-86%
HUUB Varman Men in een redelijke staat, de wetsuits hebben meerdere beschadigingen die gerepareerd moeten worden
DEMO WETSUITS KUNNEN NIET WORDEN GERUILD OF GERETOURNEERD. PASSEN IS MOGELIJK OP AFSPRAAK TE BOEKEN VIA ONZE ONLINE KALENDER. GEEF BIJ HET INVULLEN DUIDELIJK AAN DAT JE VOOR DE DEMO-WETSUITS KOMT, NEGEER DE OPMERKING IN DE BEVESTIGING OVER DE PASKOSTEN DIE NIET VAN TOEPASSING ZIJN OMDAT ER NIET IN DE DEMOWETSUITS MEER GEZWOMMEN KAN WORDEN.
ONLINE KALENDER: https://www.tripro.nl/wetsuit-fit
Deze Huub wetsuits hebben op wat meerdere plaatsen op de benen wat fingernail cuts die gelijm moeten worden. Meestal een stuk of 4-5. Maar daarna nog steeds uitstekend bruikbaar bijv. als trainingswetsuit en je je nieuwste wetsuit houdt voor het racen.
KEY FEATURES
Maximum Flexibility | Maximum Buoyancy
We've created a suit with ultimate flexibility on the upper body and huge buoyancy in the hips and thighs.
Over the years we found we needed to push the search even further, to get the maximum amount of buoyancy in the hips and thighs, but the rules in triathlon limit wetsuit thickness to a maximum of 5mm. So our goal was to push the boundaries to get the most out of this, which led us to the most buoyant material ever used in wetsuit production.
+43™ Foam
There is no finer or more buoyant material on the market, 43% more buoyant than standard neoprene.
+43™ is the most significant technological advancement in wetsuit materials for over 80 years. Since its inception in 1930, neoprene has been used in many applications. It took until the late 80's for the early triathlon adopters to use versions of smooth skin neoprene, and we asked ourselves why this hasn't progressed?
When tested in our labs we have seen that dimples and contours deliver no benefit to performance. It has taken the constant questioning of the norm, and a multi-year development cycle with our partners in production HD Labs to finally create a material that is lighter, and more buoyant. The result? A ground-breaking 43% more buoyant (than standard neoprene) foam, worth the 80-year wait!
Neoprene will always have its place… well, for now! The Japanese Yamamoto materials we use are perfect for stretch and reach zones, coupled with our engineering and design thought process there really is no substitute, but buoyancy proposes a different set of needs. Where buoyancy for swimming wetsuits is concerned, first there was neoprene, then came NBR, now there is +43™, and we cannot wait for you to try it.
Arms Neutral™
We have now created a new Arms Neutral™ position reducing the typical maximum stretch cycle down by 50%. Your stroking style with a wetsuit can now mimic your stroking style without a wetsuit, delivering a Rotational Freedom™ never before felt.
M.A.D System
Developed in partnership with Innovate-UK the Measurement of Active Drag (M.A.D) is the ultimate measurement - the holy grail of data for swimmers. How much drag am I creating myself and in differing wetsuits, swimskins etc? There are other methods but none as accurate and precise as the M.A.D system.
Professor Huub Toussaint invented the first M.A.D system 15 years ago, but his learning's and research had him wanting to take it to the next level by using 17 force plates instead of one. With the vision of HUUB and its shareholders, the decision was made to chase the dream and create our very own M.A.D system. No other sports brand has one, and that's what we couldn't get over, how can you make claims without thorough testing? The worlds most advanced M.A.D system resides at our testing facility partnership in Mallorca with BEST swim centre. Watch Professor Huub explain the M.A.D system here.
A WHOLE NEW SWIMMING AND BUOYANCY EXPERIENCE
Key features:
- HUUB's exclusive+43™ buoyancy foam delivering 43% more buoyancy than standard neoprene.
- Rotational Freedom™ upper body design.
- Arms Neutral™ exclusive HUUB technology.
- Buoyancy and body alignment constrictor system (patent pending).
- Exclusive 3:5 buoyancy profile (VB 2:8*).
- Exclusive incredible stretch neoprene.
- M.A.D System tested.
- Chosen and refined by the fastest swimmers in triathlon. Why do you think we called in Varman?