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Description

Dexterity, and warmth.

Punch through cold air with the Castelli Chiro Due Cycling Glove. A WindStopper back ensures protection form the cold, while a synthetic suede palm with silicon gripers provides the dexterity needed to nail the perfect gear change and to hold your line.

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Castelli Chiro Due Gloves

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Here's what others have to say...

4 5

Tim E

Member since 

These gloves fit well according to the size chart and the quality is pretty sweet. I cannot wear them in temps below the mid 30's w/o several fingers going numb. I imagine if you buy them large and use liners they would be better. My experience is they are a fantastic mild winter day glove, but not for brutal winter days.

4 5

Meerkat

Member since 
  • Gender: Male
  • Familiarity: I've used it once or twice and have initial impressions

Nice gloves but do not order by the size chart on BC. My finger to palm measures 7.5 inches, indicating I need a Medium. Those were way too small. I ordered the Large and it fits but is still tight. No room left in the finger tips.
The glove is wind proof. I have only ridden with it in 40 degrees and my hands were warm.

5 5

nic4990050

Member since 

These gloves are good for the cold, period. I've tried several other brands and these are the best for straight out cold morning or nights in the dark with winds and temps below 40. In the afternoon when the sun comes out your hands will sweat so bring a pair of fingerless if you are on a day long ride and think it will warm up.

5 5

Eric

Member since 

I did not buy these from Realcyclist, but locally. The Chiro Due gloves are quite good in the 36-40 F range, I have used them for 3+ hours in this range and my hands have stayed warm. Between 40-45 F they are good but on the warm side and above 45 F they are probably too much. I had to ditch them one day when the temps got upward of 45 F, changed them out for a pair of Defeet Woolie Duragloves that I was carrying (it was early days with the Chiro Due and I did not know how warm they were). I have not used these in wet weather, but I suspect they will not be stellar performers in steady rain and cold temps as most WS gloves are a letdown in these situations. Hint: try neoprene paddling gloves for cold rainy days.