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#21
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My syndicate partner I tested several different sunglasses
under a blue Duo canopy a couple of years ago and reported here on RAS. We used a variety of different lenses including darker and lighter tint varieties of Suntigers. We also compared visibility through haze looking through the clear view panel and the canopy. Basically, during flight, the brain adapts and the blue canopy made no difference to the subjective perception of colour, which was overwhelmingly that of the sunglass lens rather than the canopy. Subjectively all of the different sunglasses seemed to retain their own characteristics through the blue canopy - the lenses are far stronger colour filters than the canopy. I never noticed any perceptible loss of light under a blue canopy and, counterintuitively, my partner and I both found that visibility through haze was marginally better looking through the blue canopy compared with looking through the open clear view panel. So I would say choose the colour of lens that you prefer for other reasons than the colour of the canopy. Colour photographs through the blue canopy were surprisingly blue - which shows the difference between a brain and a camera. Now that I have a glider with a clear canopy I notice how much hotter direct sunlight is on me. I never thought the blue canopy reduced heat build up inside the cockpit (from the greenhouse effect) but it certainly reduces direct IR transmission by absorption - which is why they are blue not amber - and also why the blue canopies expand more in hot weather. I hate bifocals in the air and find the transition line intrusive but progressive lenses are fine for me. I can't see that any of the other suggestions in this thread are going to answer S6's problem as directly as Scheyden prescripition lense flip ups like I use. The inner clear prescription lense is fixed and the outer amber tinted lens flips up when I need to see in darker areas - both in low light conditions and also in very bright into-sun conditions when the light contrast makes LCD screens on the lower part my panel unreadable to me with dark lenses. John Galloway At 16:24 21 January 2006, wrote: Hi again , I forgot one question. No one mention flying with a tinted coanopy and the recommended glasses. Any comment. S6 wrote: Hi all, Thank you for your comment. I will talk with my optician about Suntiger, Rayban and Melanin. Will see what he recommend. Regards S6 bumper wrote: Progressive lenses are not 'progressive bifocals'. I've been wearing and flying with progressive lenses for years. Vision is corrected to 20-12. Progressives do take some getting used to, however they allow distance vision, close-up reading and everything in between - like the panel. Some people cannot adapt to progressives, too bad, they sure are great if you can! bumper Minden NV '01-- Zero One' wrote in message news:gq2dnWTWkJZ370zeRVn-pw@ comcast.com... There are some very good reasons not to use progressive bifocals for flying. Use lined bifocals instead. This will optimize the visual acuity for what we need. distance vision (to spot other aircraft, birds, etc.) and arms length vision (charts, instruments, etc.). Larry '01' USA |
#22
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I use progressive lenses for normal day wear and for flying airplanes.
I usually use suntigers with stick on reading lenses in the sailplane but sometimes fly with the progressives. The only problem is that they do not darken enough. My next set of suntigers will be progressive. My first reaction to progressives was that it would be impossible to fly with them. I may have had a bad prescription because after suffering with line bifocals for a few years I went to progressives and will not go back. What good reasons do you gave against using them? Andy |
#23
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I tried progressives in 1997 for several months and found them
unsuitable for me for flying. 1. The distortion at the edge of the lenses produced a swimming effect as I moved my head which I found unhelpful. I found it distorted my distant vision so that runway slope was hard to judge, especially where the slope varied significantly (eg Manchester). It also made 'black hole' night visual approaches difficult to judge. This only affected earning a living but the first problem applied to gliding also. 2. The reading (near vision) band was so narrow that I could only see a newspaper column width of print clearly without moving my head. This made rapid reference to a Jepp chart a major operation. I didn't like it for daily living either since newspapers are only a small part of my reading. It's also an inconvenience reading a map gliding (Yes, I don't totally trust GPS). I reverted to my previous trifocals with relief and continue to use them with no problems - except they're rather stronger now than they were then - but I guess that would happened with progressives too. Graeme Cant Andy wrote: I use progressive lenses for normal day wear and for flying airplanes. I usually use suntigers with stick on reading lenses in the sailplane but sometimes fly with the progressives. The only problem is that they do not darken enough. My next set of suntigers will be progressive. My first reaction to progressives was that it would be impossible to fly with them. I may have had a bad prescription because after suffering with line bifocals for a few years I went to progressives and will not go back. What good reasons do you gave against using them? Andy |
