REVOLUTIONARY CLOTHING FOR COLD CONDITIONS
Work Warm has developed a revolutionary new type of under clothing that can keep you warm in any winter work or sports activity.
Light Weight Single Layer Comfort
Tested in the Oil Fields of North Dakota, where workers have gone from wearing 5 layers at -50 to 70°F to just our top & bottom and a pair of summer coveralls!
CoreThermals ™ allow improved comfort and mobility over layering systems. Now you have a chance to replace multiple layers with a single layer that provides warmth, wind resistance, and moisture management. Get better performance than the best and most expensive “water-proof breathable” layered system.
Keeps you warm, dry, and comfortable from -50 to 70 degrees.
Work Dry And Warm
- Keeps you warm and dry whether you are working out in the weather or standing for hours.
- You remain warm and dry even when you have worked up a sweat.
- If you fall in the water, the system does the work, warming you within minutes of getting out of the water and then proceeds to dry you out. The colder it is, the faster you dry.
Improve Productivity... Significantly
- Less time warming up…more time doing the job.
- Improved employee morale.
- Reduced turnover.
- Reduced sick days & injuries.
CHECK OUT OUR GEAR TAKING
THE COLD PLUNGE CHALLENGE
THE COLD PLUNGE CHALLENGE
Testing out WorkWarm's new CoreThermals. Tested April 2, 2012 at Huntington Reservoir. Temperature is 9 degrees Fahrenheit, 25 mph wind, -11 wind chill. Hole was cut through 48" of ice. Taylor jumped into the 33 degree water and then was warm after 45 seconds of getting out of the water. Taylor then spent the next hour out on the frozen lake in wet, but warm clothes.
Jacob Meyers testing CoreThermals from WorkWarm. With a temperature a 9 degrees F, with winds over 25 mph, wind chill of -9, Mike and some friends cut a hole through over 4 feet of ice at Huntington Reservoir, elevation 9034 feet, and then proceeded to jump in. Then spent the next hour and a half out on the frozen lake in wet but warm clothes. Jacob did the same test in 2010 using waterproof-breathable, polar fleece, and Thinsulate with substantially different results. (also available on YouTube)
Josh testing CoreThermals from WorkWarm. With a temperature a 9 degrees F, with winds over 25 mph, wind chill of -9, Josh and some friends cut a hole through over 4 feet of ice at Huntington Reservoir, elevation 9034 feet, and then proceeded to jump in. Then spent the next hour and a half out on the frozen lake in wet but warm clothes.