- This topic has 29 replies, 17 voices, and was last updated 6 years ago by
Balthazar.
-
CreatorTopic
-
May 11, 2020 at 7:45 pm #30712
road
Do coloured lenses make a difference for cycling? I’ve read the suggested yellow for this, blue for that but I’m not certain. I’ve currently got yellow lenses in my prescription glasses which are needing replacement and I’m wondering whether to get coloured or clear. I can’t currently afford photochromic ones but will consider them if they’re really worth it in people’s opinion.
I ride a mix of road and gravel with these glasses on so am looking for a general purpose lens colour. -
CreatorTopic
-
AuthorReplies
-
Balthazar
leqin wrote:I have. I buy Sports multi lense pairs on amazon or ebay and then I get a set of lenses out of a old pair of glasses and use hot glue to stick them onto the inside of the lense I am using. If you do it with care it then the result is pretty near perfect and I have never had a set like this fall apart or fog up. If you have no sacrificial spare set around then buy a cheap set of plastic lense reading glasses of the correct power for your eyes and then break the frame to get the lenses out.thats an interesting idea, thanks. I do have an old pair of specs and an even older pair of bikey sunglasses… I might have a go at this. I’ll let you know if I manage not to destroy both of them
wycombewheeler
if you shine light through
if you shine light through two pairs of polarised lenses and rotate them so they are not aligned no light should get through, as I recall from GCSE physics
wycombewheeler
I have an pair of adidas
I have an pair of adidas photochromics with prescription inserts, generally they are no more prone to fogging up.
I’ve managed to wear them through the day and into the night on long brevets, the only time I wish I had my normal glasses with me as well as when we go inside during the day, as I feel a bit self concius wearing glasses indoors, and they do take time to react to lower light conditions
leqin
I have. I buy Sports multi
I have. I buy Sports multi lense pairs on amazon or ebay and then I get a set of lenses out of a old pair of glasses and use hot glue to stick them onto the inside of the lense I am using. If you do it with care it then the result is pretty near perfect and I have never had a set like this fall apart or fog up. If you have no sacrificial spare set around then buy a cheap set of plastic lense reading glasses of the correct power for your eyes and then break the frame to get the lenses out.
Balthazar
Extremely useful, thank you.
Extremely useful, thank you. I’ll have a look at that website- that’s about as much as I would want to pay (I’m too old and jaded to spend vast amounts of money on bits of plastic from Luxoticca) , and like you I have weird differences between my eyes that should be taken into account. Thanks all!
TheBillder
I’m short-sighted and deeply
I’m short-sighted and deeply cynical about big brand sunglasses. My optician showed me their best sellers to cyclists, but as the frame alone was £175 I struggled not to laugh. I’m sure they are terrific even without high modulus unobtainium nose pieces but after glazing would have been about £400.I looked at some of the cheaper type with a secondary lens holder, but even without glazing the holder, I could tell it would be too close to my eyes and quite heavy, but they do allow a wrap around style which is difficult to produce with a prescription.
I found some prescription sunglasses on Amazon for very low prices but the lens power is the same both sides and my eyes are not. There were also none of the other corrections that are important if you’re going to wear the glasses for hours at a time.
So I decided to by from an online optician, and only considered those who take all the numbers from your prescription. I spent £80 at spex4less.com and have been very happy. The style is good, the optics are good, and summer rides up to 6 hours are no problem for my eyes. There are plenty of such websites, some a bit less up front with pricing.
Hope this is useful.
pockstone
You’re welcome Balthazar, I
You’re welcome Balthazar, I realised after posting that not everyone is a long sighted old git like me, and that those safety glasses are only suitable for cerrtain eye problems. I recall a thread some time ago on Road CC about prescription glasses with some links. It may be worth searching for.
Chris Hayes
Trouble reading your Garmin
Trouble reading your Garmin whilst riding….that’s old age in my case! I was thinking of mounting a magnifying glass over the screen!
Balthazar
Your comment about the resin
Your comment about the resin has me thinking- I have a 3D printer which prints in UV curing resin, maybe I could try to print my own lenses. Can’t see that going wrong 🙂
Balthazar
Thank you both. Those safety
Thank you both. Those safety glasses look fine to me, and I’m intrigued about the stick on lens thing, but unfortunately my eyeballs are short-sighted, which apparently means I must have proper prescription lenses. I only started wearing glasses for cycling a couple of years ago, and since then I’ve just worn normal specs. I remember mixed reports of the “mini-specs” – attached to the inside of sunglasses, Briko and Bolle style – before, but there seem to be plenty of cheapy versions available, hence my query. I guess I could also consider contacts.
pockstone
I use Volt-X safety glasses,
I use Volt-X safety glasses, available in clear, smoke, amber and polarising, with a bifocal type reading lens.
If you’re not a spectacle snob they’re fine. I experience a bit of fogging when I stop but not too bad. They do a passable impersonation of much more expensive cycling glasses for about £15 a pair.
So happy to say goodbye to the ‘stop’n’swop-glasses’ palaver when looking at map or phone.
Pilot Pete
Depends on what eye
Depends on what eye correction you need, but since I’ve needed readers I found just reading my Garmin getting increasingly difficult on the bike. I started experimenting with stick on Hydrotac lenses.
The idea is you wet the Hydrotac lense, put into position and squeeze the excess water out with any air bubbles, thus causing the two surfaces to adhere with no distortion to your vision.
These certainly allowed me to see my Garmin display again once I’d worked out where exactly I need to position them on the inside of my Oakley photochromic lenses.
I do sweat a lot and found that sweat from my brow and helmet pad would dribble down over the lenses and in summer especially, would cause the lenses to lose their adhesion.
After mulling over for some time I bit the bullet and glued them on with Bondic, very carefully to prevent getting the resin all over the Oakley lenses! Done carefully, with any excess wiped off with cotton buds and isopropyl alcohol before using the UV light to harden the resin has made a permanent and distortion free bifocal set of Oakleys which will not be disturbed with sweat or water! Much cheaper than prescription Oakleys, but probably only any good if you only need reading lenses…
If you have not come across it before I can highly recommend Bondic which is a clear liquid plastic resin which stays liquid until exposed to UV light (you get a little UV light pen with the pack). It sets rock hard, can be sanded if you need it to be and is so much better than superglue etc as you won’t get everything stuck (including fingers) whilst you try to position something! It has so many uses not only on bikes but around the home. I have stuck my Di2 Junct A box mount to the underside of my stem so I could dispense with the unsightly rubber band, fixed a crack in our food mixer bowl and so on. It’s my ‘find of the year’ for 2020 so far!
Balthazar
Any of you lot got experience
Any of you lot got experience with the prescription knock-offs (the ones with a secondary lens holder for prescription lenses)? Fogging, etc? I’m getting a bit fed up of cycling in my normal specs, but no way am I about to spend £££ on branded thingies.
Sriracha
Foakleys from Alibaba? That
Foakleys from Alibaba? That’ll be about 3:20 on the video
Compact Corned Beef
As long as the lenses are
As long as the lenses are made of polyacrbonate, which as someone else on this string has pointed out is opaque to UV, you’ll be fine from a protection-from-UV perspective.
I’m still mystified at the Fauxkley thing though. Plenty of decent cheap sunnies out there (my got-to low light option is a B’twin photochromic set) without resorting to knock-offs.
-
AuthorReplies
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.