Best knee pad
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What’s the best knee pad on the market these days? |
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https://youtu.be/HB2p66XuOdo?si=sCHue5yMgoTiya9S I wish you hadn’t asked. |
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Jack Lange wrote: Lol. As a serious answer - there are numerous good options now (big change from the situation 10 years ago). In the US the Send brand kneepads have become the standard and are a safe bet. They are expensive, but it's a small US company and the quality is good. Within the Send product line you have a lot of options. There are 3 different thicknesses to choose from - thin, regular, "magnum" - with 3 mm, 4 mm, and 5 mm rubber respectively. There are 2 sizes to choose from - a 3 strap "large" and a 2 strap "mini". There's also the strapless sleeve style pads that you tape on. Which combo of thickness and size to choose will depend on personal preference, but also your use case. Boulders vs sport climbs, what rock type (slippery limestone vs jagged volcanic rock), and how big a person you are. Give some details about your use case (i.e. what crags you typically climb at) and I can make a more detailed suggestion. |
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Also, a general suggestion in the absence of other information about use case: If you are new to kneepads use and want something comfortable and unobtrusive, I suggest the Send Large Slim. I.e. the 3 strap pad with the thin rubber. Suggesting the 3 strap pad since I find it is actually more comfortable than the 2 strap. The extra strap let's you spread out the pressure a bit more and makes for a better combo of comfort and security. You can crank down the upper two straps (around the meat of your leg) pretty snug to keep the pad in place, and leave the lower strap (behind your knee) a bit looser. Suggesting the "thin" option for most people since that makes for a lighter and less bulky/obstructive pad. Though if you climb on sharp/jagged rock the "regular" thickness rubber is worth it. The sleeve-style pads are a specialized option for more advanced technical knee scumming. If you're going to Rifle you should get those (plus glue and tape), but otherwise I don't recommend them as an entry point to kneepads. I have one of the "magnum" pads with the thickest rubber - it is like wearing a shoe on your leg. It's a specialized item that is great for really sharp kneebars, but I don't suggest it for general use. TLDR: buy a Send Large Slim as your first pad, then branch out into the other options if you have more specialized requirements down the road. |
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Thanks JCM! Sounds like a plan |
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What JCM missed out is the large is really quite large if your under 6ft it's likely to be huge on you. Even then it's needlessly big 99% of knee bars are just above the knee, it's very rare to need a pad that extends that far up your thigh. |
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I'm 5'8" and prefer the large. I don't think the size is excessive. The benefit of the large isn't the greater rubber coverage (I agree you rarely kneebar that far up the leg), but rather is about having the third strap and spreading out the pressure of holding the pad in place. I find this makes it more secure and more comfortable. If you're really short though you'd want the mini. |
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I got the large slim… I’ll share an opinion when I get a chance to use it! |
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JCM has about all the info you could want, and explained it well. The only additional input I'd have is that I had problems with the send strap pad on my right leg. The 3rd buckle digs into my LCL/hamstring pretty bad. I've converted to a sleeve guy since it fits the climbing I kneebar on more anyway, but the euros make a pair of symmetrical pads with opposing straps that fix that issue - blakpad.com/kneepads/ Something to keep in mind down the road if you decide to sell out to the dark arts completely but love the feel of a strap-on. |
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Tried a send pad- hated the sleeve. Might be good for a proj when using a shaved leg with spray glue and duck tape, but a real pain in the ass for trying out beta on new routes. I got a LaSportiva buckled pad and love it. Much easier to get on and off between attempts, vastly more comfortable, and considering I'm not that close to sending Silence, I'm not worried about elite stickyness or slight slippage as the pad settles on my leg. Any kind of rubber to prevent my kneecap from exploding on shallow bars is adequate at this stage in life. |
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that guy named seb wrote: ya but the key is dissipating the strap force. Im just shy of 5.8, idk my thigh length tbh but the two stap really doesnt work for me on a technical kneebar. The buckle behind your knee can be a real pain (literally) depending on your thigh shape and if you have three straps you dont have to tighten the bottom buckle as much |