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Help me identify progressive lens markings

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    Help me identify progressive lens markings

    Hello. I have a customer who really like their old progressive lenses. With those lenses she can comfortably see her multiple monitors at intermediate distance without turning her bad neck too much. For new lenses, I sold her Essilor Varilux X because it's supposed to have the widest corridor, but apparently not wide enough for her (compared to her current glasses). I think her old lenses have an ADD of +1.00, while her new Varilux X has an ADD of +2.00. I know that higher add power generally makes the corridor narrower. Maybe this narrower corridor is the new reality she has to get used to.

    In any case, I need help identifying her old lenses.

    Click image for larger version

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    Above the temporal marking is "IXL-9". Below it is "100", which is probably the ADD power. Below that is the letter "A". Above the nasal marking is "1.61", which is probably the lens material.

    So the question is, what lens has that "IXL-9" markings?

    Thanks,
    Josh

    #2
    I couldn't find anything matching in the Vision Council's EPIC progressive identifier database. I did find an IXL progressive design from Optotech's lens design software but I couldn't find a centration chart anywhere to verify the markings. Here is the pdf with the design on pages 15-17:



    I'm guessing these are designs for private label PALS.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by salvadorjoshua View Post
      Hello. I have a customer who really like their old progressive lenses. With those lenses she can comfortably see her multiple monitors at intermediate distance without turning her bad neck too much. For new lenses, I sold her Essilor Varilux X because it's supposed to have the widest corridor, but apparently not wide enough for her (compared to her current glasses). I think her old lenses have an ADD of +1.00, while her new Varilux X has an ADD of +2.00. I know that higher add power generally makes the corridor narrower. Maybe this narrower corridor is the new reality she has to get used to.

      In any case, I need help identifying her old lenses.

      [ATTACH=CONFIG]15328[/ATTACH]

      Above the temporal marking is "IXL-9". Below it is "100", which is probably the ADD power. Below that is the letter "A". Above the nasal marking is "1.61", which is probably the lens material.

      So the question is, what lens has that "IXL-9" markings?

      Thanks,
      Josh
      With a +1.00 she was likely just using the top distance part of the lens for multiple monitors. With a +2.00 add she has to use the actual intermediate portion of the lens which will be narrow. There's no general purpose PAL in the world that has a corridor wide enough more multiple monitors without significant head turn.

      Comment


        #4
        This thread may be of interest as well...

        Hi guys, I know there isn't one, but a buddy informed me that when her aunt received new spectacles, the bottom reading portion covered the entire frame. They were bifocals, she claimed but had no lines. They were fresh and pricey, according to my aunt. She didn't seem to trust me when I attempted to convince her that there was


        What's the distance rx?

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by salvadorjoshua View Post
          Hello. I have a customer who really like their old progressive lenses. With those lenses she can comfortably see her multiple monitors at intermediate distance without turning her bad neck too much. For new lenses, I sold her Essilor Varilux X because it's supposed to have the widest corridor, but apparently not wide enough for her (compared to her current glasses). I think her old lenses have an ADD of +1.00, while her new Varilux X has an ADD of +2.00. I know that higher add power generally makes the corridor narrower. Maybe this narrower corridor is the new reality she has to get used to.

          In any case, I need help identifying her old lenses.

          [ATTACH=CONFIG]15328[/ATTACH]

          Above the temporal marking is "IXL-9". Below it is "100", which is probably the ADD power. Below that is the letter "A". Above the nasal marking is "1.61", which is probably the lens material.

          So the question is, what lens has that "IXL-9" markings?

          Thanks,
          Josh
          Going on this limited info, I don't think the issue is lens design. It appears that the glasses she's wearing are an optician-compensated computer PAL. I'd bet a dollar thst she has half of her add power in the top portion of her lenses, hence the +1.00 / +2.00 add disparity. She's wearing an occupational lens design and her new glasses are for everyday wear.
          I'm Andrew Hamm and I approve this message.

          Comment


            #6
            Accommodative support lens turned into an office set maybe. Hence no peripheral distortion

            Comment

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