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Thread: What knee pads to you use?
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16th May 2015, 08:33 PM #1
What knee pads to you use?
Not quite "Safety" but that's the closest fit.
What knee pads do you find both comfortable and practical?
I guess a couple of different types are in order - soft and hard - wouldn't want to be up on a roof in hard jobbies because of the slipping danger.
I have a pair of Irwins with a hard shell but the damn things like to move around on my legs a fair bit, so I don't wear them much.
For many tasks I use a pillow case that I have several sheets of 3mm neoprene in so it's about an inch thick. Excellent for gardening and many other floor jobs because of the large surface area.
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16th May 2015, 08:39 PM #2
I use:
Knee pads that are in pockets in my garage trousers - more comfortable than any of the strap fixed ones that do their best to cut off circulation in your legs and always dig in painfully, and,
One of those packs of Bunnings foam floor tiles (still all in the packet - it's like a big, thick, $14 pillow)
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16th May 2015, 08:58 PM #3
I can thankfully still use my built in ones and as i'm still in shorts from the long summer I'm not even kneeling on trouser fabric. I have been down on my knees a lot lately fixing machines at the mens shed. The one surface they struggle with is the crushed brick around the sawmill at the tree loppers yard. So when I drop something like a screw or a nut and have to get down on my knees to find it I may kneel down on a piece of bark or wood. Another reason I can tell I'm on my knees a fair but is that they are now nearly as grimy as my hands.
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16th May 2015, 09:38 PM #4
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16th May 2015, 09:43 PM #5
I use a couple of foam kneeling pads about 450x300 that I got from Bunnings (I think) although If you are moving around a bit they are not as convenient as knee pads.
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17th May 2015, 01:32 PM #6
The ones I use are these http://www.bunnings.com.au/irwin-tri...-pads_p5817331
I have a few pairs, in the car, at home and at work.
Have worn these for hours and recon they have saved the knees. The elastic tends to go before anything else and at under $10 a pair they are cheap enough that if they get damaged by kneeling on gravel, or a hot cut off I have not lost a fortune.
I have used them for fixing beds and assembling furniture, as well as on roofs cleaning gutters.
Also impresses the females when they see a man on their knees.
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17th May 2015, 02:54 PM #7
They must have a soft layer inside Kevin? How do find they go with moving off your knees as you walk around (twisting etc)? The Irwins I have are more like these: http://www.bunnings.com.au/craftrigh...-pads_p5820490
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17th May 2015, 03:30 PM #8
Its cool and wet here today so I finally put on some long daks and realize they have outside pockets on the knees for pads but the two layer duck weave fabric is pretty useful padding in itself.
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17th May 2015, 04:15 PM #9
Stick the pads in - it's the most convenient and comfortable knee protection you'll find!
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17th May 2015, 05:06 PM #10
I seem to spend a lot of time on my knees (I have a wife and 2 daughters) and my knees at times get sore. I foolishly bought a CHEAP pair of hard plastic moulded ones that after a while the roundness of my knees were jambing in the moulded covers. They were a painful waste of space. The sponge idea sounds good but if your are moving progressively, along a wall say, having to move what ever tools you are using as well as the "pillows" would get annoying too.
You have prompted me, with this discussion, to do a "study tour" to see what's available locally to choose from.Just do it!
Kind regards Rod
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17th May 2015, 06:17 PM #11
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17th May 2015, 06:49 PM #12
The pads are fastened with velcro that is on elastic. When putting on one needs to be careful that the ID tag does not get in the way of the velcro. (Perhaps I should cut it off?) I too have found bits of sharp objects embedded in the pad, thankfully not the knee.
I have a different set of pads with a single strap and buckle. I found the strap was more uncomfortable than working without pads.
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17th May 2015, 07:19 PM #13
Brett
I have a pair of knee pads like yours. They are fine when actually kneeling, but uncomfortable when just walking around. Also I have difficulty keeping them in place.
That is probably because I have bony knees and little padding of my own. I also use the green foam gardening pads that safari mentioned, but as he said you have to keep moving them about so it depends on the job on hand what you use.
I like the sound of these knee pockets that Master Splinter mentioned. They sound a little like the pockets of the racing leathers the motorcyclists use. I remember that Barry Sheen used to pack his with aluminium foil so he didn't destroy his kneecaps on the fast corners.
Perhaps I will ask, very nicely, if SWMBO would sew a pocket and zip on the front of one of my pairs of trousers for this purpose (err, make that one of each leg). I can see it won't work as well in summer with shorts, but I try to wear long trousers until the heat becomes unbearable.
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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17th May 2015, 10:44 PM #14
If you are doing your own, remember that they need to go lower down your leg than your knee, so that when you bend they rise up to the correct position.
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17th May 2015, 11:12 PM #15
Watching this thread with interest, as I'm yet to find a good all-round solution for knee pads. The knee pocket inserts (on my Hard Yakka Extreme pants) don't work that great in practice, I find they often don't center properly when you kneel down, so you're constantly tweaking them as you're lowering yourself. A PITA if you've got your hands full.
The hard shell ones are better, but the straps need to be tight to keep them properly in place, which becomes irritating and rash-producing on the back of my legs particularly if I'm wearing long pants.
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