* France includes Spain, Portugal and Belgium, while Germany includes Switzerland, Austria, Holland and Scandanavia.
Men's Iced Tees
Iced Tee sizing is designed to match Commandos and Sherpa Shorts. For example, if you're a size Medium in Sherpas, you should also be a size Medium Iced Tee.
Beat the summer sun with our runner designed-and-tested Neck Cooler, featuring a comfortable stretch ice pocket and adjustable snaps. Simply
add ice cubes for 30-60 minutes of heat-beating running comfort, or flip over for a
colder icy hit! Trail tested in the hot and humid Hong Kong summer!
Great for running, hiking or any hot outdoor activity
30-60 mins of cooling with flared opening to refill on longer runs
Flip over (ice pocket opening on inside) for extra cooling
Adjustable snaps fit most necks (32-41cm circumference)
Instructions: Fill the T8 Neck Cooler with regular freezer or supermarket ice, then wrap around the back of the neck and fasten with the snaps at the front. The fit should be comfortable but firm, and can be tightened for bouncing or melted ice. As the ice melts, flip the bandana so the ice pocket opening is against the neck for thinner insulation and better cooling. When the ice is finished, remove and pocket. Machine washable.
Can this help my running performance in the heat?
1. "Neck-cooling during exercise improves repeated sprint performance in a hot environment without altering physiological or neuroendocrinological responses. Rating of perceived exertion is reduced and may partially explain the performance improvement." https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2015.00314/full
2. "Cooling the neck increased the time taken to reach volitional exhaustion by dampening the perceived levels of thermal strain."
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21214352/
3. "Cooling the neck via a cooling collar can improve exercise performance in a hot environment but it appears that there may be a thermal strain threshold which must be breached to gain a performance benefit from the collar." https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20694731/