Thanks, I looked them up. Very interesting concept. They won't be hot enough for me. Today it was 23F with a light north wind. It took me two rides to get ten miles using bar mitts, electric gloves and chemical warmers. I had to quit after 3 laps (6.12 miles) to warm my hands inside and then went again to get 4. 08 more. Sometimes I can get the whole ten miles at one time but it has to be around 32F. When it is really cold I use several hand warmers in the bar mitts and on the back of my wrist inside the electric gloves. Bitter cold like -20F I can only do 4 miles with goggles, face mask electric sox and gloves and lots of layers. You start out freezing and then get hot and sweaty, but your hands and feet get so cold you have to quit. Younger riders can ride in this stuff with much less protection but I can't. I may get these reusable warmers for pocket warmers when I go to night events like the ski jumps and the Finnish Snow God fireworks celebration on Teal Lake, where there are bon fires for extra warmth. They would also work as pocket warmers for the day time out house races where you can step into a bar when you get too cold. Two people push an outhouse on a frozen course, fastest time wins. Men, woman, mixed and age categories. My two buddies in their 70s got 3rd place in the old timer category with their "Atomic Pile" outhouse with Korean decorations on it. It takes a lot for two people to push evenly over the whole course, especially if one gets more exhausted at the end. The outhouse can tip over on the rutted course, the resulting Atomic Pile spill will cause a momentary disruption of the activities while the Haz Mat team does their thing. Ha Ha. In certain instances these would save money if used instead of the chemical warmers. Thanks, I never new about these.