Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes

Sporting Goods : Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes

Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes

from: Yaktrax



 : Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes
See Larger Image







Binding: Misc.
Brand: YakTrax
Label: Yaktrax
Manufacturer: Yaktrax
Publisher: Yaktrax
Studio: Yaktrax



Editorial Review:

Product DescriptionYaktrax have a unique, spikeless, patented coil design, unlike other products on the market. The Yaktrax Pro will instantly give you better traction, confidence and safety on packed snow or ice. Move about naturally with the same solid grip that you are accustomed to on dry surfaces. Walk or run as you normally would and experience stability on ice and snow like you have never felt before. Made with high strength, abrasion resistant 1.4 mm steel coils and heavy duty natural rubber material, the Yaktrax Pro easily conforms to the shape of your boot or shoe. With its patented SkidLock coil design, the Yaktrax Pro provides 360 degrees of traction on packed snow and ice and can be worn in temperatures as low as -41 Fahrenheit.




Features:
  • Walk confidently on ice and hard packed snow / Stretches to fit over almost any type of shoe
  • Designed to be more durable for the active person
  • Features a removable performance strap to keep in place during activities
  • Sizes: SMALL (Men's 5-8.5 / Women's 6.5-10) / MEDIUM (Men's 9-11 / Women's 10.5-12.5) / LARGE (Men's 11.5-13.5 / Women's 13-15)
  • Color: Black













Related Items:
     see more

Related Items:



banned interdit verboden prohibido vietato proibido
  banned    interdit    verboden   vietato     prohibido    verboden  banned      vietato      interdit proibido   vietato       interdit      verboden      banned  prohibido   

Your IP has been blocked. Please perform the action below to regain access.

Code:  security image
Please enter the Code: 



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Fan-trax-tic!
I have owned a pair of these for over year during which time we've had two major ice storms as well as snow and lesser amounts of ice. The Yaktrax have held up wonderfully. The one time that I've slipped on ice it was because I had been too lazy to put them on. Lesson learned! At least two co-workers have purchased their own pair of Yaktrax after seeing mine.

No, these aren't meant to be worn INSIDE, they are for OUTSIDE use in foul weather. From the website: "The Yaktrax Walker and Yaktrax Pro are not for use on gravel, concrete or sanded roads. Avoid surfaces such as marble, tile or any non-icy, non-snowy surfaces when wearing the Yaktrax Walker or Yaktrax Pro." It takes less than two minutes to put both on and even less time to take them off or one can simply have another pair of shoes to slip into. I don't find it a "hassle" either way, especially when one considers the benefits of using Yaktrax.

I would recommend buying a size larger if you will be using these on boots. I find it a little bit of a struggle to put them on my hiking boots. If the weather is going to be bad for an extended period, I tend to just leave the Yaktrax on my boots and switch to another pair of shoes.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - yaktrax pro worth every penny!
I regularly walk my dog in the woods on snowmobile trails that can get hard packed and icy. With my new Yaktrax I feel sure footed and much safer!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Really Helps
Every day I walk for an hour or two in the woods along uneven mountain bike/hiking trails. Wouldn't want to be without them. These things really work in the snow and ice. Also help tons on my black top drive when it's icy. Lots of snow & ice this winter. I've used them almost daily for two months. No sign of wear. They are slippery on hard slick indoor surfaces. Instructions say not to, but if your careful you can walk a few feet on tile.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Yaktrax pro
I run 3 to 6 miles several times a week year around in Michigan. I bought a pair of yaktrax pro 3 years ago and use them whenever there is ice and/or snow on the trails on which I run. They have been great! They are easy to slip on over my running shoes, they stay on, and I'm barely aware of them when I run, other than that I no longer slip and slide on ice and snow. The original pair that I bought 3 years ago finally broke in one spot last week so I need to replace them. Even the break was not a big deal. One of the pieces of rubber on the bottom tore. I went ahead and ran on it anyway and it still did OK. I highly recommend these to anyone who wants to stay active year around in a snowy/icy climate.



