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Thread: Best Sunglass lens color

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
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    i have oakley fuel cells they are awesome and scratch resistant

  2. #12
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    Jan 2006
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    Much of what Vanilla says is true. I'm almost 60 and have been wearing glasses since I was 12. Polycarbs are indeed MUCH lighter but they do scratch more easily than glass. Modern glass won't shatter except in extreme conditions. I used to be a stone mason and had numerous missiles hit my face and glasses and just bounce off. With a fairly heavy prescription plastic will be a bit thicker too.

    Anyway thanks guys for the color recomendations. These unfortunately will have to cover a variety of conditions. My cocoons are amber so maybe I'll get some blue/grey for higher light conditions and use both.

  3. #13
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    Apr 2011
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    $5 pair of rip off westcoast choppers at your local gas station

  4. #14
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    Apr 2010
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    Quote Originally Posted by vanillagurilla View Post
    i see you didnt post the part where it said that the tests were done with "regular" plastic and glass lenses, probly something not designed for out door sports with little or NO impact resistance so there brand of lens would come out ontop. i highly dout that costas or maui jims dont have impact resistant lenses. most new glass lenses are impact resistant and tempered so they DONT shatter, but if they break they'll stay together. Also the clarity diff between glass and poly is uncomparable. Glass is also MUCH more scratch/chip resistant, they'll sustain a drop on asphalt with no damage while polys will have scratches, dents, or chips in the lense.
    Might have wanted to do you homework before name-dropping.

    From Maui Jim's:

    "When durability and protection against shattering are the priority, Polycarbonate will stand up to your most intense activities. This lens is scratch and impact-resistant, and injection molded for crisp optics. The lightest choice for long days in the sun."

    From Costa Del Mar:

    "IMPACT RESISTANT - We know the type of people that wear Costas and we know the type of things they spend their time doing. Costa 580P lenses have been tested to meet or exceed the rigorous impact standards set forth by the American National Standards Institute, including ANSI Z80.3 and ANSI Z87.1."

    Costa's 580P (polycarbonate) lenses meet higher impact-resistance standards than their 580G (glass) lenses. And they claim the 580P's are "the clearest lenses on the planet".

    So while both companies have glass lenses which meet or exceed federally-mandated requirements, they clearly see polycarbonate as the (ahem, pun) clearer choice for impact resistance. Oakley has gone so far as to demonstrate in testing how their polycarbonate lenses have the clarity of glass lenses.

    As far as scratch-resistance is concerned, most reputable companies treat their lenses, regardless of material, to be scratch-resistant. I won't argue the quality of lenses you find on the WalMart racks.

    But since everyone loves anecdotal evidence, here is my take: I am wearing Ray-Ban half-frame polycarbonate prescription lenses as I type this. These glasses have been though the war; they've been dropped, sat on, left in the scorching heat of a car, smudged, washed in the laundry, humiliated & insulted. They have not "fogged", and have suffered only one scratch from an atypical impact.
    Last edited by Lady Quagga; 08-17-2011 at 12:21 AM. Reason: The glare was in my eyes.

  5. #15
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    Mar 2006
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    Saugus
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    Really?? Unless I missed it not a single person said Wiley X Sunglasses. I have used many polarized glasses including Oakley, Maui Jim and many other popular sunglasses but I just got a new pair of Wiley X Xcess and absolutely LOVE THEM! They cut glare better then any pair I've ever owned and the scratch resistant finish is extremely tough!

    Lens color makes a huge difference. I prefer an amber tinted lens for 60 - 70% of my fishing. It doesnt allow you to see true color but the advantage is the help in the contrast of colors. If Im out on the water during peak sunlight hours (say noon to 4pm) I switch to a grey lens to help cut glare more and see true color but lose the advantage of the contrast.

  6. #16
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    I think the reason noone suggested Wiley is that I asked not to suggest name brands, but simply colors. I was hoping to keep the thread narrow and focused on that issue alone.

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