skanagar shooting glasses
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skanagar shooting glasses
http://www.skanaker.se/eng/glas/Function.html
Any one used this shooting glasses before?
I think the frame is on a magnetic rail, can be move to as close to eyes or further away. So if I have +0.5 lens, move it away would become +0.75.
It could also be clip up, makes examine score card up close easier.
Any one used this shooting glasses before?
I think the frame is on a magnetic rail, can be move to as close to eyes or further away. So if I have +0.5 lens, move it away would become +0.75.
It could also be clip up, makes examine score card up close easier.
- ShootingSight
- Posts: 318
- Joined: Fri May 18, 2012 9:37 pm
- Location: Cincinnati, OH
- Contact:
I don't see the benefit, and I see a lot of negatives.
1. These are not safety glasses.
2. These do not come with the diopter correction that is critical to shooting.
3. These do not appear to swivel, so you can position the lens to be perpendicular to your line of sight, which can be almost a significant tilt to the side in prone.
4. Cost is not mentioned, but coming from Sweden, and looking expensive.
5. All he is advertising is yellow lenses, well shucks, I can order any lens with a yellow tint for about a $5 premium, so he is not offering anything a regular lens is not.
1. These are not safety glasses.
2. These do not come with the diopter correction that is critical to shooting.
3. These do not appear to swivel, so you can position the lens to be perpendicular to your line of sight, which can be almost a significant tilt to the side in prone.
4. Cost is not mentioned, but coming from Sweden, and looking expensive.
5. All he is advertising is yellow lenses, well shucks, I can order any lens with a yellow tint for about a $5 premium, so he is not offering anything a regular lens is not.
A diopter is anything but critical in shooting. There's a reason why you see almost no top shooters using them. I don't disagree on the overall concept though, which to me is also pointless.ShootingSight wrote:I don't see the benefit, and I see a lot of negatives.
1. These are not safety glasses.
2. These do not come with the diopter correction that is critical to shooting.
3. These do not appear to swivel, so you can position the lens to be perpendicular to your line of sight, which can be almost a significant tilt to the side in prone.
4. Cost is not mentioned, but coming from Sweden, and looking expensive.
5. All he is advertising is yellow lenses, well shucks, I can order any lens with a yellow tint for about a $5 premium, so he is not offering anything a regular lens is not.
Rob.
- ShootingSight
- Posts: 318
- Joined: Fri May 18, 2012 9:37 pm
- Location: Cincinnati, OH
- Contact:
- ShootingSight
- Posts: 318
- Joined: Fri May 18, 2012 9:37 pm
- Location: Cincinnati, OH
- Contact:
Actually, on the variable aperture, I do not shoot much pistol, but I would love to know why they are not used more.
In rifle, all match rifles use variable iris rear sights, and I have not seen anything in the optical math that suggests why they are not used in pistol.
I'm going on the assumption that better focus is .. better. There is no justification that less focus is a good thing. I will admit that good focus is not the end-all. Constant focus is the end-all. So consistent bad focus you can learn to shoot with. But as long as you have constancy, consistent good is surely better than consistent bad, no?
In rifle, all match rifles use variable iris rear sights, and I have not seen anything in the optical math that suggests why they are not used in pistol.
I'm going on the assumption that better focus is .. better. There is no justification that less focus is a good thing. I will admit that good focus is not the end-all. Constant focus is the end-all. So consistent bad focus you can learn to shoot with. But as long as you have constancy, consistent good is surely better than consistent bad, no?
My first reply got lost so a shorter version. Pistol shooting relies on area aim so absolute precision isn't as critical. Too big a depth of field leads to concentration being on the wrong thing - only the foresight needs to be in sharp focus. Also the iris distorts around the edges and cuts down a large amount of light. So all told, the benefits are outweighed by the downsides.
Rob.
Rob.
-
- Posts: 5617
- Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 12:49 pm
- Location: Ruislip, UK
I totally agree.RobStubbs wrote:My first reply got lost so a shorter version. Pistol shooting relies on area aim so absolute precision isn't as critical. Too big a depth of field leads to concentration being on the wrong thing - only the foresight needs to be in sharp focus. Also the iris distorts around the edges and cuts down a large amount of light. So all told, the benefits are outweighed by the downsides.
One thing an iris is good for is, if you open it to 4-5mm, it tells you that your head is in the same position for each shot.
My view exactlyDavid Levene wrote:I totally agree.RobStubbs wrote:My first reply got lost so a shorter version. Pistol shooting relies on area aim so absolute precision isn't as critical. Too big a depth of field leads to concentration being on the wrong thing - only the foresight needs to be in sharp focus. Also the iris distorts around the edges and cuts down a large amount of light. So all told, the benefits are outweighed by the downsides.
One thing an iris is good for is, if you open it to 4-5mm, it tells you that your head is in the same position for each shot.