Rating: 1 out of 5 stars - Not what you'd expect...
As someone else said already, on surfaces such as tiled floors, you must be very very careful, they are EXTREMELY slippery. Over the years I have owned three different pairs of these products. They are a wonderful idea. I live in a town that isn't too horribly big, so, I walk most of the time instead of wasting money on gas. It's better for the environment and better for my physical health. The first time I bought these we had a nasty winter, many feet of snow and below freezing temperatures which means tons and tons of thick ice. I can honestly say, that first year, they didn't last even two months before they broke. That first year, I thought maybe I had been too "hard" on them. The next time I bought them, as they were all I could find here in town, I realized it wasn't me at all. They had frozen and snapped. Now, they do work really well on ice and snow, out of all the times I've used them to walk around, I've barely slipped at all, IF at all. Only once this year. The problem is, this being the third year I've tried these things out, they snapped on me once again. They do fit over your shoes or boots rather well, they stay quite snug, but, the rubber bottoms are just too thin and the cold doesn't do them any justice. I would recommend them only if they are the only thing you can find, such as happened with me time and again. As I said, they do work REALLY well on snow and ice, but, they just don't hold up to prolonged exposure. I have since tried a new product by a company called duenorth. These are a large rubber outersole for your shoe or boot with individual spikes on the bottom. There are four located toward the front and two at the back. They even come with two extra spikes in case they break or fall out. So far, I've found that these hold up much better and do just as well if not better in the conditions I've been talking about. They are much more bulky in appearance than the YakTrax, but, if that's all you're worried about, you shouldn't be out roughing it in frozen conditions anyway lest you should fall and embarrass yourself.



read more customer reviews on Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes


 



Plasna TV
Baby Shop




Nick Bradbury just had a tumor removed from his head. Glad to hear he's doing well:

The fact that I'm able to type this blog entry less than a week after the operation has me hopeful that recovery will be quicker than I was led to believe, but it will still be a few weeks before I'm able to really tackle any serious work.



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Tuesday signaled a readiness to lower U.S. interest rates in a dramatic shift to support an economy battered by a financial crisis of "historic dimension."


Hanging out at sites like Giz may have instilled in you an insatiable, pocket-emptying gadget habit. But now we're entering a new era—the old guys on the TV are saying that soon we may not even have pockets, let alone money for them. Don't panic though: You've probably got a wealth of gadgetry sitting underutilized in your living rooms, closets and basements, just waiting to be given powerful new (not exactly authorized) features. For free.

I've collected the best firmware replacements, software mods and homebrew hacks from the DMCA-flouting, EULA-hating frontiers of gadgetland that'll breathe new life into your stable of hardware and maybe—just maybe—let you feel that lusty new-gadget rush again.

Turn Your Xbox, Old PC or Apple TV into a Genuine Media Center
Xbox Media Center is about as refined as an unauthorized hack can get, playing back virtually any audio and video format, running a bevy of console emulators and still playing your Xbox games. To be honest, this should almost be viewed as a natural update for every Xbox, which at its core is a slow but functional PC with an easy TV connection. (Any actual PCs you have lying around can run a PC-ported version of XBMC.)

Boxee is a very slick fork of the XBMC project for Mac, and it's available for Apple TV. As shipped, the Apple TV works fine within the closed iTunes ecosystem, but Boxee's support for virtually every video codec and free TV services like Hulu will suit your new, more destitute lifestyle a bit better.

Difficulty: Easy to Moderate. Installation is pretty straightforward in most cases, with simple Boxee and XBMC setup programs available for Windows, Mac and Linux. Before you load XBMC, though, you have to mod your Xbox with one of these methods, many of which require a specific game. After that it's all install wizards and lollipops.

Installing anything on the locked-down Apple TV used to take some serious finagling, but there are now tools that will create an automated Boxee installer on a flash drive. Just plug the drive in, restart and you're good to go.
XBMC Online Manual
Boxee

Make Over Your iPod, Archos, iRiver or Sandisk with Rockbox
It's hard to look at the current generation of media players and not admire their diverse capabilities and extensible software platforms. That's not to say that your 5th-gen iPod doesn't play back music perfectly well, or that your iRiver H10 still isn't a kickass media player, but they do feel a bit dated. Rockbox replaces your MP3 player's operating system with something more substantial, effectively making it a completely new device. You get endless codec support, advanced audio options, dozens of games, useful apps like a calculator and a text editor, plus you can choose from tons of different interface skins for a unique look and feel. Rockbox's tweaking possibilities mean you will earn admiring "what is that?" questions from friends, and it won't cost you a thing. If your player isn't supported yet just hold on—everything from the Zen Vision:M to the Toshiba Gigabeat S has a fairly active dev team.

Difficulty: Easy. Rockbox has an automated tool called the Rockbox Utility available for Windows, Mac and Linux. It does the work for you. Even better, it often automatically configures your player to dual boot with its original OS.
Rockbox Official Site

Convert Your PC or Notebook Into A Much More Expensive Mac
It's undeniable that Macs are too expensive. For many, they are considered a luxury item whose added cost doesn't justify the benefit. Luckily Apple's switch to an Intel platform opened up a world of unauthorized OS X installations which can turn your existing PC into a powerhouse Mac Pro workstation, or morph your MSI Wind or Asus EeePC into the Mac netbook that should be in their goddamn product line anyway. Check the hardware compatibility list to see if your PC is eligible for the upgrade.

