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+1 lens for shooting glasses
#1
Posted 19 November 2009 - 01:00 PM
Quite some time ago I had found a +1 clear stickon that I was able to put on the lens of my shooting glasses so I could see the front sight. I have since realized the futility of such actions and corrected the problem by moving to Open. The lovely Ms. Neomet however is now looking for the exact same thing and the lowest power I have been able to find is a +1.25 which doesn't work. Anybody know where you can get these, or alternatively if someone makes an in-frame lens set at +1? No clip-ons though.
Thanks!
Thanks!
Freedom Gunworks Shooting Team
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
#3
Posted 19 November 2009 - 05:46 PM
Hmmm... not at Walgreens.
Freedom Gunworks Shooting Team
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
#4
Posted 19 November 2009 - 05:59 PM
ESS Shooting Glasses with RX inserts. www.gunnersalley.com
I took my gun to the eye DR and he wrote an RX for the distance of my arms.
$70 for the lens.
I can see the sights, targets, and the score sheet. All three will not be perfect though.
I took my gun to the eye DR and he wrote an RX for the distance of my arms.
$70 for the lens.
I can see the sights, targets, and the score sheet. All three will not be perfect though.
#5
Posted 19 November 2009 - 06:29 PM
If she already wears glasses have a pair made with the shooting eye distance correction + what ever you determine is best to see the front sight and still be able to see the target. +1 seem a little much to me. I have mine at only +0.5 any more and the targets were to fuzzy. Best way to determine the right correction it try a few different correnction level to see wich looks best for you. The eye doc should lens set and be able to do that for you.
MDA
MDA
On Shooting "A's" Fast
You must see just enough of what must be seen for you to know that what you want to happen is happening as it is happening. (Holy crap, that sentence is cracking me up.) 12/4/03 BE
You must see just enough of what must be seen for you to know that what you want to happen is happening as it is happening. (Holy crap, that sentence is cracking me up.) 12/4/03 BE
#6
Posted 19 November 2009 - 07:11 PM
More background would probably help here. She used wear a -1.5 which she could see the front sight fine with. She finally went to the eye doc and got her proper correction which is -2.75. Not only do I suddenly look worse than she thought but the front sight is now out of focus. We went and had her try on various reading glasses and found that the +1 let her clearly see the front sight and good enough for distance. Ideally we would have shooting glasses that she could just put on at the range without having to pop her contact out.
Freedom Gunworks Shooting Team
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
Amazingly lucky man married to the woman of his dreams, surrounded by great friends in this community and living in the Sonoran desert at the epicenter of the practical shooting universe. My glass isn't half full, my mug is overflowing.
#9
Posted 25 November 2009 - 09:02 AM
+1 on Decot. Even if you don't live in Phoenix. Send them her prescription and they'll make glasses with a bit of whatever correction you need in the dominant eye for close while leaving distance in the off eye. Works well for pistol. call and talk to them first, they are shooters and optomitrists (spelling?) and understand. Not cheap but well worth it.
#10
Posted 25 November 2009 - 12:28 PM
Depends on what you lens is correcting for. I am nearsighted and my contacts correct for clearer distance viewing. I found that a + correction made the front sight harder to see. I did better using a weaker lens = less correction for distance made my close vision better. Some nearsighted people may do better with no correction at all.
#11
Posted 25 November 2009 - 01:19 PM
I use these to turn ballistic lenses into something I can see front sight with:
http://www.neoptx.com/
http://www.neoptx.com/
Dan Bernard
RO TY-60992
SO A-29997
RO TY-60992
SO A-29997
#14
Posted 01 December 2009 - 10:12 AM
Dioptors are additive so if -2.75 is her ideal long distance lens, she would normally add between .5 and .75 to that figure to get a net of -2.25 to -2.00 ... a full 1.0 on top of regular glasses seems a little too strong than is common but, that would yield a net of -1.75. I just went through all this last week and had the optometrist confirm the 'common wisdom' about shooting lenses.
Just get a dedicated pair of safety glasses or a high-end model made up with that script for the shooting eye. The off eye is personal preference - I left the full distance prescription in for seeing the HP target markers at 200 yds. Some folks use a blinder or tape to reduce the light on the off eye and facilitate shooting with both eyes open. Others put in a lens to better allow use of a scope for LR or HP at 300 and 600.
/Bryan
Just get a dedicated pair of safety glasses or a high-end model made up with that script for the shooting eye. The off eye is personal preference - I left the full distance prescription in for seeing the HP target markers at 200 yds. Some folks use a blinder or tape to reduce the light on the off eye and facilitate shooting with both eyes open. Others put in a lens to better allow use of a scope for LR or HP at 300 and 600.
/Bryan
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