Having increase interest in patients wanting shooting specif glasses, I have not made a pair in probably 6-7 years. What are you using for your patients and why? Any recommendations will help.
Having increase interest in patients wanting shooting specif glasses, I have not made a pair in probably 6-7 years. What are you using for your patients and why? Any recommendations will help.
Frames or lenses?
Indoors or outdoors?
Target or hunting or skeet?
YAAAHHH! I can barely shoot a pea-shooter.
Shooters run the gambit, some bring in their own specialty frames, others want something that are multi-purpose. If Rx allows I prefer Trivex, especially with a semi automatic; as the shell ejection trajectory can be sporadic. When possible I implement trial framing. Front site shooting as gained some popularity in my area. A call to some local gun dealers might be in order, talk to them about what their clients are looking for, and ask them for some recommendations that they might have.
I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it. Mark Twain
Lens wise, I shoot with Bluetech indoor lenses. They will still have a yellow tint, but no where near as bad as traditional shooters.
They sharpen contrast as good if not better than traditional yellow shooters BUT they DON'T change color of the intended target. Great for hunting as you can't afford to not see color correctly. Indoors at the range they are even better still.
Try them side by side as a marksman and you'll see. That's my suggestion.
Paul is on the right track! Lots of discussion to find out what kind of shooting they are doing. Ask lots of questions from your shooters to get an idea of the different methods and weapons they are using. A lot of folks are headed towards the front sight method, so make sure your lens design reflects that.
As far as brands go, there are a few out there that fall into the "shooting" catagory. WileyX is probably the most advertised of the bunch. I also like Smith Elite, just not quite sure where that ended up in the whole Safilo swap around. Decot makes a couple frames, I often see these brought in by the patient, don't carry them myself. I'm sure there are others as well.
Welcome to Optiboard MJREYES, and good luck with your shooting venture.
race, I like the color of the BlueTech lens, that's a great idea, but I would be a little cautious of the material. Not designed for impact/shatter resistance as far as I know. Please correct me if I am wrong.
What about multifocal wear? Flat top with seg for intermediate to see the sight and top for distance to see the target? Where do you put the seg?
Caroline, L.O.
If you suffer from severe nonlinear waterfowl issues, you don't have your ducks in a row.
For older presbyopes, try +.50 to +.75 over the distance Rx for handguns. Use a narrow DBL and fit high.
Science is a way of trying not to fool yourself. - Richard P. Feynman
Experience is the hardest teacher. She gives the test before the lesson.
What is the front-sight method? Focusing on the front-sight and letting the target blur instead of the opposite?
I have a number of guys and gals that are part of a large patrol unit. When they become Presbyopic we have tried a few different ways of fitting, but in the end I usually have them in a Occupational Bifocal with half the add on the upper BF and full Add for the lower BF.
I've also tried to do the Bifocal fit upside down with half the add, but most labs will sound like your half crazed with that idea. I'm sure there are a few independent labs that can/will make these.
Last edited by racethe1320; 04-27-2015 at 04:26 PM.
Fitting a prg is fine, especially just recreational shooting. The paitent will have to adjust their posture to get the vision to focus on the sight if they are shooting like above mentioned style. Tactical shooting will have a slightly harder time adjusting, as you want head down, small body effect, rather than raised chin to focus on the intermediate zone of the progressive lens.
The competitive outdoor shooters I've helped in Alaska have purchased a large number of pairs. Tinted across the spectrum. Pink, green, blue, yellow and in various grades.
"What's this "tactical shooting" stuff? Do you mean "self defense?" Bear in mind that the average defensive hand gun encounter occurs at eight feet. Cripes, Mr. Magoo don't need no stinking glasses at all in this scenario. On the range wear whatever makes you look cool and allows you to get a good sight picture.
Some folks shoot for a living rbaker. That is what I refer to as "tactical shooting". Whether it's military, police, or security patrols. Totally agree with your "self defence" comment, a person would not have time to get their "shooting glasses" on for that situation. The range is also not a big deal, my comments have more to do with folks who shoot for a living, there are a few out there.
Tactical shooting, trains the individual to react and respond differently. Most people, law enforcement included, train at a range and are not properly equipped to handle a situation where someone is shooting at them. It is well chronicled that many law enforcement officers will expel the rounds in their magazine and fail to reload quickly, if at all. Much of the training is about reacting, replaying a scenario, and repetition, repetition, repetition.
Last edited by Paul Smith LDO; 04-28-2015 at 03:57 PM.
I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it. Mark Twain
Great description Paul!!!
I do have a vague idea of the shooting sport. I was on the 2nd Marine Air Wing Combat Pistol Team and competed at the Nationals a Camp Perry in 1962 and 1963.
Sorry to offend you rbaker. You had previously asked what "tactical shooting" was. Did not know you where already an expert.
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