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GLASSES OR CONTACT LENSES WHICH

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  • #16
    Come on Telf - you know asbestos is a health hazard[]Seriously though there is a lot of room here for personal preference.I like an open face helmet with a retractable visor, I can then adjust it to suit the circumstances.Your experience with the moving contact seems to rule them out, particularly when you realise that if you need correction for disant vision you are required to have spare correction with you.John EvansThink logically and do things well, think laterally and do things better.

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    • #17
      Come on Telf - you know asbestos is a health hazard[]Seriously though there is a lot of room here for personal preference.I like an open face helmet with a retractable visor, I can then adjust it to suit the circumstances.Your experience with the moving contact seems to rule them out, particularly when you realise that if you need correction for disant vision you are required to have spare correction with you.John EvansThink logically and do things well, think laterally and do things better.

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      • #18
        Thanks for your coments peoples, to clarify a little I am using the multifocal lenses with largish lens's. Where the blur is the area just outside the rim. I have all my life been fortunate to be able to see movement in that area clearly, now I have to turn my head further to view the same angle of view range. Just that I object to doing more work than I used to, some call it lazyness [] i call it smart working.Thanks for the down side for contact lenses.Should anyone else have views please state them.What you focus on grows. Des Gravin Bullsbrook Geraldton's (southern suburb) W.A.

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        • #19
          Thanks for your coments peoples, to clarify a little I am using the multifocal lenses with largish lens's. Where the blur is the area just outside the rim. I have all my life been fortunate to be able to see movement in that area clearly, now I have to turn my head further to view the same angle of view range. Just that I object to doing more work than I used to, some call it lazyness [] i call it smart working.Thanks for the down side for contact lenses.Should anyone else have views please state them.What you focus on grows. Des Gravin Bullsbrook Geraldton's (southern suburb) W.A.

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          • #20
            Thanks for your coments peoples, to clarify a little I am using the multifocal lenses with largish lens's. Where the blur is the area just outside the rim. I have all my life been fortunate to be able to see movement in that area clearly, now I have to turn my head further to view the same angle of view range. Just that I object to doing more work than I used to, some call it lazyness [] i call it smart working.Thanks for the down side for contact lenses.Should anyone else have views please state them.What you focus on grows. Des Gravin Bullsbrook Geraldton's (southern suburb) W.A.

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            • #21
              Thanks for your coments peoples, to clarify a little I am using the multifocal lenses with largish lens's. Where the blur is the area just outside the rim. I have all my life been fortunate to be able to see movement in that area clearly, now I have to turn my head further to view the same angle of view range. Just that I object to doing more work than I used to, some call it lazyness [] i call it smart working.Thanks for the down side for contact lenses.Should anyone else have views please state them.What you focus on grows. Des Gravin Bullsbrook Geraldton's (southern suburb) W.A.

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              • #22
                Des, that was my point...Multifocal....I know that they all say, including John, that you get used to them. What really happens is that you get used to moving your head more so that you look directly at the subject, which does not improve the clarity of your peripheral vision. The bi-focals are excellent at overcoming this disadvantage and the modern glasses are such that you really can't tell they are bi-focals at all overcoming the 'grandpa'imagen that Mark alludes to.PeteBairnsdale,Vic.

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                • #23
                  Des, that was my point...Multifocal....I know that they all say, including John, that you get used to them. What really happens is that you get used to moving your head more so that you look directly at the subject, which does not improve the clarity of your peripheral vision. The bi-focals are excellent at overcoming this disadvantage and the modern glasses are such that you really can't tell they are bi-focals at all overcoming the 'grandpa'imagen that Mark alludes to.PeteBairnsdale,Vic.

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                  • #24
                    Des, that was my point...Multifocal....I know that they all say, including John, that you get used to them. What really happens is that you get used to moving your head more so that you look directly at the subject, which does not improve the clarity of your peripheral vision. The bi-focals are excellent at overcoming this disadvantage and the modern glasses are such that you really can't tell they are bi-focals at all overcoming the 'grandpa'imagen that Mark alludes to.PeteBairnsdale,Vic.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Des, that was my point...Multifocal....I know that they all say, including John, that you get used to them. What really happens is that you get used to moving your head more so that you look directly at the subject, which does not improve the clarity of your peripheral vision. The bi-focals are excellent at overcoming this disadvantage and the modern glasses are such that you really can't tell they are bi-focals at all overcoming the 'grandpa'imagen that Mark alludes to.PeteBairnsdale,Vic.

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