Built for · Trades
Electrolytes for trades
& crews in the heat.
Out in the sun, on your feet, pouring sweat by 10 a.m. Redi puts back what the heat takes out — fast.
Working in the heat costs you up to a liter of sweat an hour, heavy in sodium. Redi replaces all five electrolytes in absorbable forms — Amplify for morning energy, Replenish through the day — in stick packs that live in a truck or toolbag.
Heat plus sweat equals serious mineral loss
Working in the heat, you can lose up to a liter of sweat an hour — and with it a heavy dose of sodium and chloride. That’s far more than a few sips of water can offset. Plain water dilutes what’s left and leaves you cramping, sluggish, and headachy by afternoon, which is exactly when accidents climb. Real hydration on a hot job site means replacing the minerals you’re sweating out, not just the fluid. Redi’s sodium comes from pink Himalayan sea salt — the mineral you’re actually losing.
The 2 p.m. wall is a chemistry problem
That mid-afternoon crash on a hot day usually isn’t just tiredness — it’s a fluid and electrolyte deficit that’s been building since morning. By the time you feel it, you’re already well behind, and chugging water alone won’t catch you up because it can’t replace the sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium you’ve lost. Staying ahead of the wall means hydrating with electrolytes steadily through the day, before you feel it, not after.
Beat the afternoon crash
- Morning: Amplify for sustained energy and focus before the day gets brutal — caffeine, Alpha-GPC, and NMN on a full electrolyte base, so you start switched-on without a jittery crash later.
- Through the day: Replenish to keep replacing fluid and all five electrolytes as you sweat. Caffeine-free, so you can keep drinking it right up to quitting time.
Why premium forms matter on the job
When you’re drinking fast between tasks, often with nothing in your stomach, cheap mineral salts can turn on you. Redi uses magnesium malate, calcium citrate, and pink Himalayan sea salt — forms chosen for absorption and a settled stomach, so hydration helps instead of sitting heavy. Naturally sweetened, gluten-free, third-party tested, and made in the USA.
Tough enough for the job box
Single-serve stick packs live in a truck, a toolbag, or a lunch cooler and don’t melt into a sticky mess like a bottle of pre-mixed drink. Tear, pour into your water bottle, keep working. It’s the kind of thing a whole crew can keep stocked in the gang box so nobody’s caught out at the hottest part of the day.
Common questions from the trades
How many packs a day in the heat? On a hot, physical day, many people use two to three packs across the shift, more if they’re sweating heavily. When in doubt, stay ahead of thirst rather than chasing it.
Can I keep drinking it late in the day? Yes — Replenish is caffeine-free, so it’s the right choice for the afternoon and evening. Keep Amplify for the morning.
Stay Redi
Go the distance in the heat.
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Hydration is a safety issue, not a comfort one
On a hot site, dehydration doesn’t just make you uncomfortable — it slows your reaction time, clouds your judgment, and raises your risk of a heat-related incident. The afternoon when you feel foggy and heavy is the same afternoon mistakes are most likely to happen. Treating electrolyte hydration as part of the job, the way you treat your PPE, keeps you and the people working next to you safer through the hottest stretch of the day.
A simple crew habit that sticks
The easiest way to make it stick is to make it a crew thing. Keep a box of stick packs in the gang box, mix a round at the morning tailgate and again after lunch, and check on the newest guys — they’re usually the ones who don’t want to say they’re struggling in the heat. It costs almost nothing and it keeps everyone sharp when the temperature climbs.