#24
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I've been using progressive lenses for the last 4 years and find that they
work well. There's a short period with a new prescription when straight lines appear curved, but this has always disappeared within the first day of wearing them. Although the adjustment from near to far and side to side has been automatic for me, I'm told that this is not always the case. Some users adjust more slowly and some never do. For the last two years, I've been using self-darkening progressives; they don't darken nearly as much as a good pair of regular sunglasses, but, at least for me, provide more than adequate visual contrast and eye-strain protection. I have them made big enough to provide good eye coverage since the glare seems worse with smaller lenses. Raphael Warshaw 1LK "Graeme Cant" wrote in message ... I tried progressives in 1997 for several months and found them unsuitable for me for flying. 1. The distortion at the edge of the lenses produced a swimming effect as I moved my head which I found unhelpful. I found it distorted my distant vision so that runway slope was hard to judge, especially where the slope varied significantly (eg Manchester). It also made 'black hole' night visual approaches difficult to judge. This only affected earning a living but the first problem applied to gliding also. 2. The reading (near vision) band was so narrow that I could only see a newspaper column width of print clearly without moving my head. This made rapid reference to a Jepp chart a major operation. I didn't like it for daily living either since newspapers are only a small part of my reading. It's also an inconvenience reading a map gliding (Yes, I don't totally trust GPS). I reverted to my previous trifocals with relief and continue to use them with no problems - except they're rather stronger now than they were then - but I guess that would happened with progressives too. Graeme Cant Andy wrote: I use progressive lenses for normal day wear and for flying airplanes. I usually use suntigers with stick on reading lenses in the sailplane but sometimes fly with the progressives. The only problem is that they do not darken enough. My next set of suntigers will be progressive. My first reaction to progressives was that it would be impossible to fly with them. I may have had a bad prescription because after suffering with line bifocals for a few years I went to progressives and will not go back. What good reasons do you gave against using them? Andy |
#25
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Like Raphael, I wear progressives that self-darken. I also have a pair or
progressive sunglasses, but usually forget to change to 'em, as the newer self-darkening lenses are much better than the ones made a few years ago. It's important to have the progressives aligned and made properly. In the US, I've had good results at Costco's optical department, but even they can screw up. I had them do-it-again on one pair and they got it right. bumper "Raphael Warshaw" wrote in message ... I've been using progressive lenses for the last 4 years and find that they work well. There's a short period with a new prescription when straight lines appear curved, but this has always disappeared within the first day of wearing them. Although the adjustment from near to far and side to side has been automatic for me, I'm told that this is not always the case. Some users adjust more slowly and some never do. For the last two years, I've been using self-darkening progressives; they don't darken nearly as much as a good pair of regular sunglasses, but, at least for me, provide more than adequate visual contrast and eye-strain protection. I have them made big enough to provide good eye coverage since the glare seems worse with smaller lenses. Raphael Warshaw 1LK "Graeme Cant" wrote in message ... I tried progressives in 1997 for several months and found them unsuitable for me for flying. 1. The distortion at the edge of the lenses produced a swimming effect as I moved my head which I found unhelpful. I found it distorted my distant vision so that runway slope was hard to judge, especially where the slope varied significantly (eg Manchester). It also made 'black hole' night visual approaches difficult to judge. This only affected earning a living but the first problem applied to gliding also. 2. The reading (near vision) band was so narrow that I could only see a newspaper column width of print clearly without moving my head. This made rapid reference to a Jepp chart a major operation. I didn't like it for daily living either since newspapers are only a small part of my reading. It's also an inconvenience reading a map gliding (Yes, I don't totally trust GPS). I reverted to my previous trifocals with relief and continue to use them with no problems - except they're rather stronger now than they were then - but I guess that would happened with progressives too. Graeme Cant Andy wrote: I use progressive lenses for normal day wear and for flying airplanes. I usually use suntigers with stick on reading lenses in the sailplane but sometimes fly with the progressives. The only problem is that they do not darken enough. My next set of suntigers will be progressive. My first reaction to progressives was that it would be impossible to fly with them. I may have had a bad prescription because after suffering with line bifocals for a few years I went to progressives and will not go back. What good reasons do you gave against using them? Andy |
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