It is called being profile active.
Tired of having to slow down when things are heating up in bed? A Colombia-based condom maker is launching a competing “pre-erectile” model that can be worn up to two hours before sex. We want to help women use rubber the right way.
“This…makes sex so much easier and more enjoyable because you don’t have to interrupt your intimacy with the mundane task of putting it on because you’re already wearing it,” one manufacturer, Camila Condoms, said in a written statement. said in a statement.
Camila’s C2 Smart Condom stretches over a flaccid penis and covers it like a sock, with a ring at the base helping the prophylactic adhere to the soft member. daily mail report.
When the penis becomes erect, the condom expands up to 7 inches in size, making it resemble the penis equivalent of the top of a popcorn.
Camila competes with the makers of Uniq Smart, a similar pre-emptive prophylactic drug that boasts that users can put on the product “before they get an erection” and forget about it.
One of the company’s main selling points is that these smart condoms are made from a synthetic resin called AT-10, which is much thinner than traditional latex typically used in rubber manufacturing.
Kamriya describes it as more like a second skin than a contraceptive.

Meanwhile, Uniq touts its condoms as “one of the world’s thinnest condoms at 0.01mm” and up to “one-eighth thinner than latex”.
This thinness is said to help maximize sensation inside the bag. One online Uniq reviewer claimed that sex with the product was “even better than without.”
Some compared the rice-paper-thin Johnson Hugger to cling film, while others complained that it “takes a while to learn how to wear it comfortably,” the Daily Mail reported.
Despite its thinness, the manufacturer claims that this product is more durable than latex.
Meanwhile, the companies say their products can also help men overcome condom-related erectile dysfunction. one of several reasons Men avoid wearing them even though they are effective in preventing sexually transmitted diseases.
To test whether condoms prevent erections, According to a report from a Colombian university, Researchers tracked the arousal levels of 82 men between the ages of 18 and 30. Half of them were wearing special rubber bands, and the other half were not using condoms.
Different groups were given the task of watching erotic content and rating their arousal level on a scale of 1 to 25 based on the International Index of Erectile Function.
The study found that there was no “significant difference” in sexual arousal between the groups, suggesting that “pre-erect condoms have no effect on erectile response.” The only downside is that the sample size is said to be a bit lacking in the size department.





