Sun Glasses
Sun Glasses
Someone mentioned one day that there is an awesome pair of sunglasses that someone supply's that we are able to fly with. Anyone know of this person?
Last edited by Hot Stuff on Tue Sep 04, 2007 2:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- John Boucher
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Sunglasses....
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John Boucher
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A Bushcat is Born - CH 211 C "Super Excited"
MISASA Chairman 2023
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chairman@misasa.org
A Bushcat is Born - CH 211 C "Super Excited"

- Biggles
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I firmly believe in polariods for all applications. Having sensitive blue eyes I find they keep out the glare while not being too dark so you can fly up to dusk with them on.
There are drawbacks. Some visors and polariods mean you start seeing funny colours... reflected light from dams is pink!!! And I swear that was not related to what I smoked for breakfast.
Liquid crystal displays have a polariod screen over them. So check that you can see all your instruments if you have glass cockpit. I have anaolog and have no problem viewing the 196Garmin.
My personal favourites are Oakleys, while expensive I get about 2 years from a pair in "extreme conditions" lots of dust ect. They have a hard coating that protects them quite well.
There are drawbacks. Some visors and polariods mean you start seeing funny colours... reflected light from dams is pink!!! And I swear that was not related to what I smoked for breakfast.
Liquid crystal displays have a polariod screen over them. So check that you can see all your instruments if you have glass cockpit. I have anaolog and have no problem viewing the 196Garmin.
My personal favourites are Oakleys, while expensive I get about 2 years from a pair in "extreme conditions" lots of dust ect. They have a hard coating that protects them quite well.
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- Bacchus
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Let me tell you guys something about sunglasses. I wear them ALL the time as I have very very sensitive eyes.
Never buy cheap sunglasses.
When you look through dark glasses, youre eyes relax and youre pupils enlarge. ( same thing happens when it is dark ). It is natures way to make you see better in less light conditions. Stand close to somebody in the sun, make them close their eyes for 30 seconds or so, and see that when they open them, the pupils goes small in a fraction of a second to adapt to the light.
Now, when you have shit sunglasses, the pupils are big because of the darker light, but theres no protection against the UV rays of the sun, and the bigger pupils let in more than the usual amount of UV rays than normal( the glare is the uncomfortable thing, but the UV rays are the dangerous part that stuffs up eyes).
Its better then not to wear sunglasses at all.
Those twenty rand jobs you can use indoors, but believe me, there will be no protection against UV rays there and they will open up your pupils big time... Very very dangerous.
Never buy cheap sunglasses.
When you look through dark glasses, youre eyes relax and youre pupils enlarge. ( same thing happens when it is dark ). It is natures way to make you see better in less light conditions. Stand close to somebody in the sun, make them close their eyes for 30 seconds or so, and see that when they open them, the pupils goes small in a fraction of a second to adapt to the light.
Now, when you have shit sunglasses, the pupils are big because of the darker light, but theres no protection against the UV rays of the sun, and the bigger pupils let in more than the usual amount of UV rays than normal( the glare is the uncomfortable thing, but the UV rays are the dangerous part that stuffs up eyes).
Its better then not to wear sunglasses at all.
Those twenty rand jobs you can use indoors, but believe me, there will be no protection against UV rays there and they will open up your pupils big time... Very very dangerous.
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- V
- Whats the right frequency?
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I've got a pair of SG1 from these folks: http://www.wiley-x.com. Bulletproof - literally. They were the only people I could find, making prescription glasses/sunglasses in a wrap-around style. The rest is just bonus
Comes with interchangeable straps, etc. (great for sports).
Shelled out about USD 10.00 for the frame and about USD 180 for the lenses.
Had them for over 2 years now. Flew in them once, but gave up, saw absolutely nothing on the LCD panel due to the polarised lenses.
From the wind/deflection point of view they work well, though - my next pair won't be polarised, that's for sure.
Cheers,
V.

Shelled out about USD 10.00 for the frame and about USD 180 for the lenses.
Had them for over 2 years now. Flew in them once, but gave up, saw absolutely nothing on the LCD panel due to the polarised lenses.
From the wind/deflection point of view they work well, though - my next pair won't be polarised, that's for sure.
Cheers,
V.
- Nick
- Learning to fly
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Id second that, big time. Also suggest one goes for the brown lenses, not the green ones, blue, black or seriously bling - silver. The light brown lenses give better colour balance and also improve contrast, quite drastically. You'll want to wear them in cloudy conditions too - because of the contrast improvement. The polaroid lenses are well worth having. Other brands only have some of the range in Polaroid. Polaroid reduces glare off horisontal flat surfaces like water, roads, runways, and off cowlings and wings. One downside is that it can show up the heat tempering in some older car's windshields -this can be distracting, but it's only in older car glass.Biggles wrote:I firmly believe in polariods for all applications.
Polaroids are good value too, for the top quality they are, way less than all the poncy brands like Bolle, Ray Bans etcetera.
Last edited by Nick on Tue Sep 04, 2007 10:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Duck Rogers
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- Biggles
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Yup, that is the problem with Polaroids, I got a big fright when I first flew the schools Aquila with a skydat... display seemed very faint and flying around sunset did not help iether... then took the sunnies off.V wrote: Flew in them once, but gave up, saw absolutely nothing on the LCD panel due to the polarised lenses.
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- Thunderboy
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This is where I struggle a bit even with OakleysBiggles wrote:I
Liquid crystal displays have a polariod screen over them. So check that you can see all your instruments if you have glass cockpit.
Have 3 axis so dont need to cover my eyes for wind, however when looking outside cockpit with sunglasses it's great to wear sunglasses for the glare but when you bring your eyes inside the cockpit to the glass panel its difficult to focus on the LCD. I often end up just taking them off
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