Thinnest Condom

Thinnest Condom




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Common complaint about condoms is that they decrease the sensation and that the process of putting a condom on somehow kills the excitement. Well, if your willy goes down while you’re putting a condom, I’m sorry but it’s more likely that you’re too nervous or inexperienced so don’t blame it on the condom right away.
But if your problem is the lack of sensation, there is a solution -try the thinnest condoms before you give up on condoms or bash them.
Maybe you’ve even tried some ultra thin latex condoms, but new generation of condoms with new materials, pushes the boundaries of thickness and provides even better feeling. In this post I’ll introduce you with the thinnest condoms currently available on the market.
Without much delay and introduction, let me introduce you with the thinnest condoms (based on my thorough research):
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UPDATE:
The thinnest condom in the world at this moment is Pasante Unique Unique Pull*, measuring just 0.015 mm thickness. But before you rush out to get it, just a friendly warning – this condom is actually more similar to a cling film than a standard condom.
*update: the new & improved version of Pasante Unique is available from another brand and it’s called Unique Pull. You can order it from here
Check a video review of Pasante Unique here if you want to learn more, and below are the other thinnest condom candidates.
UPDATE no. 2:
Sagami has introduced a new contender in the thinnest condoms arena – Sagami 0.01 which is just 0.018 mm thick. Here’s the complete review if you want to learn more.

Sagami Rubber Industries was the first manufacturer that produced a condom with the thickness of just 0.02 mm. To give you a better impression how thin this really is, I’ll compare it to the avarage thickness of a human hair which is 0.06mm. So 0.02 mm is a third of the thickness of a human hair.
It is also more than twice as thin as the standard latex ultra-thin condom (eg. Durex Sensi-Thin, which is 0.048 mm).
As you may presume Sagami Rubber is a Japanese manufacturer with long history – the company was established in 1934.
This extremely thin condom is made of polyurethane – type of plastic, introduced in the market in the 1990s. Besides being thinner, condoms made of polyurethane have some other benefits as well:
Note: Keep on mind that polyurethane is less stretchable than latex! If you pick the wrong size the constriction feeling might ruin the moment. Secondly, Sagami condoms imported from Japan might be a bit too small for the US market. That’s why, unless you usually use small condoms, I would recommend that you order the Sagami 0.02 larger version.
For the 10th anniversary of Sagami Original they introduced even thinner and stronger Sagami Original 0.02 Premium condom with the thickness of outstanding ~0.022mm (the regular Sagami Original condom is around 0.024mm, as we’ve been told by the distributor).
However, there are a few other Japanese manufacturers which, shortly after Sagami, produced their own 0.02 mm thick condoms. And, as it seems, it is only a matter of time when manufacturers will brake this record and produce even thinner condom.
Here are other 0.02 mm thick condoms:

Size: 170mm length
32mm diameter
50mm width
Water base lubricated
Made of Polyurethane

Another Japanese manufacturer produced a urethane condom.

 

You may have noticed that above mentioned condoms are produced from polyurethane.
The main disadvantage of these new materials is the price, which is still significantly higher than the price of latex condoms.
There are however just slightly thicker latex condoms, with the thickness of 0.03 mm and with the smaller price.
These condoms are made from latex, but with the use of the highest manufacturing technology. If you don’t mind the latex and don’t want to pay the high price for polyurethane, try these condoms:
Here are few other thin latex condoms, which have been available on the market for some time. There are thicker than all the above mentioned, but they have the most affordable prices:
Peter started condom-sizes.org in 2011 after realizing what a difference using a proper condom size really makes! In 2012 he published the e-book called 'How to Find Your Perfect Condom' which is still available on Amazon
You should check this out, dunno if it is legit,
The 004 condom by Okamoto (makers of Crown) is the thinnest LATEX condom in the world. It has been available in Japan for some years but has been resized for the U.S market, which is now made in the U.S
I just wish there are 0.01 mm coming soon
anyone has heard anything about 0.01 coming ?
hi,
there’s not a 0.01 mm condom as far as I know, but there’s a 0.015 mm condom – it’s called Pasante Unique.
However, there’s a catch, it doesn’t really look like a regular latex condom. check out this video review below, I think your enthusiasm will fade away:
i just looked at the pasante condom, the condom is poorly designed and is just sad, i mean come on, i’m sure sagami had more cunstomers than that hoax of a condom. but in all, pasante needs to man up and NOT use the little sanwich bag as a condom
LOL
“sandwich bag” is the best comparison I’ve heard so far :)
btw, have you checked the new thin condom from Sagami – Sagami 0.01?
(I obviously have to update this post!)
As someone who has actually used the pasante unique I have to say that that review is complete bollox. The condom needs the body heat to function. It molds itself to you and works pretty damn well. Definitely transfers a lot of heat. My only problem with it is that the big rim or flare at the bottom is kind of offputting and could have been made a lot smaller. Still if you are interested in a thin condom you should give it a try.
I found those Okamoto Skinless 3000 on eBay and they said its 0.015 mm thickness. I brought some and tried and I do not feel its 0.04 or 0.05, more like a 0.03 to 0.02 .
like you guys said there is NO official thickness stated ANYWHERE.
But they are too small so my fav now is sagami 0.02 Large.
never tried sagami 0.02 preimum somebody please put some review
The okamoto skinless 3000 is rated at .015mm. This may be the thinnest in the world. Check it out and give your opinion please!!
Hey O’Neal, thanks for the comment! I just googled it and it seems to me that you’re right! Good find! I’ll have to update this post :)
btw, have you tried it already?
Well, I’ll have to correct myself…it seems that the information about the thickness of Okamoto 3000 available on Amazon.com is incorrect.
Condom distributor from Hong Kong (Sampsonstore) informed me that Okamoto Skinless 3000 has been in the market for more than 20 years and its tickness is actually 0.04-0.05mm, and not 0.015 mm. The reason why this condom is a bit more expansive is the special shape, as they say.
Maybe Okamoto changed the spec’s? Also the brand “Skinless” has been around for over 20 years, but the 3000 hasn’t been here very long. But I cannot find where Okamoto officially states that it’s 0.015 mm.
yeah, neither can I, so I’ll trust the distributor on this one…unless I find some other facts…

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The World’s Thinnest Condom Is One-Sixth The Width Of A Human Hair
Showering with a raincoat has never been this awesome.
Japan just broke its own record for the “world’s thinnest” condom when Sagami Original announced its ultra-light, polyurethane condom measuring at 0.01 millimeter. That’s 0.01 millimeter thinner than the company’s last iteration of the contraceptive tool, and one-sixth the width of the average human hair, according to Condom-Sizes.org.
The race for the thinnest condom may sound like a safety risk, but the company has conducted stress tests on 25,000 condoms. Condom-Sizes.org, meanwhile, had its readers give the rubbers the hard test:
On the first look this condom is so thin and fragile that some might be a bit skeptical in its durability. It proved it self in practical use however, as our reader confirmed ... Our reader who tried it likes it and says he can really feel a difference. He asked us for more of these.
That reader will have to wait for a worldwide release, as the condoms are only sold in Japan, and they’re selling out quickly, the Daily Mail reports. The condoms’ suggested retail price puts them at about $12.
“Honestly, I don’t know how we can make them thinner than this,” a Sagami researcher told Tokyo Sports. “As long as there is a need for thinner, we will continue researching 0.009 mm and 0.008 mm thinness.”
Sagami’s condom unofficially beats out the Guinness World Record for thinnest condom, a 0.038 millimeter thick rubber by Okamoto Industries, Inc. The measurement was verified in January, 2012.
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