Difficulty: Moderate to Hard. If you're not morally opposed to downloading iATKOS and Kalyway, which are pre-patched Leopard install DVDs (this is bit torrent territory), then the process is much like installing any other OS. If you insist on building your own patched install from a DVD you own, then, well, good luck. Always check hardware lists first, though, because driver support is everything.
OSX86 Project Page

Flash Your Crappy Router Into a Top-Line Piece of Hardware
The DD-WRT project exists for a simple reason: Most routers are physically very similar, but are priced differently because of functionality derived from software. The DD-WRT firmware unlocks the potential of the most basic routers out there—too many to name but damn if yours isn't on the list. As it turns out, your budget model is kind of impressive: Program-specific traffic throttling, professional level wireless security and radical signal boosting are just a few of the dozens of new features that can be enabled.

Difficulty: Easy. If you can't manage this one, then you don't deserve a router—installation just takes a few clicks on the device's default configuration pages. A word of caution, though: Make sure your router configuration page is totally compatible with your browser before the operation, as some choke on Firefox and can botch firmware upgrades. Stick to IE if you have the choice.
DD-WRT Project Page

Download Updated Maps For Your Old GPS
I'm referring of course to capital 'D' downloading here, mainly because at the moment GPS map updates are a racket. You could spend hundreds of dollars on map data that is freely available on Google Maps, Microsoft Live and MapQuest, among others, or you can just, you know, not. Map packs for Garmin, TomTom and Magellan units are floating around torrent sites and usually don't require much more than a simple CD image mount and run routine to set up. (Guilty conscience sold separately.)

Difficulty: Easy to Moderate. If you're just running a copy of a CD, then you'll be able to use the installation wizards. Some more involved methods for Windows CE-based devices require some SSH file transfers, but these are relatively rare.

Jailbreak Your iPhone for Wi-Fi Internet Tethering
Two internet plans are enough, but to sign on to a mobile internet contract when you've already got unlimited iPhone data feels kind of stupid. Jailbreaking your iPhone is now about as easy as performing a firmware upgrade, and there are actually multiple tethering apps. PDANet and iPhoneModem both work a treat, but keep in mind that excessive usage could draw AT&T's attention and ire: Tethering is not allowed on the data plan, even though it works fine. Both apps are available in Cydia, where you can also find a limited assortment of other apps that don't have a place in the app store.

Difficulty: Moderate. Jailbreaking can be managed through the Dev Team's fantastic Quickpwn tool, but it does take a few minutes and can go wrong if instructions aren't followed closely. After jailbreak, Cydia and Installer fill the role of the gray-market app store, functioning as simple package managers that are arguably as polished as their more legitimate younger brother.

PDANet and iPhoneModem take different approaches to tethering, but neither requires more networking expertise than it would take to, say, set up a router.
iPhone Jailbreak
PDANet
iPhoneModem

Turn Your Wii Into a Free Emulation Machine
It's more than a little infuriating to have to repurchase your childhood library of console games from the Virtual Console, especially when free PC emulators and accompanying ROMs abound on the old intertubes. All you need is a copy of Legend of Zelda: The Twilight Princess, an SD card and an SD reader and you're ready to install A Boy and His Blob: Trouble on Blobolonia, which is pretty much all anyone has ever really needed since this whole "Video Gaming Television Machine" thing got under way in the first place. Throw in extended media playback and some helpful widgets for an extra value-add.

Difficulty: Moderate. This is one of the only hacks here that needs additional hardware to work, even if it's basic. The good news is that once you find a copy of Zelda and load up your SD card, the process pretty much takes care of itself. Further app installs are taken care of through a intuitive dedicated channel.
WiiBrew WIki

A great resource for similar projects is our industrious sister site Lifehacker, where you can find a veritable treasure trove of tutorials and tricks. Have you postponed any gadget purchases until you're sure your bank is solvent? Have any other budget hardware resurrection techniques that we missed? Let us know in the comments.


via Gizmodo

A new experimental feature for Google's free e-mail service forces the user to stop and answer simple math questions before sending after-hours messages on Friday and Saturday nights. Curbing your drinking, however, is still up to you.

Wired.com






Yaktrax Pro - Foot Traction for Ice and Snow - 3 Sizes

Shopping