Leaning towards giving Photogray's a try after seeing way too many Transitions lenses give out after 18/24 months. I've heard they last longer, like SunSensors, which makes sense because Corning designed both.
One question that I have - SunSensors have about a 15% tint indoors (like Transitions XTRActives), but what about Photogray Thin & Dark? Looking at the ISO data, it sounds like it has a 9% tint - but in real-world use, is it noticeable? Transitions technically have about a 5% tint and most don't notice that.
I'm guessing it's somewhere in-between but I can't find anyone around me that has a sample of Thin & Dark's. Would be nice to hear if they're viable alternative to Transitions, particularly in the zero-tint area.
Honestly I can't find many real-world users today, and I'm kinda wondering why (Transitions monopoly power aside). I mean, it has better optics and doesn't seem to cost more than Transitions.
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