Gloves for in-tank use

PCKRAJ

New member
Just got a pair of gloves from Foster & Smith, they're called Atlas Nitrile gloves and I think they'll work a lot better than the orange/blue ones as I was able to get a smaller size. Better fitting and on sale for $9.69.

Haven't used them yet, but thought I'd pass this info along as this is a good price. Anyone know of anything that may work even better?
 
The Gloves thing to me as far as just hand ones that are only to the wrist,
never made much sense to me.

I mean, your going in the water, if it's just to keep from touching some stuff with your bare hands, I'd think in most cases people know what not to touch and some things you have sometimes anyhow. You just keep it to a limit as much as possible.

Trying not to put your hands in when you don't have to.

But the only gloves that ever made any sense to me, were the ones that go up to your arm pits. Those ones actually keep all skin contact out of the water. Which was the point as I could see.. protecting the tank.

I would be more worried about things on my skin getting into the water, as opposed to the water touching me. That's why the LONG gloves make sense. Nothing washes off you in to your tank. (dry soap you can't see, minute chemicals, oil on the skin etc..) getting into your water. The kind of stuff that may make corals close up longer when they are exposed. So the long gloves make sense to me because they protect the reef tank when you have to get your hands/arms in it.

But short, "hand only" gloves with the rubber bands to hold them on...
They still leave your arm exposed... which could still wash things in your skin into the water.
I don't see what good they are for the tank, unless the reason you use them is just your fingers- that you don't want to touch something.? Just because you don't like it?

The long arm length gloves are made to protect the reef tank environment.
Short ones, (if your arm skin still goes in) I don't see what good they are doing.
Personally, I usually don't use any. However, if I were to, I'd go with the long style. But that's just IMHO.

Just sayin'

Of course, even if bare handed, one MUST remember to be careful when touching certain corals such as Zoanthids and others. As later on, a hand swipe to the face or lips just wiping or itching etc..in an innocent way could get a toxin into you in an unplanned way. Some things are poisonous... Especially with an open cut, open pores, or tasting it (like an off metal taste) in your mouth. Be cautious of that.
 
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Over the years I've recently developed a skin reaction to frogspawn. That'd be a reason I can think of to use "hand gloves" but I haven't bothered yet as of this point.
 
is something wrong with me that nothing bothers my skin? not even nems...about the only that ever hurt was the snowflake taking a piece of me.
 
I wear hand gloves because my hands are far more oily and dirty than my forearm. 1ml in 265 gal is ~1ppm. When I put my hands in my tank and my skimmer immediately losses skim (I don't see the same result with exam gloves on), how much unknown stuff is releasing off my hands into my 50 gal tv tank?
 
Using gloves is a very good idea, trust me on this. Not only is it so much safer for your aquarium but its also much safer for you. I now only wish I began using gloves years ago and now I am forced to for medical reasons because of serious problems caused by aquariums.
 
I use the hand gloves to protect myself from corals that irritate me, to avoid getting glue on my skin, and to cover any small abrasions that I might have. I like them because I can still feel what I'm touching.
 
I have those fosters blue and orange gloves and (hate them) I actually cut them down because the elastic was cutting my circulation off after a while of cleaning the tank!
I was wondering myself about disposable gloves but I think the bristle worms can still get through them? I never want to have that happen again! Also the blue and orange gloves I cant hold anything/feel anything Im holding such as coral and actually broke a piece of coral trying to hold it! what about those dish gloves? safe or no?
 
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