Most writers seem not to have experienced this, or may not expect to use their gloves in this way.
2. I have regular gloves for winter day use that can fit in my coat pocket. My purpose with these gloves was to keep my hands warm while on winter hikes and occasional backpacking (latter is rare, but a place where the gloves MUST be up to the circumstances). These gloves needed to be up to my hardest usage, not the more common easy usage. Thus I needed gloves for dexterity, and I needed waterproof. Their warmth needed to be sufficient for windy occasions, but temperatures stay above zero around here.
3. The dual compartments are a unique feature, and I wondered about this, but the concept seemed interesting. It does seem to work as advertized. This adds complexity to the inner linings, and I wouldn\u2019t be surprised if problems eventually developed there. But I do not expect to use these gloves for daily use \u2013 this would be overkill on most occasions. Getting hands into either compartment is easy. I used the dexterity position for my hiking pole hand, and the warmth position for my other hand. Nice. Dexterity for this style of glove is not too bad \u2013 I have seen others very stiff.
4. I find that I always want a large glove, and large is warmer and easier to get your hand into. I\u2019m XL, but I ordered 2XL (largest size listed). That was a good choice. With hand thrust fully inside in dexterity position, I believe I could unload a backpack, set up a tent and handle food, with only a rare need to remove a glove and go bare-handed. However, with hand not so far in, since it was somewhat oversized, I could withdraw my fingers with hand already in dexterity position inside glove, and curl my fingers together and use the palm area as a glove. This was easy, comfortable, and warm. My fingers get cold readily if not exercised, so I would wish to do this for weather in the teens. I also carry a small backup liner, and I discovered that in dexterity position I could insert my hand into glove with the liner already on my hand, without danger of damage. The liner added warmth , and it could also be used alone in appropriate circumstances.
5. Working around home, my other gloves always got wet when clearing gutters and often when shoveling. Waterproof is worth it, unless you somehow know your gloves will never get wet. Mine get wet.
6. People differ. I remember skiing in northern NE with temps well below freezing and wearing only leather ski mittens, and hands were always warm. I\u2019m now in my 60\u2019s and more sensitive to cold, naturally. So warm and dry, as well as some dexterity, are very important.
7. I looked at a lot of gloves at different sites and in person. I\u2019d recommend these gloves (on half-price sale) for anyone for whom my situation seems comparable.
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