As I said, I can't wear progressives. I tried some. They don't work
for me.

Several years ago, I had the idea of constructing a fluid-filled lens
with a clear liquid substance between sheets of clear plastic, or
between a firm clear piece and a thinner, flexible sheet; altering the
amount of liquid would have altered the refractive qualities of the
"lenses." The fluid level would have been controlled by a syringe-like
pump controlled by- (drum roll, please...) - a knob. I imagined I
could have these manufactured in Hong Kong, and sold at WalMart for- I
dunno, $30?

I did some research into  "variable refraction lenses," and came up
with an invention by a physicist named Joshua Silver, who had thought
of the idea himself, a couple years previous to my own brainstorm
(hate when things like that happen). While I had sketches on paper, he
had a working prototype, and a plan to export the finished product to
"Third World" countries at minimal cost.

I found a similar product recently, priced at nearly $900. I think
that's too much. It isn't sold at WalMart.


WHL

Character is doing the right thing when no one is watching.



On Jun 18, 1:28 am, carrots <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Beaugrand,
>
> Hope you'r not minding my thoughts on your subject ;)
>
> You"r wishing for a "little knob" on your glasses to accommodate " on
> the spot" perfect sight? Search and wish no further. Put ordinary and
> bifocals in the treasure chest, and switch to progressives. I'm a
> happy wearer of progressives and have been so for years. They do it
> all for me, far, near, midfield, sidefield whatever I wish for and all
> of that in just one frame.
> Last year I became a first time online buyer and ordered a pair of Kam
> Dhilon frameless glasses at Coastalcontacts. On top of the perfect
> lenses they put in the frame, the frame ls a-ma-zing! It can be over
> stretched, sit on, stand on, twisted, folded, etc etc. They are like a
> pair of eyes on sticks, and they do the trick for me. Because the
> frame is light, I forget I'm wearing glasses and so do others when I'm
> at "close encounters" if you get my drift.....
>
> Some people have problems adjusting to progressives, I think the
> secret is not choosing a frame with large lenses.
>
> Ah well, just pondering over the subject on a sunny morning sipping my
> coffee.
>
> Grz carrots
>
> On 16 jun, 10:06, Beaugrand®™© <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > PD can sometimes be given as a "mono" fraction, such as 32/34; that's
> > the distance from the center of the pupil to the center of the bridge
> > of the nose, the first number corresponding to the right eye, the
> > second to the left. Ordinarily it's written like R32 L34.
> > For progressives or bifocals (some of us can't wear progressives) the
> > larger number (which I assume would be written first, such as 66/63)
> > would be for "distance," the other for "reading," or, in my case,
> > "computer," since, for reading, I hold a book closer to my eyes than I
> > would view a computer screen.
>
> > If I sit at a computer screen I grab my "computer glasses," for
> > reading I grab my "reading glasses," if I drive my car I grab my
> > "driving glasses," since, thanks to Ira and GlassyEyes, I can now
> > afford to have several of each kind.
>
> > I actually do have some bifocals that I ordinarily wear socially, or
> > when I can't carry a specialized pair, but it's such a joy to be able
> > to put on my reading glasses so I can read the price label on the
> > bottom shelf at the grocery without straining my neck looking through
> > that little "reading" window at the bottom of the bifocal lens.
>
> > What I really need is glasses that would adjust by twisting a little
> > knob on the side to change the refractive value of the lens...
>
> > WHL
>
> > Character is doing the right thing when no one is watching.
>
> > On Jun 15, 2:12 pm, powrwrap <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > On Jun 13, 11:53 am, Sasha <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > > Re. PD: I learned this week that PD is often given as a fraction, such
> > > > as 58/61.
> > > > The second, higher number is the one to use for progressives, the
> > > > lower for reading glasses.
> > > > Or so I'm told.
>
> > > > Anyone know otherwise?
>
> > > Almost got it. The number is not a fraction, it's actually two
> > > numbers. Only progressives have 2 PD numbers. The higher number is for
> > > distance vision, the lower number is for reading.

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