Let's start by taking a close-up look at the cut resistant gloves, one of the first things to mention is how well they work when using electronics. You can find that people always use electronics when they're working, it's just nice to be able to touch the screen. Almost as well or actually I'd say the glove probably works just as well as your finger. It's just amazing how you can just scroll through stuff.
I want to talk about the cut protection that it has. What is ANSI A5 cut resistance? You roll the blade directly on the glove and it won’t be cut. I believe its somewhere between like five and eight pounds of cutting force.
We can do a little cut resistance test right there:
If you push down and run it across with a knife, and the glove won't be cut; you can put a hot dog in a cut resistant glove, it'll fit in the finger or the thumb, and we'll find the cut protection that the glove offers - just run the blade over the glove a few times, you can see it's not cutting that at all. How amazing! You may think it would make that fabric fray because knife is so sharp.
If you do the test by yourselves, you may find that hot dog has a little scuff mark right there, but it's hard to say if that's just from it catching inside the glove, but overall, it's not cut. You can just see like if you didn't have that cut resistant glove, what would happen. Just lightly pulling this blade across the hot dog there, you see that the hot dog being cut in half. So cut-resistant gloves definitely offer some really good cut protection.